By Mildred Robertson
Well,
as North Carolinians await an NC Supreme Court decision on litigation of
recently gerrymandered redistricting maps they don’t know when they will get to
cast their primary ballots. The Court has scheduled an expedited hearing on
February 2 to hear challenges against the redrawn maps. North Carolina’s primary
was already moved from March 8 to May 17 to accommodate ongoing litigation. Now
Republicans want to move NC Primaries to June 7 in hopes of getting the Court’s
approval to use gerrymandered maps in the 2022 mid-term elections. On January 19 the NC Senate will
determine whether to schedule the Primary on June 7.
Plaintiffs
presenting at the February 2 Supreme Court hearing oppose the redrawn district
maps saying they are partisan gerrymandered, and therefore unconstitutional. While
the trial court judges agree that the maps were drawn to give Republicans an
advantage, they don’t see anything in the constitution that would prohibit it.
They say partisanship is part of the political process and does not affect a
person’s right to “cast” a ballot.
A
major issue we face nationwide is the matter of voter nullification. It is not
our desire just to have access to the ballot. We must also make sure that once a
ballot is cast, it is counted. Republican legislatures across the nation have
engaged in a series of efforts to not only manage who has access to the ballot
box, but how each ballot is tallied once it is cast. North Carolina is among the states working
to quash the voice of minorities and progressives across this nation through
gerrymander voting districts.
So
that is the challenge in North Carolina. Voters must wait to see whether the
Court will allow their votes to be nullified by maps that don’t reflect their
will. By packing and cracking minorities and progressives into several districts
(either packing these voters into several
large districts or separating and diluting the number of like-minded voters in a
target district), Republicans can reduce the number of districts that might
deliver seats to the Democratic Party. The GOP maps are expected to give North
Carolina Republicans a 10-4 or 11-3 majority in House and strong majorities in
the state’s 2022 election.
Republican
Sen. Ralph Hise complains that the current schedule is an extremely short time
frame that will cause unnecessary confusion and chaos. However, what is causing
confusion and chaos is the Republican attempt to lessen the impact of minority
and progressive voters. Note that
Carolina Demography indicates that as July 2020 roughly 36% of North
Carolinians are registered Democrats, with only 30 % registered Republican. The
remainder of North Carolinians are unaffiliated or registered with another
party.
The
NC Court’s decision that the gerrymander districts do not impede access to the
ballot box is just a clever way to ignore the fact that, while everyone may
have the right to cast a ballot, the weight of each individual vote is skewed
based on packing and cracking by the Republican majority that diminishes the
impact of some ballots.
Let’s
hope the North Carolina Supreme Court sees it differently.
_______________
Update January 19, 2022: Republican state lawmakers passed a bill Wednesday that would delay North Carolina’s primary election a second time, but that bill is facing a potential veto by Gov. Roy Cooper (D) as Democrats were united in their opposition to it. --CBS17.com
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