By Mildred Robertson
North
Carolinians can expect more equitable maps as they head to the polls on May 17.
On Monday, March 7, the U.S. Supreme Court denied an appeal by GOP lawmakers to
reinstate their gerrymandered political districts for North Carolina’s
congressional elections. That means the voters will cast ballots in districts
drawn by outside experts for the state’s 14 seats in the U.S. House of
Representatives as prescribed by NC state courts in a redistricting lawsuit
brought to achieve more fair maps.
The U.S. Supreme Court’s denial ends the GOP lawmaker’s emergency appeal to
block the redrawn redistricting maps to replace their gerrymandered maps. The
NC State Supreme Court let a nonpartisan panel of experts draw the new map
after concluding the Republican state legislature’s map violated the state
Constitution by heavily favoring Republican voters.
North Carolina is a purple state that is fairly evenly divided between Democrat
and Republican voters. Approximately 36% of North Carolinians are registered
Democrats, while 30% are Republicans. Unaffiliated voters account for 33% of
the North Carolina voting population. The congressional maps drawn by the
outside experts will produce primary and general elections more favorable to
Democrats than previous maps Republicans passed in November and February where
they were drawn to guarantee a Republican victory in up to 10 of the 14
districts.
While Democrats can take a victory lap for more equitable maps in 2022, the
fight is not over. Several of the Supreme Court Justices wanted to take the
case. In a 6-3 decision, the Court rejected the GOP redistricting case, stating
that it was too close to the election to force states to redraw maps. However,
several of the justices stated that the Court will eventually have to address
whether a state court has the authority to reject rules adopted by a state
legislature for conducting federal elections.
While not viewed as ideal by many on the left, the new maps are expected to
benefit Democrats more than those proposed by the Republican-controlled state
legislature. Based upon the new voting map, the GOP is expected to win seven
congressional seats, while the Democrats will likely win six. A new
Raleigh-area congressional seat is a probable toss-up. The U.S. House map
approved by a panel of judges will only be used in the 2022 election cycle.
If Republicans retake the state Supreme Court by winning at least one of two
state Supreme Court races this year and GOP lawmakers retain their legislative
majorities, the party could potentially enact more partisan maps that benefit
them. So it is extremely important that everyone who wants to maintain fair
maps register and vote in this primary and general election.
Mail-in voting begins on March 28. The civilian voter registration deadline is
April 22. One-stop, in-person early voting begins April 28 and ends at 3 p.m.
May 14.