Gerrymandering
2011 Style
By
Dr.
Jimmie R. Applegate
The bipartisan Washington State Congressional Redistricting
Commission has drafted the state voting district map to include the first ever
“Majority-Minority Voting District”.
From the beginning of the redistricting process activist individuals and
Hispanic groups (ACLU, One America, Paul Opostolidis, Aaron Case) lobbied
persistently for the creation of such a district. The new 9th Congressional District
has, according to Baker, “slightly less than 50 percent white mainly due to large blocs of Asians and blacks”. (Baker,
Mike “10th Congressional District creates swing seat”, Yakima Herald
Republic, December 29, 2011, p. 5A)
When a congressional voting district is drawn to
create a district in which “large blocs of Asians and blacks” are a majority
and where “slightly less than 50% [are] white” the result is racial
gerrymandering that creates political apartheid in its rawest and most odious
form. Racial gerrymandering was an
anathema when used to “pack” or “crack” the Black vote. In fact the 1965 Voting Rights Act was passed
partially to prohibit the development of political apartheid by manipulating
the boundaries of congressional voting districts. Given that track record, I must ask two
questions: “Why is it OK today to create majority-minority districts that
result in a reverse form of political apartheid?” and, “Is race the most
important characteristic of a political candidate as promoted by the drawing of
majority-minority voting districts?”
There appears to be no question in the minds of the
Redistricting Commissioners about the appropriateness of creating
majority-minority districts. The Yakima
Herald Republic (Faulk, Mike, Debate over 15th “District boundaries
slows process”, December 30, 2011, p. B1 and p. B3) reported “Both
[commissioners] agree the 15th District be Latino” by either 60% or
slightly in the majority.
It looks like Latino and other political activists
(One America, United for Full Representation, Asian Pacific Islander Americans
for Civic Empowerment, National Voting Rights Advocacy Initiative, Win/Win
Organization, Cheryl Cayabyab (APACE), Tony Sandoval (Yakima County Democratic
Chairman)) and the Redistricting Commissioners aim to reinvent the wheel by
focusing on race as a legitimate means to promote reverse discrimination. I am unaware of empirical data that supports
the position that all members of a minority, or a majority, group vote in lock
step fashion. One of the main foci of
the civil rights movement was to abolish seeing individuals as members of any
race, but rather as human beings each with different attitudes, political
philosophies, desires, needs, and economic status regardless of the community
in where they live.
Even if empirical data exist to support such a
position, Shields argued that since the 1990’s “gerrymandering based solely on
racial data has been ruled unconstitutional by the United States Supreme Court
under the Fourteenth Amendment, first in Shaw v. Reno (1993) and subsequently
in Miller v. Johnson (1995)”. See: http://www.drury.edu/ess/irconf/MShields.html.
If racial gerrymandering is unconstitutional when it
is used to inhibit voting rights of a specific group, why is it not equally
unconstitutional when used to promote voting influence by a specific group or
groups. Putting the question of legality
aside, gerrymandering by race is poor public policy given the combustible
nature of the illegal alien controversy between federal and state governments.
The United States no longer is a “melting pot where
immigrates become one with Americans of all races and nationalities. Rather the United States is becoming a multicultural
and multinational nation of various national and religious groups who expect
citizens to accommodate their national and religious customs and beliefs,
including national symbols and laws, even when they conflict with the customs,
beliefs, symbols and laws of American citizens.
The creation of majority-minority districts by
racial gerrymandering is a major mistake that will exacerbate this tension with
potentially serious results. Let us hope
that these obvious politically based decisions, or lack of decisions, by the
Redistricting Commissioners will be modified by wiser heads in the State
Legislature as Article 2, Section 7 states: “(7) The legislature may amend the
redistricting plan but must do so by a two-thirds vote of the legislators
elected or appointed to each house of the legislature. Any amendment must have
passed both houses by the end of the thirtieth day of the first session
convened after the commission has submitted its plan to the legislature. After
that day, the plan, with any legislative amendments, constitutes the state
districting law.”
Reinventing the wheel by using Racial Gerrymandering
to promote social policy has no place in 2011, or henceforth. After all, we are not hyphenated-Americans
with multiple national loyalties. We are
proud Americans loyal to one nation, one flag and one oath of allegiance.