A lot of time and attention have already been devoted to what happens when voters attempt to cast their ballots in next year’s midterm elections. While access to the ballot is definitely at risk in many states, the fight over whether those votes matter is also underway.
Which brings up a question that I’m struggling to answer. What should be more important for Democrats: leveling the playing field now — getting rid of drawing partisan election maps altogether — to negate the GOP’s advantages? Or winning the long game, even if it means being as vicious as the GOP in winning elections before they even begin, by drawing maps that prevent Republicans from winning seats?
An extra seat could make or break control of the House in 2022.
That question is being asked both in Washington and around the country. Ahead of the 2020 elections, state-level political operatives were confident that a looming blue wave in the presidential race would also give Democrats control over a number of state legislative chambers. Instead, almost no state legislatures flipped, leaving the census-mandated redistricting process firmly in the hands of the same GOP that masterfully used the 2010 process to its advantage.
That has left Democrats in states where they do control the legislatures with the dilemma noted above. Making things more fraught is that Democrats have over the years moved to embrace nonpartisan redistricting commissions to alleviate the gerrymandering that has plagued elections since 1812. It’s a positive step in favor of good governance — but one that worries some people that the party is unilaterally disarming instead of playing to win.
New Mexico is one state that has recently set up a commission to handle redrawing boundaries. But as Dave Wasserman, the House editor of the Cook Political Report, noted Friday, New Mexico Democrats have a chance to lock in all three seats in the congressional delegation ahead of 2022 — if they override the commission’s probable recommendations:
If the map’s main goal were compactness or proportionality, NM would probably end up with a clean-looking 2D-1R map like the one below. But it’s tough to believe, in this high-stakes political environment, partisans won’t press their advantage via gerrymandering. pic.twitter.com/7DGMGbIeCF
— Dave Wasserman (@Redistrict) July 9, 2021
An extra seat could make or break control of the House next year. As things stand, the Democrats’ majority is hanging by a thread, with only five seats preventing a GOP takeover — and the minority party traditionally makes gains in the midterms.
Even a small shift in national sentiment can have a huge impact post-gerrymander. Ahead of the 2018 midterms, when the Democrats took control of the House, Michael Li and Laura Royden of the Brennan Center for Justice made it clear how the GOP had tried to screw over Democrats with their intense gerrymandering:
In 2006, a roughly five-and-a-half-point lead in the national popular vote was enough for Democrats to pick up 31 seats and win back the House majority they had lost to Newt Gingrich. But our research shows that a similar margin of victory in 2018 would most likely net Democrats only 13 seats, leaving the Republicans firmly in charge.
Democrats actually won by 8 points in 2018, an advantage of over 8.6 million votes, allowing them to overcome the hurdles to taking the majority. But even though President Joe Biden won the popular vote by millions of votes last year, that didn’t translate into more seats for Democrats — in fact, they lost seats.
So when you have folks like Rep. Ronny Johnson, R-Texas, saying redistricting “alone should get us our majority back,” you can see the cause for concern among Democrats who think giving up the ability to gerrymander GOP House seats out of existence is an unforced error. And thanks to a 2018 Supreme Court ruling, federal courts no longer have the authority to step in and order state governments to fix overly gerrymandered districts.
This all means there’s nothing stopping Democrats from playing hardball, too. But gerrymandering in most states where Democrats already have control won’t ultimately be enough to hold the House. Why? The GOP controls the majority of states’ governments.
Gerrymandering in most states where Democrats already have control won’t ultimately be enough to hold the House.
The biggest threat comes from states like Texas, where significant gains among Democratic voters could be quashed depending on how electoral lines are drawn. And this will be the first time in over 50 years that states in the South that once had to submit their revised districts to the Justice Department for preclearance under the Voting Rights Act will no longer have to do so. Couple that with the Supreme Court’s 2018 ruling and it’s a recipe for some truly wild maps.








