Tom Delay Ambushes Texas--And America
by Steven Hill and Rob Richie
Led by US House Majority Leader Tom DeLay and Bush political mastermind
Karl Rove, Texas Republicans have completed their ambush of
congressional Democrats. After DeLay spent three days huddled in private
conferences with bickering Republican legislators, they gerrymandered US
House districts in order to knock off as many as seven Democratic
incumbents--and help secure right-wing Republican dominance of the House
of Representatives for a decade.
For months, Texas Republicans tried to re-open the can of worms known as
redistricting in an unprecedented series of special sessions. Twice
Democratic legislators fled the state to block a quorum. But
power-hungry Republicans were relentless, and now they've finally
crushed Democratic opposition. The battle moves to the courts, but it's
unlikely that the carefully vetted map will be overturned.
Simply by rejiggering district lines in Texas, Republicans have padded
their slim majority in the US House so that they can even more brazenly
avoid any need to work with House Democrats--or even moderate
Republicans. Their dominance has little to do with how many votes they
win, or how popular Republican candidates are, either nationally or in
Texas. It's much more the power of computers and databases to slice and
dice the electorate, creating precisely crafted "designer districts" for
the candidates of the party in power.
Just as perniciously, the GOP plan is designed to wipe out nearly every
moderate and white Democrat from the Texas congressional delegation. For
instance, long-time Democratic House leader Martin Frost has been drawn
out of a seat that is now 63 percent Republican. Richard Murray, a
professor of political science at the University of Houston, predicted
that the GOP plan eventually will leave Texas without a single white
majority district represented by a Democrat.
"This plan basically envisions all Democrats elected to Congress being
either from Hispanic-majority or African-American-majority districts,"
Professor Murray said.
And yet voting rights advocates aren't happy with DeLay's redistricting
plan either. People of color were underrepresented in the old
congressional map and had a legitimate case for increased
representation. But even if minorities now pick up one seat, which is
possible, it will come at the cost of hundreds of thousands of Latino
and African-American voters now being "represented" by conservative
Republicans rather than by more like-minded Democrats. In essence, the
Republicans have sinisterly manipulated the winner-take-all districts to
pit the electoral opportunities of people of color against white
moderate Democrats.
Texas is just the tip of the rather gnarly iceberg of gerrymandering.
With Republicans at a state level having controlled redistricting in
such big states as Florida, Michigan, Ohio, Pennsylvania and now Texas,
GOP leaders have encouraged attempts to draw districts that not only get
rid of white Democrats, but also moderate Republicans. The nationwide
result has been nothing less than titanic. Increasingly, the House is
polarized by representatives considerably to the left or right of most
of the state's voters, even as the political center of the House has
moved sharply rightward. Safe seats have become the rule, two party
politics is dead in most districts, and entire regions of Red and Blue
America have become balkanized one-party fiefdoms.
Most alarmingly, these monumental shifts are cemented in for the
foreseeable future. Nationwide, very few of the 435 House districts have
any chance of changing parties anytime soon. Only four House incumbents
lost to challengers in 2002, and fewer than one in ten races were
decided by less than 10%. And it will get worse throughout the decade.
Will Texans really benefit from a polarized congressional delegation of
22 conservative white Republicans and 10 liberal minority Democrats, as
the DeLay plan envisions? Do Texans really want a state with a "white
party" and a "racial minority party?" Is that good for Texas, or any
other state? In South Africa, they used to call that apartheid.
South Africa, ironically, provides the best solution to this dilemma.
Post-apartheid South Africa adopted a "full representation" voting
method in multi-seat districts--one that allows voters of all political
persuasions and races to control and define their representation, not
the map-makers. If Texas elected its US House delegation by a full
representation method like ones already used by such cities as Peoria,
Illinois and Amarillo, Texas, a broader political spectrum would be
elected. Representation of people of color would not be pitted against
white, moderate Democrats.
Instead, DeLay, Rove, and the GOP have engineered our antiquated
winner-take-all system to create a new kind of apartheid of
representation. This cannot help but further undermine confidence in our
already shaky political system.
Steven Hill is a senior analyst at the Center for Voting and Democracy
(www.fairvote.org)
and author of Fixing Elections: The Failure of
America's Winner Take All Politics (Routledge Press,
www.FixingElections.com),
which has just been released in paperback. Rob
Richie is executive director of the Center. The Center is the lead
organizer of the major "Claim Democracy" conference in Washington, D.C.
on November 22-23 (for more info, see
www.DemocracyUSA.org).
|