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Redistricting Practicalities: Lessons from the Midwest Mapping Project. Michael P. McDonald Associate Professor, George Mason University Non-Resident Senior Fellow, Brookings Institution Consultant, 2000 Arizona Independent Redistricting Com’ish
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Redistricting Practicalities:Lessons from the Midwest Mapping Project Michael P. McDonald Associate Professor, George Mason University Non-Resident Senior Fellow, Brookings Institution Consultant, 2000 Arizona Independent Redistricting Com’ish Expert or Consulting Expert Witness in AK, AZ, CA, MI, & NY
Census Geography Census Place: Springfield, IL Water: Lake Springfield Census Block Boundary
Compactness Lessons • Three ways to measure district compactness: • Perimeter Lengths: Districts that follow straight-edge features like county lines • District Area: Circular districts with ragged edges • Center of Population: Districts that encompass urban areas • Compactness typically conflicts with respecting political boundaries, particularly municipalities, cities, towns, and other political subdivisions.
Taking Geography Seriously • Where Democrats and Republicans live matters
Census Geography Election Boundaries Water Census Block Boundary Ward Boundary
Respecting Counties Lines:Peoria and Tazewell Counties, Illinois
Lessons from Political Geography • Democrats tend to be inefficiently concentrated in urban areas located along state borders from a partisan fairness standpoint. • BUT, the size of the districts relative to the size of a state’s urban areas matters. The smaller the district size, the worse Democrats do. • Weak evidence that respecting census place boundaries modestly mitigates this disadvantage by tying mid-sized urban areas together. • BUT, can inefficiently concentrate Democrats into large urban cities.
Racial Communities • Finding: Minority communities are highly concentrated into Cleveland and Detroit area districts by rules respecting political boundaries. • A racial bloc voting analysis would need to be performed to determine if these are Voting Rights Act Section 2 violations
Existing State Constitutional and Statutory Rules • Redistricting criteria are often in conflict • How to resolve conflicts is often a matter of interpretation
Conclusions • One-size reform does not fit all districts, even within the same state • A politically blind process does not guarantee a politically fair outcome • Care should be taken in choosing criteria, as a set of criteria can be a gerrymander in sheep’s clothing.