-Caveat Lector- ---------- Forwarded message ---------- Date: Fri, 5 Oct 2001 12:03:40 -0700 (PDT) From: Bill White <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] To: [EMAIL PROTECTED], [EMAIL PROTECTED], [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: [AL-AWDA] Forward: GOP Driving Jews Out of State Legislatures
Jewish Dems: GOP Redistricting Plans Cross the Line By RACHEL DONADIO FORWARD STAFF Republican-controlled redistricting efforts in Texas and Utah could eliminate every Jewish Democratic state representative in each of those states, the targeted legislators are warning. The redistricting efforts in both states will pit incumbent Jewish Democrats against other incumbent Democrats in new districts in ways that critics say favor the non-Jews. In Texas, the American Jewish Committee has testified that the new map splits Houston's Jewish community in thirds, weakening its voting power. Republicans overseeing redistricting in Texas and Utah say that Jewish lawmakers were not singled out for their religion, but rather because they are Democrats. Indeed, the new maps, based on 2000 Census data, infuse current Democratic strongholds with Republicans from surrounding areas, further jeopardizing the Democrats' chances of re-election. Yet, regardless of the motivations behind them, if the maps are passed, analysts say that the clout of the Jewish Democratic minority in both Republican-dominated states could be diluted. "They're trying to do to a lot of us through redistricting what they've been unable to do at the ballot box," said Texas state Rep. Scott Hochberg, a veteran Jewish Democrat from Houston. "Democratic members who have won repeatedly in districts that elect Republicans are being removed from office by virtue of the map." "I don't perceive it as purposeful anti-Semitism or targeting, but the result remains the same," said Utah State Rep. David Litvack. Mr. Litvack and his only Jewish colleague in the legislature, state Rep. Patrice Arent, both Democrats from Salt Lake City, would be pitted against incumbent Democrats from neighboring districts. The new seats favor the non-Jewish incumbents. "It's not always in the intent where we see the injustice," Mr. Litvack said. Texas In Texas, State Representatives Elliott Naishtat in Austin and Steve Wolens in Dallas are two of four Jewish Democrats who would be paired against other Democratic incumbents in new districts with Republican majorities. Yet, the situation is most extreme in Houston where Mr. Hochberg would be pitted against his fellow Jewish Democrat, state Rep. Debra Danburg. The newly drawn, largely Republican district would favor a GOP incumbent. "It totally eliminates my district," said Mr. Hochberg, a well-respected 10-year incumbent who serves on the House Appropriations Committee. If the map is passed, he said, "I guess we look for work." Mr. Hochberg's current district, which contains Rice University and its medical center, has a strong Democratic voice. It also contains much of the city's Jewish community, which the proposed map would split into three new districts: One would contain an African-American majority, while another would stretch almost to Texas's eastern border and be overwhelmingly Republican. "They've effectively divided the community and limited our ability to elect representatives," said Ben Samuels, a vice president of AJCommittee's Houston branch. "We have testified and have lobbied and are working to have our voice heard." After the AJCommittee and others in the Jewish community testified against the map, the Legislative Board redrew it in a way that further divided the Jewish community, Mr. Hochberg said. The Houston map has drawn the ire of some African-Americans and Hispanics for similar reasons. Gay activists are upset that the new map bisects Houston's gay community, which falls largely in Ms. Danburg's district. Democrats control Texas's state House of Representatives, while the Senate has a narrow 16-15 Republican margin. The House proposed a redistricting plan that did not eliminate any Jewish seats, while the Senate did not propose any plan. Because of the lack of consensus — exacerbated by the governor saying that he would veto any legislative plan — redistricting fell to a Legislative Redistricting Board. Congressional redistricting fell into the hands of the federal courts. Texas will gain two congressional seats, for a total of 32. Four of the board's five members are Republicans. Its chairman is GOP State Attorney General John Cornyn. The Cornyn plan paired up incumbent Democrats in eight districts, incumbent Republicans in one district and Democratic against GOP incumbents in nine seats, creating 22 new open districts with no current incumbent. While the four Jewish Democrats were all paired in new districts, the state's lone Jewish Republican, State Senator Florence Shapiro from Dallas-Fort Worth, faces no challenges. "This is the most partisan redistricting plan in the history of Texas," said Mr. Naishtat. Ms. Shapiro acknowledged that the new map had been drawn in order to help the Republicans capture the state house "for the first time in 140 years." "That has everything to do with it," Ms. Shapiro said. "Texas is a Republican state." Mr. Naishtat, who is chairs the House Human Services Committee, will be pitted against two fellow Democrats in the same district. If the map is approved, both have said that they won't run against him, Mr. Naishtat said. Mr. Cornyn downplayed the religious and partisan dimensions of the redistricting. "The attorney general did not for a moment consider religion when proposing new boundary lines for the Texas legislature," said Jane Shepperd, a spokeswoman for Mr. Cornyn. She said that the attorney general's goals were "clear and two-fold: Number one, to propose plans that will pass muster with the Department of Justice, and, number two, to propose plans that will hold up to the inevitable court challenges." Mr. Naishtat disagreed. "While Cornyn may argue that it is simply a coincidence that his plan places at risk the only Jewish members of the Texas House, the fact of the matter is his plan does precisely that," Mr. Naishtat said. "The lines for each of our respective districts could easily have been drawn to avoid this clearly discriminatory outcome." Utah In Utah, a Republican-controlled House Redistricting Committee drew the state's new map, which critics have said effectively eliminates the current districts of all of the state's Jewish lawmakers and threatens many of its women legislators. In Salt Lake City, Mr. Litvack, the state representative, was paired with a neighboring Democrat in a new district that maintains "only a sliver" of his original one, he said. Mr. Litvack, 29, was elected in 2000 to the 27th District, a 30% minority residential area in southern Salt Lake City. He is the assistant Utah regional director of the National Conference for Community and Justice, formerly called the National Conference of Christians and Jews. The new map also spells trouble for the other Jewish representative, Ms. Arent, a Salt Lake City lawyer who since being elected in 1995 has gone from outsider to house minority whip. She is paired with her Democratic colleague Rep. Karen Morgan in a new district that favors Ms. Morgan. Elsewhere in Utah, two other Democrats were merged into the same district, while two Democratic districts were gerrymandered into heavily Republican districts. Republicans control two-thirds of the Utah House and Senate and all statewide offices. The redistricting committee presented its plan to the House on September 27, leaving only hours to debate a map that would likely eliminate six Democratic seats. The House had previously agreed to end debate at 3 p.m. that day so that Mr. Litvack and Ms. Arent could prepare for Yom Kippur. As the hour neared, however, the house took a voice vote and a Republican majority nearly passed a motion to continue debate. "To me that was very disrespectful and inconsiderate," Mr. Litvack said. The lack of regard for the Jewish holiday "does not typify my experience as a Jewish legislator, but it does indicate the lack of balance in the Utah state legislature," he said. Ms. Arent agreed. As a Jewish legislator in an overwhelmingly Mormon and Republican state, "It is a little lonely out here," she said. House Republicans have also blocked a resolution by Mr. Litvack and Ms. Arent that speaks out against retribution on the local Arab and Muslim communities for the September 11 terror attacks. Gerry Adair, a Republican representative who chairs the House Redistricting Committee, said that the Jewish holiday had nothing to do with the vote. "They wanted to stay and finish unfinished business," he said. Mr. Adair said population decline shaped the new map. He said that the eastern side of the Salt Lake Valley, where Mr. Litvack and Ms. Arent's districts lie, had lost more than 50,000 people. "This was nothing to do with religion or women or men representatives," Mr. Adair said. "It just happens to be that six or seven of the representatives from the east side of the Salt Lake Valley are women, out of eight lady representatives in the entire house. And that's where we lost the population," he said. Democrats counter that the top three seats that lost the most population were all Republican. Mr. Adair said that the House Democratic leadership had "requested" that they pair Mr. Litvack and Ms. Arent, among other Democrats. "That was their decision. Almost half of the Democrats voted for it," he said. "The census is very contentious in most states," Mr. Adair said. "We tried to be fair, but fair is only in the eyes of the beholder." In addition, the state's new congressional map would divide traditionally Democratic Salt Lake County into a urban-rural hybrid, making it easier for a GOP candidate to recapture the 2nd District and keep the GOP grip on the state's other two districts. The state Senate was expected to pass the map this week. Governor Mike Leavitt had said that he would sign the redistricting bills, which he likened to the television show "Survivor." __________________________________________________ Do You Yahoo!? NEW from Yahoo! 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