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- <text id=93TT0134>
- <title>
- July 12, 1993: Snakes or Ladders?
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- July 12, 1993 Reno:The Real Thing
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- POLITICS, Page 30
- Snakes or Ladders
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>A controversial Supreme Court decision on racial redistricting
- uncovers a can of worms. Or is it a string of pearls?
- </p>
- <p>By DAVID VAN BIEMA--With reporting by Wendy Cole/New York and Michael Riley/Atlanta
- </p>
- <p> There can be no doubt as to what sort of beast North Carolina's
- 12th District is. It ambles crookedly from the textile mills
- of Gastonia to the skyscrapered banking district of Charlotte,
- through Lexington's furniture factories, picking up a voter
- or 10 on its way between Greensboro's downtown and Burlington's
- outlet malls; onward, ever onward, until it comes to rest 160
- miles later among the black neigh borhoods of Durham. It is
- narrow, as narrow in some spots as one lane of the I-85 Interstate
- highway. Its friends call it "a string of pearls." Most people
- settle for "snake" or "worm." But what it is, obviously and
- manifestly, is a gerrymander.
- </p>
- <p> But it is a noble gerrymander, whose existence has given North
- Carolina one of its first black members of Congress in this
- century. At least that was the assumption until last week, when
- a divided Supreme Court declared that the creature could well
- be unconstitutional. Justice Sandra Day O'Connor, writing for
- a 5-to-4 majority, not only swatted the squiggly district; she
- moved on to question the mechanism that created it, an important
- part of the Voting Rights Act of 1965. Her ruling reopened a
- national debate on whether drawing congressional districts along
- racial lines is a laudable way to ensure a ladder for shut-out
- minorities--or a step toward a dangerous Balkanization of
- American politics.
- </p>
- <p> The phrase gerrymander, coined in the early 1800s to describe
- a salamander-shaped district engineered by MassachuGovernor
- Elbridge Gerry, originally referred to an amphibian of convenience,
- the creature of whichever self-serving pol was carving up the
- turf. Such shenanigans have generally been deemed dubious because
- American democracy is based on the premise that legislators
- are elected to represent geographic regions and communities--diverse constituencies that share sewer systems and schools
- and workplaces--rather than a specific ethnic group, economic
- class or partisan faction. Circles and squares were fine; snakes
- and salamanders and inkblots tended to be perversions committed
- for political gain.
- </p>
- <p> It took the Voting Rights Act to suggest the possibility of
- a "good" gerrymander. The act's 1982 revision and related court
- rulings required states with histories of racial discrimination
- to draw up districts where minority candidates would have a
- viable chance of being elected. Resulting jurisdictions with
- built-in black majorities came to be called "majority-minority"
- districts. More than a dozen new majority-minority seats were
- born in the South. Because of the redistricting based on the
- 1990 census, the number of black and Hispanic representatives
- in Congress rose from 36 to a politically potent 56 last year.
- </p>
- <p> Many of the new districts, created with the help of computers,
- looked strange but possessed some geographic integrity. Not
- so the North Carolina 12th. The meandering serpent represents
- not just an attempt to concentrate black voters but also a bit
- of traditional gerrymandering, as the Democratic state legislature
- strove to avoid siphoning away too many black Democrats from
- incumbents in adjoining districts. The resulting line segment
- cleaves so closely to the Interstate that state representative
- Mickey Michaux, who is black, jokes, "You could drive down I-85
- with both doors open and kill everybody in the district." Alive
- and voting last year, they put Mel Watt, a black Democrat, in
- Congress.
- </p>
- <p> It was the grotesque shape of the 12th District that most offended
- the Supreme Court's majority. "Appearances do matter," Justice
- O'Connor wrote, praising "compactness, contiguity, and respect
- for political subdivisions." And if the court had limited itself
- to a slap at the aesthetic excess of one bizarre district, the
- furor would have been minimal. Instead, however, it questioned
- the entire premise of racially motivated gerrymandering. The
- five white voters who brought the case, O'Connor wrote, were
- properly offended by a redistricting that "can be viewed only
- as an effort to segregate the races for purposes of voting."
- She warned that "racial gerrymandering, even for remedial purposes,
- may Balkanize us into competing racial factions." Continuing
- to spin the globe in search of metaphors, she added, "A reapportionment
- plan that includes in one district individuals who belong to
- the same race, but who are otherwise widely separated by geographical
- and political boundaries, and who may have little in common
- with one another but the color of their skin, bears an uncomfortable
- resemblance to political apartheid."
- </p>
- <p> O'Connor granted that "race-conscious state decision making"
- should not be impermissible "in all circumstances." But she
- suggested that if racial considerations were a district's only
- reason for being, the damage done to the district's white voters
- under the Constitution's equal-protection clause might outweigh
- any good. The court remanded the case to the North Carolina
- district court for "close scrutiny" to determine whether a "compelling
- governmental interest" was served that would outweigh the injustice.
- </p>
- <p> As liberal circles erupted in protest, other gerrymanders underwent
- existentialist spasms. Of these, the most endangered may be
- the Louisiana Fourth. Says lawyer Paul Hurd, who represents
- a group of voters who have challenged the district in federal
- court: "If you look up bizarre in Webster's, you'd find a picture
- of this district." Four hundred miles long, and only 80 ft.
- wide at its narrowest, it loops from the state's extreme northwest
- corner along its northern border, then sends several fingers
- far south in search of the minority vote. Cleo Fields, the Democrat
- who won the district in 1992 and is now Washington's youngest
- Congressman, notes that his voters have more than color in common;
- they have poverty too, and are a valid constituency. But the
- Fourth's challengers see it as the product of an unholy compromise
- between blacks and Republicans in the state legislature, benefiting
- both at the expense of white Democratic incumbents. A three-judge
- panel of a federal district court in Shreveport heard the case
- in August, but delayed its decision--perhaps awaiting last
- week's high-court ruling.
- </p>
- <p> Congresswoman Cyn thia McKinney of Georgia makes a fierce defense
- of her 11th District, whose 250-mile length includes middle-class
- black suburbs in south DeKalb County, central Georgia's farms
- and the inner cities of Savannah and Augusta. McKinney does
- not claim that her constituents' needs are of a piece; she says
- that with seats on both the House's Foreign Affairs and Agriculture
- committees, she can look out for export as well as farm policy,
- and "pull urban, suburban and rural together." She hints that
- the fact that the district unites the black minority should
- be sufficient: of those who would use the high-court decision
- to challenge her, she says, "Some of us in Georgia are still
- fighting the Civil War."
- </p>
- <p> Back in North Carolina, there are people who believe that the
- now infamous 12th will clear O'Connor's test of "close scrutiny"
- when the case comes home. Shape notwithstanding, it is the state's
- only urban district: 80% of its constituents live in towns of
- more than 20,000. Ted Arrington, a political science professor
- at the University of North Carolina-Charlotte, notes of its
- voters, "They have the same kind of neighborhoods--read decaying;
- they have the same kind of education problems--read poor schools;
- and the same economic concerns--read no jobs. These areas
- do have an enormous commonality of interests."
- </p>
- <p> Eventually, as more challenges to oddly shaped districts accrue
- and are appealed to the Supreme Court, it may be possible to
- know whether O'Connor, as the liberals fear, was really preparing
- the ground for an all-out attack on racially motivated redistricting.
- Certainly her decision comes at a moment when traditional conservative
- complaints about majority-minority districting are being joined
- by voices on the left. None other than Lani Guinier, Clinton's
- discarded nominee for assistant Attorney General, wrote that
- they may merely serve the end of "isolating black constituents
- from the white majority, from other blacks who do not reside
- in the district and from potential legislative allies." Says
- Carol Swain, a political science professor at Princeton: "The
- court made the right decision for the wrong reasons."
- </p>
- <p> Both supporters and opponents of O'Connor's decision see it
- as consistent with the conservative conception of a "color-blind"
- America, one in which, if the state treats everybody equally,
- any remnants of the historical inequality will eventually wither
- away. This view of social justice stands in stark opposition
- to the liberal assumption that inequality is so bad that the
- only realistic remedy is to occasionally reach in and favor
- minorities. By such lights, the Balkanization that O'Connor
- fears has actually been in place for more than a hundred years;
- her worries about racial gerrymandering, suggests Dayna Cunningham
- of the NAACP Legal Defense and Education Fund, are idyllic,
- "based on a view of race and politics in this country that has
- no grounding in reality."
- </p>
- <p> No one likes gerrymandering, even in this day and age. But some
- see it as a medicine made necessary by generations of institutional
- racism. If it were eliminated, what would replace it? Perhaps
- nothing would work just fine, as the conservatives hope. Perhaps
- some experimentation is in order involving the election of blacks
- to at-large seats through systems of "cumulative" or "limited"
- voting. Yet the political theory is knotty, and the surrounding
- sensitivities raw: it was grapplings along precisely these lines
- that a month ago crippled Guinier's public career.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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