This could mean that the release of population data at the census block level, which is what is used in redistricting itself, may not be released until after April 30. That could cause serious problems for states whose constitutions mandate redistricting deadlines weeks afterward
It appears highly likely that New Jersey will use its current legislative maps for 2021 & won't redistrict their legislature until 2023. Virginia may end up doing the same for November. Several other states with early summer deadlines for redistricting could be thrown into chaos
The census delaying the release of redistricting data this year is a good reason why states should change their redistricting deadlines to make them more flexible in similar future situations, but amending state constitutions is a lengthy process, & it's too late to do so by 2022
The census is now expecting to not release the population data needed to conduct redistricting until after July 30. Multiple states have constitutional deadlines for drawing new maps before then, & it's unclear what will happen brennancenter.org/our-work/resea…
5 of 14 New Hampshire GOP state senators have introduced a bill that would gerrymander the state's Electoral College votes by assigning them by gerrymandered congressional district. GOP legislators proposed this same scheme this month in MI & WI too gencourt.state.nh.us/bill_status/bi…
In a 4th state, the GOP is proposing *ending* the allocation of electoral votes congressional district: Nebraska, where Biden won the 2nd District & its one electoral vote.
GOP could pass these power grabs in NE & NH now, but MI & WI depend on GOP winning 2022 governors' races
An important point: These GOP Electoral College manipulation schemes aren't even guaranteed to help the GOP, & so much of it is just a knee-jerk reaction to the specific manner of Biden's 2020 win. But eventually, the GOP may get smarter about these power grabs & actually do it
Today, we restored majority rule by inaugurating a Democratic president & Senate majority that won with millions more votes than the GOP. It's been 4 straight years of GOP minority rule in the White House combined with 6 straight years of GOP minority rule in the Senate
But don't ignore how close we came to total GOP minority rule.
Had Trump won just 42,921 more votes, the Senate GOP won just 1,018 more votes, & GOP not lost anti-gerrymandering lawsuits last decade, they'd have held the White House, Senate, & House despite millions fewer votes
American democracy survived the Trump era, but not because it's resilient. We barely scraped by, & the threat of far-right authoritarianism is far from over when GOP leaders of all stripes tell the Big Lie with impunity that the 2020 election was stolen.
Senate Dems just introduced the most important democracy reform bill since the 1965 Voting Rights Act, joining House Dems. I detailed the major components here, including sweeping voting access expansions, banning House gerrymandering, & public financing: dailykos.com/stories/2021/1…
Note that this bill doesn't include a restoration of the Voting Rights Act, which is planned as separate legislation, but this bill does include a reaffirmed commitment to restore the VRA. You can read the section-by-section Senate bill summary here: democrats.senate.gov/imo/media/doc/…
Here's the full list of major provisions in the sweeping democracy-reform bill that House & now Senate Dems have introduced as the first bill of the new session. These would be the biggest expansion of voting access & fair elections since the 1965 VRA dailykos.com/stories/2021/1…
Martin Luther King Jr.'s "Give Us the Ballot" speech (May 17, 1957).
King called the right to vote the most critical achievement of the civil rights movement because it was the key right that made securing all the other rights possible.
Excerpts below:
"3 years ago the Supreme Court of this nation rendered ... a decision which will long be stenciled on the mental sheets of succeeding generations. For all men of goodwill, this May 17 decision [Brown v. Board] came as a joyous daybreak to end the long night of human captivity."
"Unfortunately, this noble & sublime decision has not gone without opposition. This opposition has often risen to ominous proportions. Many states have risen up in open defiance. The legislative halls of the South ring loud with such words as 'interposition' & 'nullification.'"
Really bad news for fair redistricting in Arizona, where GOP Gov. Ducey stacked the court commission that screens applicants for the redistricting commission by not appointing any Dems to the former, meaning a closeted Republican could get chosen as the redistricting tiebreaker
Arizona is the same state where, after the independent chair sided with Dems in 2011 to pass districts that gave neither party a sizable unfair advantage, GOP tried to fire the chair, & when that failed, tried to get SCOTUS to strike down the commission so they could gerrymander
Arizona's GOP Gov. Doug Ducey is the very same governor who packed the state Supreme Court in 2016 by adding 2 more seats & later manipulated the nominating commission so he could install another arch-conservative hardliner to cement far-right control slate.com/news-and-polit…
New York's Dem Senate has passed 9 bills to improve absentee mail voting & protect voting access. New York's election admin & voting access have long been a national embarrassment, so these reforms are long overdue. Dems have passed many reforms since 2019 cnycentral.com/news/local/nys…
New York state Senate Democrats have passed a same-day voter registration constitutional amendment after both chambers did so in 2019. Once the Assembly again follows suit, it would appear on the ballot this November alongside this fall's local elections nysenate.gov/newsroom/press…
NY Senate Dems passed a constitutional amendment that lowers the threshold for overriding the bipartisan redistricting commission from 2/3 to 3/5 & make it easier for Dems to gerrymander. However, Dems won 2/3 majorities in 2020, so it may be moot for 2022 nysenate.gov/legislation/bi…