18 UnitedStates TheEconomistFebruary12th 2022
from reforms that keep districts fairer.
TakeColorado.Afterthe 2000 and 2010
censuses,statelegislatorstherefailedto
agreeonmaps,sostatecourtsdrewthe
linesinstead. In November2018, fedup
Coloradanspasseda ballotinitiativethat
authorisedanindependentcommissionof
residents—fourDemocrats,fourRepubli
cansandfour“unaffiliated”—toredrawthe
state’scongressionalboundaries.Itjoined
ArizonaandCalifornia(whichbeganusing
similarmodelsin 2000 and2010,respec
tively)and Michigan (2018) as the only
states using partisanbalanced commis
sionsofcitizenstodrawdistrictmaps.
Colorado’scommissionersbeganmeet
inginMarch,andbythefinalmonthsthey
wereworkingasmanyas 40 hourseach
weektomeettheirOctoberdeadline.Sim
plerulesguidedthem:createnondiscrim
inatory,contiguousdistrictsofequalsize;
maximisepoliticalcompetition;andpre
servesocalledcommunitiesofinterest—
neighbourhoodswherevotershaveshared
policyconcernsandwouldbenefitfrom
beinginthesamedistrict(examplesin
cludeethnic,racialandeconomicgroups).
Thecommission’smapsdonotrequire
approvalfromthegovernororthestateleg
islature.Thisyearthefinalmappreserves
thepartisanleaningsofColorado’sseven
existingdistricts,andaddsonemoreRe
publicanleaningseatwiththeadditional
representativethestategainedthanksto
theincreaseinitspopulation.Thecom
mission also madethe Seventh District
morecompetitive.Thecurrentrepresenta
tivethere,EdPerlmutter,a Democrat,an
nouncedlastmonththathewouldnotseek
reelection.InaclimatethatfavoursRe
publicans,hemayhavestruggledtowin
thereviseddistrictanyway.Themapsin
Michiganendedupsimilarlybalanced.
Lastly,therearethecourts.Those in
OhioandNorthCarolinabothstruckdown
mapstheysaidfavouredRepublicanstoo
much, acting as partisan gerrymanders
thatviolatedstateconstitutions.InOhio,
Republicansdrewa mapwhichmade73%
ofthestate’sdistrictsleantowardsRepub
licans—thoughthepartywononly55%of
thevotestatewide.“Byanyrationalmea
sure,”JusticeMichaelDonnellysaidinthe
court’sopinion,“thatskewedresultjust
does notaddup.”Republicans inNorth
Carolinapassedamapwhichgavethem
theedgein71%ofseats,eventhoughDo
nald Trumpbeat MrBiden by onlyone
pointtherein2020.Neitherstatehasyet
approveda newmap.
A lowercourtinAlabamaalsoruledthat
its new map is biased againstAfrican
Americans, butonFebruary7th theSu
premeCourtvoted54toapproveitforthe
2022 election.Themapprovidesforonly
oneofsevendistrictswhereblackvoters
willhavea chancetoelecta candidateof
theirchoice,ina statewhere27%ofthe
votersareblack.Plaintiffssaylegislators
couldeasilyhavedrawna second.Thede
cisionhighlightsthelimitsofa judicialap
proachto enforcing fairmapmaking—at
leastinthefederalcourts.
Crackingandpacking
Inall,acrossthe 30 statesthathavepassed
mapssofar,Democratshavegained 12 new
seatswheretheymakeupmorethanhalf
ofvotersinpresidentialelections.Yetthe
mapasa wholemaystillbebiasedtowards
Republicans.ThegapbetweenMrBiden’s
marginnationallyandinthenewmedian
islikelytobebetweenhalfanda fullper
centagepointratherthantwopoints.
Further,somepoliticalscientiststhink
a simpletallyofseatsisnotenoughtoas
sesspartisanbalancefully.NickStephano
polous, a Harvard professor who helps
withanalysisatPlanScore,a websitethat
checksmapsforfairness,preferstofocus
onthe“efficiencygap”.Thismeasuresthe
shareofDemocraticandRepublicanvotes
that are “wasted” in each seat. Wasted
votesarethosethatarecastforpartiesin
excessofthemargintheyneedindistricts
theywin,pluseveryvotecastfortheparty
in seats theylose. The measure can be
thoughtofasquantifyingbothhowmany
membersofonepartyare“cracked”into
losingdistrictsandthenumberthatare
“packed”intosaferones(seemap).
InthestatesthatJoeBidenwonin2020,
thereisanefficiencygapofroughlyfive
pointsfavouringDemocrats.Thatmeans
roughly 5%more Republicanvotes than
Democraticonesarewastedacrossthem.
Thatisanincreaseoverthetwopointgap
inthose statesunderprevious lines,re
flectingDemocraticgainsfromthegerry
mandering,reformandlitigationefforts.
ButinRepublicanstates,theefficiency
gapwillberoughly 14 points(theprecise
numberdependsonwhatthefinalmaps
looklike;ourfigureisbasedontheaverage
acrossthelikeliestplansunderconsider
ation).Thatisanincreaseoverthe13point
efficiencygap inthose statesunderthe
2020 congressionalmap.Inotherwords,
themapsinbothDemocraticandRepubli
canstateshavebecomemorebiasedasa
resultofthisdecade’sredistricting. And
theaverageRepublicanplancreatesmany
morewastedvotesthantheaverageDemo
craticone(seechart).Instateswithinde
pendent redistricting commissions, by
contrast,theabsoluteefficiencygapfellby
nearlythreepoints,meaningdistrictswere
lessgerrymandered.Itincreasedbythree
pointselsewhere.
Accordingtoestimatesofdistrictparti
sanshipproducedbyMrStephanopolous
andsharedwithTheEconomist, moreRe
publicanstateshavealsofocusedmoreon
ringfencingtheircurrentadvantage.That
hasmeantshiftingseatswithmildRepub
licanadvantagesfartherright,insteadof
focusingondrawingDemocratsoutofthe
onestheyhave.InTexas,forexample,the
Republicandominatedlegislaturepacked
Democrats into five new seats, but re
moved all but one competitive district.
Andittookthetwonewrepresentatives
the state was apportioned in 2020 and
drewtwonewdistrictswhereRepublicans
areexpectedtowin.Thisalmostensures
thatthestate’s congressionaldelegation
willstayRepublicanforthenextdecade.
Although rosier for Democrats, the
2022 round of redistricting reflects the
armsracenatureofgerrymandering.“Na
tionalpartisanfairnessisperfectlycom
patible”, Mr Stephanopolous says, “with
extremesubnationalpartisanunfairness.”
BiasinRepublicanstatessuchasTexasand
Florida,andinDemocraticstatessuchas
New Mexico andOregon, still produces
manywastedvotesincongressionalraces,
evenifthenumberofseatspartiesareex
pectedtowinnationallyisroughlyfair.It
isnopuzzlewhoishurtwhenpoliticians
areabletoselecttheirownvoters.n
Sources:N.Stephanopoulos;FiveThirtyEight;TheEconomist
Changeinpartisanbias*ofcongressional
districtplans,2020-22,%points
Deeperblue,darkerred
ME
VT NH
WA ID ND IL MI NY MA
OR NV WY SD IA
MN
OH PA CT RI
CA UT CO MO KY WV MD DE
NM KS TN NC SC DC
AL GA
HI FL
AK
IN
NE VA
OK
TX
AR
NJ
WI
AZ
LA MS
MT
Stateswithonly
onedistrict
30 20 10 5 0 5 10
Statesthathavenotyet
passeda planfor2022†
Nochange
Moreecientrigging ←Dem Rep→
*Measuredbythe“eciencygap”,theshareof
wastedDemocraticversusRepublicanvotes
†Average change in plans under consideration
Short end of the stack
United States, average partisan bias*
in congressional district plans, % points
Sources: N. Stephanopoulos; FiveThirtyEight; The Economist
*Measured by the “efficiency gap”, the share of
wasted Democratic versus Republican votes
Republican
states
Democratic
states
0 5 10 15
22 2