Current:Home > InvestNorth Carolina redistricting lawsuit tries `fair` election claim to overturn GOP lines -Prosperity Pathways
North Carolina redistricting lawsuit tries `fair` election claim to overturn GOP lines
View
Date:2025-04-17 05:20:37
RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) — Another lawsuit challenging North Carolina district lines for Congress and the legislature to be used starting this year seeks a new legal route to strike down maps when critics say they’ve been manipulated for political gain.
Nearly a dozen voters are plaintiffs in the lawsuit filed Wednesday in Wake County Superior Court that asks judges to declare there’s a right in the state constitution to “fair” elections. They also want at least several congressional and General Assembly districts that they say violate that right struck down and redrawn.
At least three redistricting lawsuits challenging the lines enacted by the Republican-controlled General Assembly in the fall for use through the 2030 elections have been filed in federal court. All of them alleged illegal racial gerrymandering that dilutes the voting power of Black citizens.
Federal and North Carolina courts halted in recent years the idea that judges have authority to declare redistricting maps are illegal partisan gerrymanders because one party manipulates lines excessively to win more elections. Wednesday’s lawsuit appears to attempt to bypass those rulings in North Carolina courtrooms.
The text of the North Carolina Constitution doesn’t specifically identify a right to fair elections, although it does state that elections “shall be often held” and that “all elections shall be free.”
When combined with a clause stating the people have many other unnamed rights, the argument can be made that fair elections are also a constitutional entitlement as well, said Bob Orr, a former state Supreme Court justice and lead attorney for the plaintiffs.
“The focus and purpose behind this lawsuit is to hopefully get a positive answer that citizens do have a right to fair elections and stuffing districts with favorable voters to your side violates that right,” Orr told reporters. “What good are free elections if they’re not fair, or what good are frequent elections if they’re not fair?”
Democrats and others have accused GOP mapmakers of enacting district lines in October that pulled in and out voting blocs so Republicans have a good chance to retain veto-proof majorities in the General Assembly and made it nearly impossible for three sitting Democratic members of Congress to be reelected. All three of them chose not to seek reelection.
The lawsuit details how redrawing lines for the 6th, 13th and 14th Congressional Districts, a Wilmington-area state Senate district and Charlotte-area state House district violated the right to free elections.
The case will be heard by a three-judge panel appointed by Supreme Court Chief Justice Paul Newby. It ultimately could end up at the Supreme Court, where Republicans hold five of the seven seats and last year agreed that the state constitution did not limit the practice of drawing maps with partisan gain in mind. That ruling reversed a 2022 decision by a state Supreme Court that had a Democratic majority.
While the lawsuit seeks changes in time for the 2024 elections, resolving the case before the fall would appear to be a heavy lift.
Republican legislative leaders are among the lawsuit defendants. GOP lawmakers have said their maps were lawfully created by following longstanding redistricting principles and omitting the use of racial data in drawing them.
Orr, once a Republican candidate for governor but now an unaffiliated voter, said Wednesday’s lawsuit is different from partisan gerrymandering claims, which relied in part on other portions of the state constitution.
Orr said it’s not about previous arguments that one political party drew districts that set their candidates up to win a number of seats far and above the party’s percentage in the electorate. Rather, he said, it’s about protecting the rights of individual voters, who with fair elections are provided with the power to limit their government.
“When there is an intentional aggregation and apportionment of voters in a district that tilts the election toward one political party or candidate and therefore, potentially preordains the outcome of an election, then a “fair” election cannot take place and the constitutional rights of the voters have been violated,” the lawsuit reads. The lawsuit offers a three-pronged standard to determine what is a fair election.
veryGood! (73132)
Related
- Travis Hunter, the 2
- Family of 4. Beloved sister. Uncle whose 'smile stood out': Some of the lives lost in Maui wildfires
- UN: North Korea is increasing repression as people are reportedly starving in parts of the country
- Woman sentenced to 25 years in prison for murdering victim whose headless body was found in a park
- Gen. Mark Milley's security detail and security clearance revoked, Pentagon says
- 76ers star James Harden floats idea of playing professionally in China
- Key takeaways from Trump's indictment in Georgia's 2020 election interference case
- Jamie Foxx Shares Update on His Health After Unexpected Dark Journey
- Which apps offer encrypted messaging? How to switch and what to know after feds’ warning
- US Army soldier accused of killing his wife in Alaska faces court hearing
Ranking
- Which apps offer encrypted messaging? How to switch and what to know after feds’ warning
- South Korea’s spy agency says North Korea is preparing ICBM tests, spy satellite launch
- Which digital pinball machines are right for your home?
- Paramount decides it won’t sell majority stake in BET Media Group, source tells AP
- Skins Game to make return to Thanksgiving week with a modern look
- 3 dead from rare bacterial infection in New York area. What to know about Vibrio vulnificus.
- New Zealand mother convicted of killing her 3 young daughters
- Lithuania closes 2 checkpoints with Belarus over Wagner Group border concerns
Recommendation
A Mississippi company is sentenced for mislabeling cheap seafood as premium local fish
UN: North Korea is increasing repression as people are reportedly starving in parts of the country
Tennessee Titans WR Treylon Burks has sprained LCL in his left knee
Connecticut official continues mayoral campaign despite facing charges in Jan. 6 case
Tom Holland's New Venture Revealed
23-year-old California TV producer dies falling 30 feet from banned rope swing
Paramount decides it won’t sell majority stake in BET Media Group, source tells AP
Our dreams were shattered: Afghan women reflect on 2 years of Taliban rule