Special session to focus on redistricting
From the Dallas Morning News:
After leaving it on the backburner for their regular session,
lawmakers are going into overtime to consider one of the most
contentious issues in politics: redistricting.
The goal of
Republican leaders appears to be to quickly adopt the court-ordered
boundaries for congressional and legislative districts that a court put
in place last year. That would set a ceiling for how well Democrats can
do in next year’s elections and beyond.
Most analysts expect the
Legislature to ram though the maps in a matter of days, though the
session could last longer if Gov. Rick Perry adds other matters.
The
districts, while not what Republicans had hoped for when the
once-a-decade process started in 2011, are more palatable than what
minorities and Democrats might score in the legal arena. Courts found
“intentional discrimination” against minority voters in the
Legislature’s original maps, and minority groups and Democrats say the
interim maps, which have never been pre-cleared by the Justice
Department, contain similar problems.
Last year, in striking down
temporary maps that would have benefited Democrats, the Supreme Court
ruled that the will of the Legislature should be the starting point when
developing electoral boundaries.
Since the current maps were
signed off by Attorney General Greg Abbott and Republican lawmakers
before the federal court in San Antonio approved them, GOP leaders hope
the boundaries will stand up under additional scrutiny.
The Texas Tribune provides analysis of the districts in question.