Judge Tosses Maryland's Highly Gerrymandered Congressional Map
Advanced statistics and redistricting reformers combined to kill one of the country's worst gerrymanders.

Calling it "an extreme gerrymander," a Maryland judge on Friday tossed out the state's new congressional district map and ordered state lawmakers to produce a new one before the end of the month.
In the ruling, Judge Lynne A. Battaglia said the eight congressional districts drawn by the Democrat-controlled state Legislature lacked compactness and demonstrated a disregard for existing political boundaries like counties and cities. The map "subordinates constitutional criteria to political considerations," Battaglia wrote, and in doing so violates the Maryland Constitution's equal protection and free elections clauses. It's the first time in Maryland history that a judge has discarded a redistricting map for being too politically slanted, according to The Washington Post, which is really saying something given the state's recent history.
The congressional map used in Maryland for the past 10 years was one of the most highly gerrymandered in the country—even though Republican gerrymanders in places like North Carolina, Pennsylvania, and Wisconsin attracted more attention to the problem of politically motivated mapmaking. That's part of the reason why Maryland's congressional delegation has been split 7–1 in favor of Democrats for the past decade.
This time around, Democrats in Annapolis drew an even more gerrymandered map that would have given them an electoral edge in all eight of the state's districts by carving up Maryland's deep blue Baltimore/Washington corridor so that nearly all of the state's congressional districts include some part of it. The new map received a grade of "F" from the Princeton Gerrymandering Project, which grades congressional maps on partisan fairness, geographical compactness, and other factors.

In the ruling, Battaglia pointed to how the Maryland map scored poorly in several metrics used to access the compactness of political districts. These mathematical formulas are imperfect ways of assessing congressional districts—not every district ought to be a perfect circle, of course. But, as I argued in a 2018 feature for Reason, that sort of statistical analysis is vital for lawmakers and judges to use when assessing the question of how much gerrymandering is too much.
Battaglia's ruling bears that out. She points to the fact that Maryland's districts scored worse than all but two other states on the Polsby-Popper scale—a metric that measures the ratio of a district's area against a theoretical circle with the same circumference as the district's perimeter. Maryland scores equally poorly under the Reock metric, which requires drawing the smallest possible circle that would encompass all points of a district, then comparing the area of the circle to the area of the district.
When compared to other current and former congressional maps, the scores given to Maryland's maps compare "very poorly relative to anything drawn in the last fifty years in the United States," wrote Battaglia in Friday's ruling.
Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan, a Republican, called Friday's ruling "a monumental victory for every Marylander who cares about protecting our democracy, bringing fairness to our elections, and putting the people back in charge."
Hogan encouraged state lawmakers to respond to Battaglia's ruling by voting to adopt a map drawn by the Maryland Citizens Redistricting Commission, a group that included three Republicans, three Democrats, and three politically unaffiliated residents of the state.
Though the commission was powerless to implement its vision, the map it produced is undeniably fairer than the one approved by state lawmakers and ultimately rejected by Battaglia. The districts make geographic sense, and the parts of Maryland with more Republicans (the Eastern Shore and the western panhandle) are placed in districts more likely to reflect their local politics. The Princeton Gerrymandering Project gave the commission's map an "A" grade.
By rejecting that proposal and "adopting a new map that was even more blatantly political" than the previous map, "the Maryland Legislature virtually dared the courts to do anything about it," Walter Olson, a member of the citizens' commission and a senior fellow at the Cato Institute, tells Reason.
Courts are increasingly taking that dare in other states too. State judges in Pennsylvania and North Carolina have recently tossed out Republican-drawn maps for being too politically slanted.
As those cases and the current situation in Maryland make clear, both parties seek to put their thumbs on the scale of congressional elections by trying to use redistricting to let politicians select their voters rather than the other way around. But Maryland's highly gerrymandered map has also exposed how support for redistricting reform is often warped for partisan purposes too.
As I wrote in December, Rep. Jamie Raskin (D–Md.) has been one of the loudest voices in Congress calling out Republican attempts at gerrymandering. He's claimed on Twitter that "gerrymandering empowers political minorities to redistrict political majorities into near-oblivion," issued an official statement claiming that "Republican state legislators…have perfected the art of redistricting for the goal of destroying the political opposition," and was one of several members of Congress to submit an amicus brief to the U.S. Supreme Court calling for it to "end partisan gerrymandering" when the Court reviewed Wisconsin's GOP-drawn gerrymander last year.
But Raskin's district in Maryland is highly gerrymandered and would have gotten even more misshapen if the new map had survived Battaglia's review. Raskin has refused to comment on the map-drawing process in his home state—a place where his supposedly reform-minded principles would likely have more influence, if he chose to exert it, than would his performative outrage on Twitter or in front of the Supreme Court.
At the same time, the obviously superior maps drawn by Maryland's citizens' commission suggest there is a way forward for those actually interested in reforming redistricting. It's impossible to remove politics from the process entirely, of course, but anything is probably better than letting sitting legislators from a single party control the mapmaking process.
The defeat of Maryland's highly partisan congressional map is a terrific real-world example of how greater use of statistical analyses and greater involvement of the general public can defeat the incumbency-protection scheme that is gerrymandering—or at least lessen the damage it does.
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I am pleasantly surprised by this result. Now we see if it gets overturned on appeal.
I am shocked as I was assured only meanie Repubs did this kind of blatant gerrymandering to suppress voting rights and steal elections. How can this be???
Check out Illinois:
https://gerrymander.princeton.edu/redistricting-report-card?planId=receAu6OJuYEkxKjG
The same way Maryland tries to divide the Baltimore-DC corridor among all districts, Illinois tries to divide up Cook County between as many districts as possible. Glad I don't live there anymore
Illinois is losing people almost as fast as California.
More's the pity. Concentrate the pigfuckers where they won't harm actual people.
"subordinates constitutional criteria to political considerations,"
Wait, when did *that* become illegal?
It is illegal when Democrats do if. For Republicans it is no problem.
Can't read, can ya?
Not actually sapient, even. Just a poorly written computer program.
That's the Maryland Constitution.
The congressional map used in Maryland for the past 10 years was one of the most highly gerrymandered in the country—even though Republican gerrymanders in places like North Carolina, Pennsylvania, and Wisconsin attracted more attention to the problem of politically motivated mapmaking.
Gee, can't imagine why that would be. Let's not forget the Democratic gerrymanders in California and New Mexico, either, or the fact that Colorado Democrats are kicking themselves for supporting a state amendment that requires an independent commission which drew up a map that basically kept the political status quo.
>>>even though Republican gerrymanders in places like North Carolina, Pennsylvania, and Wisconsin attracted more attention
yes you media types treat (R) like it's very shiny.
I am deeply skeptical of claims that any one statistical measure is the right way to determine whether a redistricting effort is constitutional or not. The 'comparison to a circle' is informative but hardly definitive.
On the other hand, it's pretty telling when your efforts score at the bottom (or nearly bottom) on every statistical measure.
Good. One could hope one day we'd have sane voting anyhow. Ranked choice voting, MMP, uncapping the house, independent commissions, etc. etc. Plenty of ways to actually have a fair election where your voice can be heard.
Ranked choice voting isn't going to fix anything, unless your goal is to merely strengthen political majorities.
It would only potentially work in a parliamentary style system. With maybe 5-7 political parties.
My voice is heard the most in the decisions I make without the government making them for me.
Dude. You have been on fire of late. 😀 The thrashing you gave Lauren last weekend was gloriously methodical, even not reading her half of it.
And then, well, this. 😀
There is unending complaints about district maps that "divide neighborhoods" or "split counties and municipalities." Well, no matter where the line is drawn, there will always be some folks on one side of a street in one district and others on the other side in some district. Not all districts will have uninhabited rural swaths that district lines can run through. And, so what, if Township X is split in two? Now the towns' officials have two congressmen who can advocate for them instead of one when, say, the new sewer system needs funding.
One representative per county, with each representative having a vote proportioned to the county population.
It solves the problem which is supposed to be "solved" with equal-population districts, while relying on existing political unites instead of creating brand-new Rorshach-shaped districts.
You *know* you'd get states redrawing the county lines if you did that. Plus we'd need a stadium to seat the thousands of representatives.
Hey, I mean, out here we've got counties bigger than some states back East, so, let's get equal representation by area, and I think the problems around here will be solved very shortly.
Georgia has 159 counties! Texas has 254.
I'm wondering why a township's sewer system is a federal issue. I'm also wondering whether Congress is going to build a stadium to seat all 3000+ representatives.
It shouldn't be but in the present real world such things don't get built without a heaping helping of federal and state grants.
Okay, so let's just have judges draw all the district maps instead of our elected representatives. Judges are smarter, more experienced, and never, ever partisan. Right? Right?
Of course, the more political things you make judges do, the more interested the politicians become in appointing/electing ones that will do what they want.
"Rep. Jamie Raskin (D–Md.) has been one of the loudest voices in Congress calling out Republican attempts at gerrymandering." which is freaking hilarious considering he's one of the most dishonest, amoral, vile progressive pricks in Congress. Once again proving whatever loud mouthed Democrats accuse you of they are most assuredly guilty themselves of doing ten-fold.
Suggestion??: We need every state constitution to require an independent redistricting commission comprised of 2 or 3 each of Republications, Democrats & Independents, plus 2 or 3 apolitical tech-type thinkers who can analyze & graph the statistical or other data, and craft it into a finally fair map. The commission will have no other responsibility than to then present the map(s) to a judge or panel or judges set up specifically to assess the maps on the basis of election practices and law.
Every time these are set up the democrats put a partisan as the independent to lean it in their direction.
Suggestion??: We need every state constitution to require an independent redistricting commission comprised of 2 or 3 each
We NEED the Federal legislature to be constrained by the Constitution. We NEED, judges to keep the feds in their own lane.
State elections would not be so important, if not for the battle to take grift off of every piece of legislation out to DC
The problem is incentives. Change incentives, change behavior.
I'm not convinced this is the panacea we hope.
Alternatives are at-large districting, instant runoff elections, approval voting, proportional representation, or any number of other approaches. I'd love to have different states try different approaches and we might learn something. I doubt any of those is a silver bullet either. There's just too much to be gained by winning elections for operatives to not try to influence the process.
The ultimate answer is to get politics out of money. If we had government do and spend less, there'd be less incentive to win races at all costs.
Exists in California already Observant and is promoted in the Voting Rights Act before Congress.
There is nor reason for citizens of good faith to oppose this reform and the only ones defending the status quo are Republicans who are winning redistricting battles in many more states than they are losing.
“There is nor reason for citizens of good faith to oppose this reform”
Love it when bad-faith, authoritarian pig fuckers try to tell others what their reason can and cannot be.
The problem with such plans is that "apolitical" thinkers motivated to serve in such a capacity are unicorns. Self-selection will likely make anyone who seeks out a position like that an activist. Rather like the quasi-judicial "civil rights" commissions.
"2 or 3 apolitical tech-type thinkers" Where do you get those? Seems like a certain kind of "tech-types" flock to Silicon Valley and the progressive mindset prevalent there. Other type techs work for defense contractors and tend to lean in a more conservative fashion. Just because someone is a "tech type" does not mean they are independent, reasoning human beings.
State constitution amendments on gerrymandering boundaries for the state and allow for redistributing within those bounds. When the political will to change them exists, they can be changed.
Criteria like contigiousness, max distance from geometric focal points, etc, etc.
OOPS: Not Republications! Darn proofreading failure ... you knew what I meant anyway...
Nice to see someone finally taking notice of Maryland's gross corruption, but too little, too late for me. My money and I moved to Virginia last year.
How about choosing the first ten names in the Annapolis phone book?
My quibble with the fine article is it focuses so much on geographic compactness. I'm not convinced that's the most important metric. I'd be open to creating long, convoluted districts if, say, the group income levels together. Or any other plausible community of interest.
Problem is, we don't even really agree what we hope to accomplish with a "fair" map. Any map will inevitably have some political outcome. Do I group people by income, ignoring ethnicity? By political preferences over geography? Any map which favors one metric will have to ignore others.
Even then, let's say we pick a metric. What's the desired outcome? Say a state (e.g. CA) is 60% Democrat, 40% Republican. Do we want 60% of the districts to be safe Democrat districts and 40% safe Republican? Surely that's fair, the state's delegation will reflect the stage at large. Or do we want each district to have 60% Democrats? Surely that makes each district reflect the state as a whole and what's unfair about that? Except the first is packing and the second is cracking, neither of which is considered kosher.
I find compactness attractive to a degree. Voter efficiency is another. But whatever the method will it ever pass the John Roberts Gobbledeegook test? ( See page 40 https://www.supremecourt.gov/oral_arguments/argument_transcripts/2017/16-1161_bpm1.pdf)
According to the Supremes packing and cracking are fine since these are non-judiciable political questions. They state their distaste for gerrymandering but in the same breath throw up their hands and say there is no constitutional standard and there is no hurry to come up with one. With that kind of benign (malign?) consideration of the gerrymandering problem, one can only expect the problem to persist.
Yet one more problem the Founders left.
In the case of the profoundly offensive Republican gerrymandering in North Carolina, it was court requirements of consolidating black votes that drove the laughable I-85 following district. Republicans took advantage of this to consolidate democrats into this single district, creating more Republican majority districts.
And, to a degree, Republicans could point to the majority-minority district and say "What? We did what you wanted!"
The existent majority minority district in Florida (a byproduct of a R legislature that promoted the first black man to state legislature since reconstruction) is why I ignore D belly-aching on this subject. They are just whining because they are losing. Not because they oppose gerrymandering.
I’ve since softened my position on the subject. If people care so much, pass rules in the legislative body. But stop getting courts and technocrats involved.
Off topic a bit, but I notice that folks complaining about the Electoral College not being "fair" never ever seem to realize that 60/40 split. Imagine if California dropped their winner-take-all allocation of EC electors and instead did a proportional allocation, or even one based on districts carried. Surely that would be more "representative" and a more "fair" allocation of their electors? One that gives each person's vote more of a chance of being represented?
Nope. Instead, they sit around complaining about how a non-existent "popular vote" is something that happened.
P.S. The whole "popular vote" thing is a sham, and we can use California again. Since electors shall be selected by each State "Each State shall appoint, in such Manner as the Legislature thereof may direct, a Number of Electors, equal to the whole Number of Senators and Representatives to which the State may be entitled in the Congress" and the courts have held that means pretty much in any fashion the legislature shall choose..." “Therefore, on reference to contemporaneous and subsequent action under the clause, we should expect to find, as we do, that various modes of choosing the electors were pursued, as, by the legislature itself on joint ballot; by the legislature through a concurrent vote of the two houses; by vote of the people for a general ticket; by vote of the people in districts; by choice partly by the people voting in districts and partly by the legislature; by choice by the legislature from candidates voted for by the people in districts; and in other ways, as, notably, by North Carolina in 1792, and Tennessee in 1796 and 1800. No question was raised as to the power of the State to appoint, in any mode its legislature saw fit to adopt, and none that a single method, applicable without exception, must be pursued in the absence of an amendment to the Constitution."
So, imaging that California decided to save the hassle of having a presidential election and instead allocated their electors based on a vote in the legislature. Or, even easier, just to allow the sitting Governor to appoint all the electors.
What does that do to the non-existent nationwide "popular vote" for president?
I live in Illinois and just got redistricted into a blue district. This essentially means my vote is wasted in all federal and statewide elections. And I don't waste my time voting for the Libertarians anymore. Having said that we have the founders to blame for all of this. Redistricting is a political process and in a two party monopoly system the party in power gets to draw the map. I'm cool with state judges throwing out those maps based on their state constitutions and statutes. Federal judges not so much.
The idea that one person has the power to proclaim something this inherently subjective as legal or illegal is worrisome.
I am not sure what the alternative would be though.
At state levels, it would have to end up in state Supreme Court on appeals, so it probably would never be one person.
As long as you get the desired result the process doesn't matter. Unelected bureaucrats should be in charge of, well, EVERYTHING! Libertarianism 101, baby.
The solution to shitty districting is definitely to turn over the entire process to unelected judges. Yes, let us all praise this wonderful development. Perhaps as a next step in these much-needed reforms we could just have judges elect our representatives directly.