The State Supreme Court held its session Tuesday at the Historic 1767 Chowan County courthouse. 

This story originally published online at NC Policy Watch. 

Elections week continues at the stateโ€™s high court as justices weigh another appeal involving redistricting.

The North Carolina Supreme Court wrestled once again with the issues of redistricting and gerrymandering on Tuesday in a case in which Republican lawmakers contend they should be allowed to draw maps however they choose, regardless of whether they dilute the voting power of people casting a ballot in favor of Democrats.

โ€œThe court should defer to the General Assembly when it makes those policy decision unless they make obviously wrong decisions,โ€ Phillip Strach, the lawyer representing the GOP, argued before the justices.

It is not the first time the state Supreme Court has heard the case. In February, the justices ordered the legislature to redraw congressional, state House, and state Senate districts that the majority ruled were unconstitutional because they impermissibly weakened votes for Democrats and favored Republican candidates. (The courtโ€™s three Republican justices disagreed and dissented.) The courtโ€™s opinion did not explicitly lay out how to draw the maps, but mentioned five different metrics used by redistricting experts, and said some combination of those would pass constitutional muster.

Later that month a panel of Superior Court judges replaced the Republican-drawn map for the stateโ€™s congressional districts with its own. The panel also decided that the state House and Senate plans that the legislature adopted met the constitutional standards set by the state Supreme Court.

Voters backed by the National Redistricting Foundation, who sued over the Republican-controlled gerrymandered districts, argued before the court that the legislature still didnโ€™t draw the maps correctly, and maps should be thrown out.

Strach said the General Assembly โ€œerred on the side of cautionโ€ in redrawing the maps, trying to both comply with the order and draw maps that would get enough votes from lawmakers to pass.

โ€œThe trial court should have deferred to those judgments that it made, which it did in part, but then inexplicably didnโ€™t apply that to the congressional map,โ€ Strach said. โ€œWhy? We donโ€™t know because the trial court didnโ€™t explain why it was rejecting one map over the other.โ€

Elisabeth Theodore, attorney for the plaintiffs, accused Republicans of asking the court to let them โ€œcherry pickโ€ which metrics they use when drawing maps and ignore all other evidence that their maps are discriminatory.

โ€œItโ€™s actually not that hard to pass a map thatโ€™s fair. Itโ€™s obvious that these maps werenโ€™t. They passed on a party line vote,โ€ Theodore said. โ€œThe problem isnโ€™t that the General Assembly canโ€™t not partisan gerrymander. It can. The problem is that its remedial mapsโ€”both the congressional and the Senate mapsโ€”were dramatically skewed to favor Republicans.โ€

Theodore asked the court to strike down the congressional and Senate maps, arguing that the Senate map yields unfair outcomes for Democrats.

โ€œWhen the Republicans get 55 percent of the vote in the Senate map, they get 33 seats, which is a supermajority, and when the Democrats get 55 percent of the vote, they only get 28 seats,โ€ she said.

Strach, meanwhile, said what was ostensibly โ€œsimple mathโ€ to comply with the metrics set forth by the Supreme Court turned out to be a lot more complicated. He said there were โ€œthousands of thousands of waysโ€ to calculate two specific metrics mentioned by the court, measures on which the court gave specific guidance on what thresholds must be hit to satisfy the requirements.

โ€œThis is no way to conduct constitutional analysis,โ€ Strach said.

Hilary Klein, an attorney representing Common Cause, said it would have been easy for legislators to draw a map that would have scored better on โ€œpartisan metricsโ€ without getting rid of neutral criteria for redistricting. Plus, Klein said, the courtโ€™s past ruling did not fix the destruction of โ€œcross-over districts,โ€ where some majority votersโ€™ ballots cross over with racial minoritiesโ€™ to elect the minority-preferred candidate. Klein said the maps intentionally destroyed two cross-over districts, in Senate District 4 and House District 1.

โ€œWhen legislatures went back to draft remedial maps, where they had statewide discretion to bring those maps into partisan compliance, they purposely chose to redraw other areas of the state, while ensuring the destruction of functioning crossover districts in eastern North Carolina,โ€ Klein said. โ€œLegislators destroyed these crossover districts, even though preserving them would have helped bring the map into partisan compliance.โ€

Klein said that in order to โ€œgive full force and effectโ€ to the Supreme Courtโ€™s February opinion, the justices must strike down both the remedial House and Senate maps.

โ€œJustice requires it,โ€ she said.

Strach concluded his rebuttal by asking the justices to dismiss the appeal on the congressional maps and affirm the trial courtโ€™s approval of the legislative plans. Otherwise, he warned, โ€œThis court is barreling into the political wilderness, where the legislative authority to redistrict will be transferred from the legislature to the courts.โ€

The U.S. Supreme Court is currently considering a related case (Moore v. Harper) in which Republican legislators argue that state courts shouldnโ€™t even be allowed to assess the General Assemblyโ€™s decisions on congressional elections and rule that those actions are unconstitutional.

Tuesdayโ€™s arguments marked the second time this week that the state Supreme Court heard arguments on a case involving elections. On Monday the justices heard an appeal of a lower court decision from 2021 that struck down a state law requiring a photo ID to vote. Superior Court judges ruled in a 2-1 decision last year that the law unconstitutionally targeted African American voters and put a greater burden on them than their white counterparts.

Gerrymandering and voting rights were also the subject of debate at the U.S. Supreme Court on Tuesday, where justices heard arguments in Merrill v. Milligan, a case brought by civil rights groups challenging the congressional district map in Alabama. The Court is expected to hear arguments in Moore v. Harper late this fall or early in 2023.


Support independent local journalism. Join the INDY Press Club to help us keep fearless watchdog reporting and essential arts and culture coverage viable in the Triangle. 

Comment on this story at [email protected]