Plaintiffs who challenged Gov. Ron DeSantis' congressional map in federal court want Judges to reconsider a ruling upholding the cartography. But those challenging the lines abandoned any chance at settling the matter before congressional elections this year.
Common Cause Florida and other plaintiffs filed a 38-page motion for reconsideration, asking Judges to revisit the Governor's motives when he inserted himself into the redistricting process by vetoing maps drawn by the Legislature and having his Office send its own cartography to the Legislature for approval.
"A map that moved through the legislative process with intent to discriminate against the voters cannot stand," said Amy Keith, Common Cause Florida Executive Director.
"We know full well the Governor exercised his legislative powers by drafting and introducing his own map, vetoing a map not to his liking, and participating in the redistricting process to an unusual extent. And we know that the Governor was acting with race as a motivating factor. We are asking the court to reconsider so that Black voters can exercise their right to fair representation in Congress."
The brief calls for federal Judges to direct the Legislature "to draw a new map in time for the 2026 congressional election." The latest filing came two days before an April 26 deadline for congressional candidates to qualify for the 2024 election cycle.
In March, Judges upheld the map and ruled that the Legislature did not act with race as a factor. A three-Judge panel offered conflicting opinions whether the same could be said of DeSantis. U.S. Circuit Judge Adalberto Jordan, an appointee of former President Barack Obama, wrote in a concurring opinion that the Governor "drew, proposed, and submitted the Enacted Map with race as a motivating factor."
But the three Judges ultimately agreed that it was the Legislature's motives at question with the map, and that plaintiffs failed to prove that lawmakers violated the 14th and 15th Amendments of the U.S. Constitution.
Plaintiffs in a separate state case before the Florida Supreme Court argued that the map designed and signed by DeSantis violates the Fair Districts amendment to the state constitution, which prohibits the diminishment of minority communities' ability to elect a U.S. Representative of their choice.
The map dismantled a North Florida district where a Black Democratic lawmaker, former U.S. Rep. Al Lawson, consistently won election. Under the new map, Lawson lost to U.S. Rep. Neal Dunn, a Republican. Under the map put in place last election cycle, every North Florida district is represented by a White Republican.
Plaintiffs in federal court argue that Judges should reconsider the ruling and find that DeSantis acting with "racially discriminatory intent" was enough to corrupt the process.
"The Court did not conduct a holistic analysis of the actions of the State — the entire lawmaking process, encompassing both the Governor and the Legislature — leading up to the Enacted Map," attorneys argue in the new brief.
No comments:
Post a Comment