Quick Take: The Board's job Monday is to either accept the Interim Plan as the Permanent Plan OR to 'show cause' why it shouldn't be the Permanent Plan.
What does "show cause" mean? Basically, it means they need to give good legal and/or factual reasons why, in this case, the Interim Plan, shouldn't be adopted.
If the Board Monday has no good reasons to object to adopting the Interim Plan as the Permanent Plan until the next redistricting process in ten years (eight years now), it will be a short meeting.
If Board members feel the need to change the Interim Plan, I expect they will consult with the Board's attorney on how to do this and whether it is likely to succeed. Some, of that discussion, if not all of it, will (but not necessarily should) be held in Executive Session. (The courts felt they overdid the Executive Session leading up the the Interim Plan.)
If they decide that they want to "show cause" I expect they will either discuss their reasons, and/or adjourn to work on those reasons. They may just ask the attorney to write up their response to be voted on at a later meeting. This will then be sent to the Superior Court for consideration.
At least, that's how I understand this.
Background: I don't like to repeat myself, but this opening is a quick background for people who haven't watched this saga too closely. If you know this pretty well, just skip on down.
Back in May 2022 the Alaska Supreme Court said the plan the Alaska Redistricting Board had approved (the vote was 3-2) was unconstitutional partisan gerrymandering. They sent it back to the Board through the Superior Court, ordering the Board to approve the Option 2 plan that the Board considered, but had not approved. This, then would be the Interim Plan for the November 2022 election. Given the looming deadline for candidates to file for office, the Supreme Court just couldn't wait for the Board to come up with a new plan on their own. More recently, the Supreme Court completed its Opinion - a long document that looks at all the issues it had raised regarding the Board's original plan (thrown out by the Court), and its second plan (which was also thrown out.)
Actually, that's an oversimplification. The first plan, with a couple of changes, was essentially approved WITH THE EXCEPTION of some Senate seats in Anchorage. So, the Interim plan for all 40 House seats, as understand this, is settled.
Purpose of Monday's Meeting From The Supreme Court's Opinion
The Supreme Court's Opinion ended this way:
"IX. FINAL REMEDY
After the second remand, the Board adopted the Option 2 proclamation plan as the 2022 elections interim plan.240 The question of a final redistricting plan for the
[I've cut out footnotes]
decade remains. Having concluded that the Board engaged in unconstitutional gerrymandering in its initial final redistricting plan and that the Board then did so again in its amended final redistricting plan, our remanding for yet another redistricting plan may be questioned. Indeed, by clear implication article VI, section 11 authorizes courts to mandate a redistricting plan when, after a remand, the Board develops a new plan that is declared invalid.241 But we will remand out of respect for the Board’s constitutional role in redistricting.
Given that the Board adopted the current interim redistricting plan for its final plan deliberations — confirming the Board’s belief that the interim plan is constitutional — and given that Alaska’s voters have not had a chance to raise challenges to that plan in the superior court:
We REMAND for the superior court to order that the Board shall have 90 days to show cause why the interim redistricting plan should not be the Board’s final redistricting plan for the 2020 redistricting cycle:
A. Upon a showing by the Board of good cause for a remand, the superior court shall REMAND to the Board for another round of redistricting efforts; or
B. Absent a showing by the Board of good cause for a remand, the superior court shall direct the Board to approve the interim redistricting plan as its final redistricting plan, allowing any legal challenges to that plan to be filed in superior court in the normal course." [Red emphasis added.]
Basically the court said:
- You had two final options last year - Option 3A (which you adopted, but we found unconstitutional) and Option 2.
- We told you to adopt Option 2 as the Interim Plan.
- You approved Option 2, thus implying you thought it was a constitutional plan. [Though some Board members might say they had no choice given the time constraints. If they hadn't approved it, I suspect the Court would have imposed it anyway.]
- You now have 90 days to give a good reason why the Interim Plan should NOT be the final plan. (The Opinion was dated April 21, 2023. So 90 days is just about July 21, 2023.)
- If the Superior Court deems your objection to be a worthy objection, then that Court will remand (give back) to the Board, the task of further changes to the map.
- If you do not 'show good cause' for making further changes, the Interim Plan becomes the Permanent Plan
- If you show cause but the Superior, and then the Supreme Court, reject your argument, the Interim Plan becomes the Permanent Plan.
- Once the Permanent Plan is in place, the public will have one more opportunity to challenge the plan. My understanding of the various court rulings and the Board's public musings, all the 40 House seats and all but a few Anchorage Senate seats are already fixed. The period to challenge them was within 30 days of the original Proclamation Plan. There were challenges to some other parts of the map and there were other parts of the map that no one challenged. The only parts of the map that were still in dispute in May 2022 were a few Anchorage area Senate seats.
- The Superior and Supreme Courts have both agreed that the Interim Plan was Constitutional.
- The Board, by approving the Interim Plan last May, implied they saw it as Constitutional. (They aren't supposed to approve a plan they don't think is constitutional.)
"specifically for unconstitutional political gerrymandering." (Court Opinion, p. 43)
". . .if public comments merely reflect preferences for district boundaries without implicating substantive redistricting requirements, drawing district boundaries based on demonstrated substantive redistricting requirements and not the “weight of public comment” likely would not violate the hard look requirement. We nonetheless note that a Board’s failure to follow a clear majority preference between two otherwise equally constitutional legislative districts under article VI, section 6 may be evidence supporting a gerrymandering claim."
But the court ruled that House Districts 3 and 4 were unconstitutional based solely on its “weight of public testimony” approach to the hard look analysis. Because the court otherwise agreed substantive redistricting requirements were satisfied and no salient problems were raised that the Board failed to consider, we reverse the court’s invalidation of House Districts 3 and 4 and its accompanying remand to the Board." (Opinion, p. 43-44)
- At this point, all 40 House districts are set. They've been approved and the time for the public to challenge them is over.
- The only districts that could be in play now are a couple of northeast Anchorage Senate seats. I posted the map below and incumbent lists in my previous post, but it's worth looking at again.
House Seats | Senate Seats |
---|---|
17 - Zack Fields - Democrat | I - Loki Tobin - Democrat |
18 - Cliff Groh - Democrat | J - Forrest Dunbar - Democrat |
19 - Genevieve Mina - Democrat | K - Bill Wielechowski - Democrat |
20 - Andrew Gray - Democrat | |
21 - Donna Mears - Democrat | |
22 - Stanley Wright - Republican |
"The Board cited no evidence, aside from its own speculation, that JBER is a community of interest; in any case, there was no showing that the House district encompassing the populated portion of the military base as a whole would tend to share political preferences more closely with an Eagle River House district than with the downtown Anchorage House district. We thus reject the Board’s argument that concerns about JBER justify splitting Eagle River." (Opinion p. 105)
Edited from Elections page to fit in one image |
"Indeed, by clear implication article VI, section 11 authorizes courts to mandate a redistricting plan when, after a remand, the Board develops a new plan that is declared invalid.241 But we will remand out of respect for the Board’s constitutional role in redistricting."
The court is saying, "We have the power to simply mandate a plan. But out of respect for the institution of the Board (not necessarily for this particular Board) we'll give the Board one more shot to do this right."
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