De-Rigging Elections: Direct Democracy and the Future of Redistricting Reform
Washington University Law Review
Volume 84 | Issue 3
2006
De-Rigging Elections: Direct Democracy and the
Future of Redistricting Reform
Michael S. Kang
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Michael S. Kang, De-Rigging Elections: Direct Democracy and the Future of Redistricting Reform, 84 Wash. U. L. Rev. 667 (2006).
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DE-RIGGING ELECTIONS:
DIRECT DEMOCRACY AND THE FUTURE OF
REDISTRICTING REFORM
MICHAEL S. KANG ∗
I. INTRODUCTION
After California Republicans and Democrats agreed in 2001 on a
“sweetheart” bipartisan gerrymander that ensured virtually no
congressional or state legislative seats would change hands, a Republican
consultant boasted that the “new [redistricting] plan basically does away
with the need for elections.” 1 Such is the state of self-dealing in
redistricting conducted by incumbent elected officials. As one North
Carolina state senator admitted, when it comes to redistricting, “We are in
the business of rigging elections.” 2
Alarmed critics naturally see redistricting today as polluted by a
corrosive excess of politics. 3 They look to apolitical institutions as
possible sources of restraint on gerrymandering—namely courts and
independent commissions. In the fall 2005 elections, reformers in
California and Ohio proposed ballot initiatives to strip control of
redistricting from state legislatures and entrust redistricting to independent
commissions. Redistricting reform appeared to suffer a pair of devastating
defeats when voters rejected both initiatives. 4 But these highly publicized
election setbacks were not the end of redistricting reform—far from it.
∗ Assistant Professor, Emory University School of Law. Sincere thanks to Bobby Ahdieh, Bill
Buzbee, Julie Cho, Beth Garrett, Heather Gerken, Rick Hasen, Ben Norris, Rick Pildes, Mike Pitts,
Robert Schapiro, and Liam Schwartz for their comments on earlier drafts. Thanks also to Naeha Dixit,
Matt Gewolb, and Shelley Thomas for their terrific research assistance.
1. John Wildermuth, Lawmakers Use Creative License in Redistricting: Oddly Shaped
Congressional Maps Would Largely Benefit Incumbents, S.F. CHRON., Sept. 2, 2001, at A6 (quoting
Tony Quinn). Indeed, every congressional incumbent who ran for re-election in California won by a
landslide in 2002, and not a single congressional or state legislative seat, out of 153 districts, changed
partisan control in 2004. See Nancy Vogel, Looking to Design a Fairer Map, L.A. TIMES, Feb. 13,
2005, at B1.
2. John Hoeffel, Six Incumbents Are a Week Away from Easy Election, WINSTON-SALEM J.,
Jan. 27, 1998, at B1 (quoting Mark McDaniel).
3. Samuel Issacharoff goes so far as to argue that the U.S. Supreme Court should strike down as
unconstitutional per se any redistricting conducted by elected officials. Samuel Issacharoff,
Gerrymandering and Political Cartels, 116 HARV. L. REV. 593, 641–45 (2002).
4. See, e.g., Stuart Rothenberg, On Redistricting, Voters Have Spoken Up for the Status Quo,
ROLL CALL, Nov. 10, 2005 (“Voters simply don’t care enough about the process of drawing legislative
and Congressional districts.”).
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They were merely opening volleys in the long and continuing battle over
redistricting to come. Advocates of redistricting reform recovered and
mobilized aggressively on multiple fronts, driven by the conviction that, in
Heather Gerken’s words, “we cannot leave the regulation of politics to
politics.” 5
Delegation of redistricting to apolitical institutions, such as courts and
independent commissions, comes with heavy costs. Insulation helps
ensure that redistricting is not driven by political self-interest, but it also
ensures that redistricting is far removed from the necessary degree of
public engagement, scrutiny, and accountability. Indeed, courts and
independent commissions, at least those commissions proposed by current
reforms, are specifically designed as an institutional matter to be
politically inaccessible. In understandable zeal to root out political selfdealing in redistricting, reformers would eradicate from redistricting the
positive values of the political process as well.
Rather than trying to stamp out politics, redistricting reform must seek
a new and healthier framework in which redistricting can be conducted as
part of an open political process incorporating the important elements of
democratic decisionmaking. Ironically, the problem with redistricting
today is not that it is too political, but instead that it is not political enough.
Redistricting is insufficiently “political” in the sense that it occurs too
isolated from public engagement, too distant from public scrutiny, and too
insulated from popular accountability.
This Article challenges the understandable impulse to retreat from the
political process in reforming redistricting. By so arguing, I reveal
profound weaknesses in current reform proposals and demonstrate the
need for a sharp readjustment in the direction of redistricting reform. What
all the anger about gerrymandering overlooks is the forgotten value of the
political process. Redistricting implicates central normative questions of
governance and representation that govern how a democracy should
operate. These are complicated questions that require democratic input and
civic debate on what are fundamentally contestable value judgments that a
democracy must make democratically.
I propose direct democracy as the best solution, a distinctly political
solution, to the problems of contemporary gerrymandering. By requiring
direct democratic approval by the general electorate for passage of any
statewide redistricting plan, direct democracy invites the public into civic
5. Heather K. Gerken, The Double-Edged Sword of Independence: Inoculating Electoral
Reform Commissions Against Everyday Politics, 39 U. BRIT. COLUM. L. REV. (forthcoming 2006).
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DE-RIGGING ELECTIONS
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engagement about the fundamental issues of democratic governance that a
democracy ought to embrace. As I will explain, direct democracy can be
designed to induce the major parties to forsake the maximization of
political advantage and to compete instead for the median voter’s
approval. Direct democracy thus encourages healthy moderation in
redistricting by forcing the public to decide directly for itself and by (...truncated)