Republicans Deny New Gerrymander Plan
Not planning to bypass governor, Fitzgerald says, but he and Vos won’t take follow-up questions.
Republican leaders in the Assembly and Senate reacted to yesterday’s report in the Wisconsin Examiner about a possible behind-the-scenes plan to redraw Wisconsin’s voting maps without consulting Gov. Tony Evers. Both told Scott Bauer of the Associated Press that they had never “discussed” a plan to redraw Wisconsin’s political maps by joint resolution.
“That approach has never been discussed by Republican leadership, within the GOP caucus, or with outside counsel,” Senate Majority Leader Scott Fitzgerald told AP. “This is nothing more than rumor-mongering by Democrat activists in an attempt to fire up their base ahead of the 2020 elections.”
Kit Beyer, Assembly Speaker Robin Vos’ spokesperson, told Bauer that “a redistricting resolution is not being discussed.”
But neither Vos nor Fitzgerald responded to follow-up questions from AP, or to inquires from the Examiner, about whether they would consider redistricting by joint resolution.
“It would have been much easier for Majority Leader Fitzgerald to have said that neither he nor anyone else in the leadership of the legislature would ever consider trying to use a joint resolution to enact the upcoming redistricting,” said attorney Lester Pines.“He chose not to say that, which speaks volumes.”
Rick Esenberg, the executive director of WILL, told the Examiner that he had heard about the idea of redistricting by joint resolution, but said his organization was not helping to form a plan.
“I was referring to the issue of whether the legislature could proceed by joint resolution,” Esenberg wrote in a follow-up email Tuesday. “I’ve heard that some people believe that. But I have not heard that legislative leadership is actually planning to do it. There is a difference between the two things. As I thought I made clear, WILL has had nothing to do with what the legislative leadership is or is not planning. Lester is flat wrong on that.”
The Fair Elections Project, which advocates for nonpartisan redistricting, was not satisfied with Republican leaders’ denials of discussions.
“The double-talk used by the Speaker and Majority Leader is neither an effective denial nor a promise the people of Wisconsin can count on,” the group responded in a Tuesday press release. “They can put this issue to rest by answering a simple question—will they, under any circumstance, try to pass a legislative district map without the Governor’s signature?”
“What the people of Wisconsin want to see — large bipartisan majorities, in fact—is a public statement that the legislature intends to work with the administration in an open and transparent way to draw the maps in 2021.”
“I think it’s up to the public and the media to keep pressing them until they either admit that this is their strategy or take it off the table completely,” said Fair Elections’ Sachin Chheda.
Reprinted with permission of Wisconsin Examiner.
More about the Gerrymandering of Legislative Districts
- Redistricting conversation continues on virtual “On the Issues,” Feb. 11 - Marquette University - Feb 10th, 2021
- Op Ed: Redistricting Should Consider Native Americans - Tehassi Hill - Feb 9th, 2021
- Op Ed: Why the War on Masks? Gerrymandering - Mel Barnes - Feb 7th, 2021
- Op Ed: Correct a Cheating System With Fair Maps - State Sen. Jeff Smith - Feb 3rd, 2021
- Will State Supreme Court Draw New Legislative Boundaries? - Shawn Johnson - Jan 15th, 2021
- Data Wonk: Tales Told By The 2020 Election - Bruce Thompson - Dec 31st, 2020
- Court Watch: 2,000 Object to Redistricting Proposal - Gretchen Schuldt - Dec 13th, 2020
- Murphys Law: Beware the GOP Redistricting Proposal - Bruce Murphy - Dec 2nd, 2020
- Op Ed: Dear Wisconsin Supreme Court - Matt Rothschild - Nov 23rd, 2020
- Former lawmakers to go ‘On the Issues’ for virtual bipartisan conversation on redistricting, Oct. 13 - Marquette University - Oct 12th, 2020
Read more about Gerrymandering of Legislative Districts here