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Tribune News Service
Tribune News Service
Politics
Brian Murphy, Will Doran and Danielle Battaglia

Court halts candidate filing in disputed North Carolina districts

RALEIGH, N.C. — A court order Monday temporarily blocked candidates from filing to run in the 2022 elections under the districts drawn by North Carolina Republican state lawmakers.

The order came from the North Carolina Court of Appeals in a lawsuit that claims the political districts, drawn to be used in every election from 2022 to 2030, are unconstitutionally gerrymandered.

The challengers in the lawsuit have been trying to delay candidate filing so that, if a court does order the maps to be redrawn, those new maps could be used in next year’s elections instead of having to wait until 2024.

With filing now on hold for U.S. House, state Senate and state House seats, candidates still began filing at noon Monday as scheduled in other federal, state and local races across North Carolina. Candidate filing continues through next week.

Several candidates had already lined up to register at the North Carolina State Fairgrounds when the court ruling came down.

Karen Brinson Bell, the State Board of Elections executive director, spoke over an intercom to announce the ruling to candidates.

Bell told the candidates that there were no set times for filing in the affected races to take place.

“We do not know the plan for filing for those contests at this time,” Bell said. “Further action will continue with the court system. It may mean that filing takes place later this week or another time. It is indefinite at this time.”

U.S. Rep. Alma Adams had driven from Charlotte to Raleigh to file for reelection. The Democrat had booked a flight from Raleigh to Washington for this week’s session in Congress. Despite that, she was glad that the Court of Appeals stopped filing from going forward, calling the new maps “egregious.”

“There needs to be some corrections made so there is equity and balance,” Adams said.

Adams said that the 14 new congressional districts drawn by state lawmakers give Democrats a likely win in only three districts and a possible fourth win.

“I think that’s unfair,” Adams said. “It should have never happened. I mean, what kind of math is that?”

Congressional candidate Michele Woodhouse was also in line when the announcement was made. Woodhouse, the chair of the Republican Party in the state’s westernmost congressional district, announced she would run in the new district that is home to U.S. Rep. Madison Cawthorn, after Cawthorn opted to run elsewhere.

She, too, was undeterred by the court ruling — “We’ll just make another trip back down” — but she said Monday’s ruling showed why North Carolina needs conservative judges.

“To find out minutes into filing that we’re not going to be filing does speak to the importance of making sure that we’ve got judges that follow the law and don’t try to legislate from the bench,” Woodhouse said.

The lawsuit that led to the filing delay is backed by the North Carolina League of Conservation Voters, which claims its members’ goals of pro-environmental political policies will be stymied by maps that unfairly favor Republican politicians.

A top Republican redistricting official blasted the ruling Monday in a tweet.

“In less than three hours, a secret panel of three unidentified Court of Appeals judges was able to review nearly 1,000 pages challenging maps of 184 districts, read the entire ‘record,’ and block candidate filing in every county in the state,” Sen. Paul Newton of Cabarrus County said.

A separate lawsuit is backed by the National Democratic Redistricting Committee, a group led by former U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder and represented in this case by prominent Democratic attorney Marc Elias.

In court hearings on both lawsuits Friday, judges rejected intervening in the election, but both groups appealed the rulings. Elias said Monday he had appealed to the state Supreme Court, rather the Court of Appeals which issued the order for the delay.

Holder’s group also backed two successful lawsuits here in 2019 — which led to the state’s legislative and congressional maps being redrawn before the 2020 elections. The previous lawsuits, and the new one, claimed the maps are unconstitutional partisan gerrymanders that disenfranchise Democratic voters.

The 2019 case involved maps that were drawn to all but guarantee Republicans 10 of the state’s then-13 congressional seats, even if Democrats and Republicans split the statewide vote roughly 50-50.

North Carolina gained a 14th seat after the 2020 census due to its fast growth. The new maps look like they will give Republicans at least 10 of those 14 seats, and possibly 11, in that kind of an evenly split statewide election. Republicans would also be within reach of a veto-proof supermajority in the state legislature in such a 50-50 election.

GOP leaders have largely avoided commenting on the partisan splits in the maps so far, except to say that they did not use political data when drawing them.

The conservation group submitted possible replacement maps for consideration as part of its lawsuit, which the group said would lead to ties or narrow majorities in either chamber of the state legislature under similar electoral circumstances.

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