(C) Daily Kos This story was originally published by Daily Kos and is unaltered. . . . . . . . . . . Afraid of losing Arizona's biggest county, Republicans want to gerrymander it into four new counties [1] ['Daily Kos Staff', 'Backgroundurl Avatar_Large', 'Nickname', 'Joined', 'Created_At', 'Story Count', 'N_Stories', 'Comment Count', 'N_Comments', 'Popular Tags'] Date: 2023-02-02 While both Arizona at large and Maricopa in particular had long been Republican strongholds, both jurisdictions flipped to Joe Biden in 2020 and began voting Democratic for Senate and governor for the first time in many years. That same year, Republicans narrowly preserved their 4-1 majority on the county’s Board of Supervisors despite Biden's win, but GOP county leaders have since strongly resisted Donald Trump's election denial schemes and in doing so enraged their party's MAGA wing. Thanks to this internal Republican split and Maricopa's blue trend, Democrats have a real chance to flip the board later this decade and take charge of this county of 4.4 million people, which is the nation's fourth largest. Given the rampant election denialism by the measure’s backers—the lead Senate sponsor, Jake Hoffman, was even on Trump’s fraudulent “alternative” Electoral College slate that tried to steal the election from Biden—it's hard not to see this plan as motivated squarely by partisanship, if not race, too. While the bill's shoddy description of the proposed redraw leaves some ambiguity, an approximate version is shown at the top of this post, based on a map file graciously shared by election mapper Leon Sit (click here for a larger version). The redrawn map would shrink Maricopa County down to roughly 40% of its current population and carve out three new counties from the remainder. However, more than 80% of Maricopa's current Latino and Black populations would remain in the rump county, turning it from 53% white to 65% people of color. The three newly created counties, by contrast, would each range from about 60 to 70% white. Those wide racial disparities would unsurprisingly yield similar partisan gaps, according to data from Dave's Redistricting App. While Biden won Maricopa County 50-48, packing voters of color into the proposed shrunken county would have yielded a 64-35 victory for the president. As a result, each of the three new counties would have gone for Trump, with "Hohokam" and "Mogollon" giving him 53-54% and "O'odham" 58%. Since presidential voting patterns correlate closely with how votes are cast further down the ballot, Republicans would very likely retain local control of the three new counties. Democrats, meanwhile, would be left with a rump county less than two-fifths of its present size, when they might soon govern the entirety of it if the proposal doesn't become law. The GOP plan, in short, is a partisan gerrymander. While Maricopa is one of the country's largest counties and steadily growing, there are nonetheless good reasons to leave it undivided. The existing borders largely correspond to the boundaries of the city Phoenix and the vast majority of its burgeoning suburbs, making it easier for officials to coordinate on key policies affecting the whole region. (A terrific counterexample is the similarly sized Atlanta metro area, which covers 29 counties—a balkanization directly responsible for the region's brutal traffic congestion.) If Republicans were sincere in their aims, they could instead propose moving Maricopa's rural areas into their own counties or adjacent existing ones. Instead, their redraw would divide numerous suburbs from each other and even split the city of Phoenix nearly in half between two new counties. Although Hoffman and other GOP proponents claim that splitting the county makes better sense for allocating water usage and furthers small-government goals, local Republican officials steadfastly dispute that. In data provided to legislators when a similar bill was debated last year, Maricopa estimated that funding the new governments of the three additional counties would cost $155 million annually and require tax increases to fund newly created court systems, jails, and other facilities. Fortunately for opponents of this proposal, there's a good chance it fails to become law, but not a negligible one that it passes. Following the 2022 elections, Republicans lost Arizona's governorship to Democrat Katie Hobbs, and the GOP only retained narrow one-seat majorities in each legislative chamber. But unlike the 2022 legislation, this year's House version would refer the proposal to Arizona voters in 2024 to get around a near-certain veto by Hobbs. Last year's bill advanced in committee but failed to get a full floor vote after the House speaker and a key senator both expressed opposition, but both Republicans are no longer in office. So far, however, only four Republicans in the Senate and 10 in the House have cosponsored the Senate or House version of this year's proposal, well short of the 16 senators and 31 representatives needed for passage if every Democrat opposes it But given the Republican Party's descent into election denialism nationally and in Arizona in particular, proposals like this one—which discriminate against voters of color and target Democrats—are likely to keep gaining traction on the right, if not this year then perhaps in the years to come as Arizona's growing diversity overtakes a once-dominant conservative white majority. [END] --- [1] Url: https://www.dailykos.com/stories/2023/2/2/2150505/-Afraid-of-losing-Arizona-s-biggest-county-Republicans-want-to-gerrymander-it-into-four-new-counties Published and (C) by Daily Kos Content appears here under this condition or license: Site content may be used for any purpose without permission unless otherwise specified. via Magical.Fish Gopher News Feeds: gopher://magical.fish/1/feeds/news/dailykos/