Skip to main content
Cloudy icon
66º

Wisconsin governor asks for swift action on redistricting

FILE - Wisconsin Gov. Tony Evers addresses a joint session of the Legislature in the Assembly chambers during the governor's State of the State speech at the state Capitol onn Tuesday, Feb. 15, 2022, in Madison, Wis. Wisconsin's Democratic governor told the state Supreme Court on Thursday, March 24, that it should allow him to submit additional evidence defending his legislative district boundary map that the U.S. Supreme Court rejected, arguing it is still better than the one submitted by the Republican Legislature.(AP Photo/Andy Manis, File) (Andy Manis, Copyright 2022 The Associated Press. All rights reserved)

MADISON, Wis. – Wisconsin's Democratic governor told the state Supreme Court on Thursday that it should allow him to submit additional evidence defending his legislative district boundary map that the U.S. Supreme Court rejected, arguing it is still better than the one submitted by the Republican Legislature.

The Legislature, meanwhile, responded by telling the court it should ignore Gov. Tony Evers and instead adopt the Republican-drawn map.

Recommended Videos



The court has yet to say how it will proceed after the U.S. Supreme Court ruling on Wednesday left Wisconsin without new legislative boundary lines just three weeks before candidates were to start circulating nominating papers to get on the ballot.

Evers and the Legislature, in separate letters, urged the state Supreme Court to adopt their maps as it considers what to do for a second time.

Evers also asked the Wisconsin Supreme Court, if it doesn't adopt his original map, to consider making a change to reduce the number of Black-majority Assembly districts from seven to six. The Legislature’s map had five Black-majority districts in Milwaukee.

The U.S. Supreme Court said in its ruling Wednesday that the state Supreme Court failed to consider whether a “race-neutral alternative that did not add a seventh majority-black district would deny black voters equal political opportunity."

The nation's high court also said that the state Supreme Court was free to take additional evidence it is preferred to reconsider Evers' map, and that is what Evers asked the court to do Thursday. He wants the state court to allow for the submission of additional evidence until April 1.

“No other path is tenable, as the preexisting maps are indisputably unconstitutional statewide, and this Court already observed that the Legislature’s proposal posed problems under the (Voting Rights Act),” Assistant Wisconsin Attorney General Anthony Russomanno wrote on behalf of Evers.

Kevin St. John, the attorney for Republican lawmakers, said in his letter that Evers already had a chance to make an argument for his maps and he “should not get a second chance now.”

“It would be extraordinary and contrary to the way in which this Court has conducted these proceedings to permit the Governor to attempt to rehabilitate his case at this eleventh hour,” St. John argued.

The court was expected to act quickly, given that candidates for the Legislature can begin circulating nomination papers April 15 to be on the ballot this fall.

Until the court adopts new maps, there are no maps in place for the fall legislative elections, said Riley Vetterkind, spokesman for the Wisconsin Elections Commission.

That means a candidate runs the risk of gathering signatures for his candidacy from voters who may not end up living in the district they are running for, making them invalid.

Evers’ attorney cautioned that the need for the court to act quickly should be balanced against the need to adopt legal maps without inviting more lawsuits.

While the Supreme Court rejected Wisconsin's legislative maps, it adopted the congressional maps as proposed by Evers. Republicans currently hold five of the state's eight seats and that map made one of those GOP districts more competitive.

In an apparent longshot bid, Wisconsin's Republican congressmen asked the state Supreme Court on Wednesday to allow them to submit a new map, even though the Supreme Court had already signed off on Evers' map.

The Supreme Court's ruling in the Wisconsin case marked the first time this redistricting cycle that the high court has overturned maps drawn by a state.

Redistricting is the process of redrawing the state’s political boundaries based on the latest census, showing how populations have changed in neighborhoods, cities and counties since 2010. Mapmakers can create an advantage for their political party in future elections by packing opponents’ voters into a few districts or spreading them thin among multiple districts — a process known as gerrymandering.


Loading...