Facts Irvine Voters Should Consider (But Weren’t Provided by the City Council) Before Voting to Adopt By-District Elections | #citycouncil


I write to oppose the current effort to divide the city into voting districts, which the City Council argues will give a greater voice to minorities in elections, ostensibly to comply with the California Voting Rights Act (CVRA). According to the City Council, under the current system of at-large voting, “Councilmembers and the Mayor are directly accountable to the electorate and must constantly balance the views of individuals and groups with the needs of the entire community.” But, “In recent years, cities throughout California have been legally challenged to shift from at-large elections to district-based elections, with the 2002 California Voting Rights Act as the basis for the legal challenge. In light of this, and as part of the City’s commitment to ensuring fair elections, the City Council voted at its meeting on January 10 to pursue districting and the expansion of the council from four to six, with a mayor elected at-large. In March 2024, voters will have the chance to vote on whether the City Council expands and moves to district-based elections.” However, instead of discussing the pros and cons of  conversion to by-district elections, the City Council has devoted most of its efforts to promoting the public’s participation in a contest to draw proposed district maps.

The City Council’s web site does not disclose that its own legal counsel challenged the premises underlying the adoption of by-district elections in Irvine:

It is one thing to order a city to draw districts along race-based lines when doing so will give a protected class electoral strength it never had before. It is quite another to order a city to engage in such race-conscious line-drawing when it will achieve no purpose. The U. S. Supreme Court has condemned “[r]acial gerrymandering,” which threatens to “balkanize us into competing racial factions” and “to carry us further from the goal of a political system in which race no longer matters.” (Shaw v. Reno (1993) 509 U.S. 630, 657.) Forcing the most integrated big city in the country to draw race-based districts would be a huge step backwards. “It would be an irony” if the CVRA ‘were interpreted to entrench racial differences by expanding a ‘statute meant to hasten the waning of racism in American politics.’” (Bartlett v. Strickland (2009) 556 U.S. 1, 25-26.) (April 23, 2021, letter, by City Attorney Melching, Exhibit A to Amicus Brief)


Click Here For This Articles Original Source.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *