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Mr. Peabody
12-02-2005, 10:01 AM
Justice Staff Saw Texas Districting As Illegal
Voting Rights Finding On Map Pushed by DeLay Was Overruled

Washington Post (http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/12/01/AR2005120101927.html)

By Dan Eggen
Washington Post Staff Writer
Friday, December 2, 2005; A01



Justice Department lawyers concluded that the landmark Texas congressional redistricting plan spearheaded by Rep. Tom DeLay (R) violated the Voting Rights Act, according to a previously undisclosed memo obtained by The Washington Post. But senior officials overruled them and approved the plan.

The memo, unanimously endorsed by six lawyers and two analysts in the department's voting section, said the redistricting plan illegally diluted black and Hispanic voting power in two congressional districts. It also said the plan eliminated several other districts in which minorities had a substantial, though not necessarily decisive, influence in elections.

"The State of Texas has not met its burden in showing that the proposed congressional redistricting plan does not have a discriminatory effect," the memo concluded.

The memo also found that Republican lawmakers and state officials who helped craft the proposal were aware it posed a high risk of being ruled discriminatory compared with other options.

But the Texas legislature proceeded with the new map anyway because it would maximize the number of Republican federal lawmakers in the state, the memo said. The redistricting was approved in 2003, and Texas Republicans gained five seats in the U.S. House in the 2004 elections, solidifying GOP control of Congress.

J. Gerald "Gerry" Hebert, one of the lawyers representing Texas Democrats who are challenging the redistricting in court, said of the Justice Department's action: "We always felt that the process . . . wouldn't be corrupt, but it was. . . . The staff didn't see this as a close call or a mixed bag or anything like that. This should have been a very clear-cut case."

But Justice Department spokesman Eric W. Holland said the decision to approve the Texas plan was vindicated by a three-judge panel that rejected the Democratic challenge. The case is on appeal to the U.S. Supreme Court.

"The court ruled that, in fact, the new congressional plan created a sufficient number of safe minority districts given the demographics of the state and the requirements of the law," Holland said. He added that Texas now has three African Americans serving in Congress, up from two before the redistricting.

Texas Republicans also have maintained that the plan did not dilute minority votes and that the number of congressional districts with a majority of racial minorities remained unchanged at 11. The total number of congressional districts, however, grew from 30 to 32.

The 73-page memo, dated Dec. 12, 2003, has been kept under tight wraps for two years. Lawyers who worked on the case were subjected to an unusual gag rule. The memo was provided to The Post by a person connected to the case who is critical of the adopted redistricting map. Such recommendation memos, while not binding, historically carry great weight within the Justice Department.

Under the Voting Rights Act of 1965, Texas and other states with a history of discriminatory elections are required to submit changes in their voting systems or election maps for approval by the Justice Department's Civil Rights Division.

The Texas case provides another example of conflict between political appointees and many of the division's career employees. In a separate case, The Post reported last month that a team was overruled when it recommended rejecting a controversial Georgia voter-identification program that was later struck down as unconstitutional by a court.

Mark Posner, a longtime Justice Department lawyer who now teaches law at American University, said it was "highly unusual" for political appointees to overrule a unanimous finding such as the one in the Texas case.

"In this kind of situation, where everybody agrees at least on the staff level . . . that is a very, very strong case," Posner said. "The fact that everybody agreed that there were reductions in minority voting strength, and that they were significant, raises a lot of questions as to why it was" approved, he said.

The Texas memo also provides new insight into the highly politicized environment surrounding that state's redistricting fight, which prompted Democratic state lawmakers to flee the state in hopes of derailing the plan. DeLay and his allies participated intensively as they pushed to redraw Texas's congressional boundaries and strengthen GOP control of the U.S. House.

DeLay, the former House majority leader, is fighting state felony counts of money laundering and conspiracy -- crimes he is charged with committing by unlawfully injecting corporate money into state elections. His campaign efforts were made in preparation for the new congressional map that was the focus of the Justice Department memo.

One of two DeLay aides also under indictment in the case, James W. Ellis, is cited in the Justice Department memo as pushing for the plan despite the risk that it would not receive "pre-clearance," or approval, from the department. Ellis and other DeLay aides successfully forced the adoption of their plan over two other versions passed by Texas legislators that would not have raised as many concerns about voting rights discrimination, the memo said.

"We need our map, which has been researched and vetted for months," Ellis wrote in an October 2003 document, according to the Justice Department memo. "The pre-clearance and political risks are the delegation's and we are willing to assume those risks, but only with our map."

Hebert said the Justice Department's approval of the redistricting plan, signed by Sheldon T. Bradshaw, principal deputy assistant attorney general, was valuable to Texas officials when they defended it in court. He called the internal Justice Department memo, which did not come out during the court case, "yet another indictment of Tom DeLay, because this memo shows conclusively that the map he produced violated the law."

DeLay spokesman Kevin Madden called Hebert's characterization "nonsensical political babble" and echoed the Justice Department in pointing to court rulings that have found no discriminatory impact on minority voters.

"Fair and reasonable arguments can be made in favor of the map's merits that also refute any notion that the plan is unfair or doesn't meet legal standards," Madden said. "Ultimately the court will decide whether the criticisms have any weight or validity."

Testimony in the civil lawsuit demonstrated that DeLay and Ellis insisted on last-minute changes during the Texas legislature's final deliberations. Ellis said DeLay traveled to Texas to attend many of the meetings that produced the final map, and Ellis himself worked through the state's lieutenant governor and a state senator to shape the outcome.

In their analysis, the Justice Department lawyers emphasized that the last-minute changes -- made in a legislative conference committee, out of public view -- fundamentally altered legally acceptable redistricting proposals approved separately by the Texas House and Senate.

"It was not necessary" for these plans to be altered, except to advance partisan political goals, the department lawyers concluded.

Jerry Strickland, a spokesman for Texas Attorney General Greg Abbott, said he did not have any immediate comment.

The Justice Department memo recommending rejection of the Texas plan was written by two analysts and five lawyers. In addition, the head of the voting section at the time, Joseph Rich, wrote a concurring opinion. Rich has since left the department and declined to comment on the memo yesterday.

The complexity of the arguments surrounding the Voting Rights Act is evident in the Justice Department memo, which focused particular attention on seats held in 2003 by a white Democrat, Martin Frost, and a Hispanic Republican, Henry Bonilla.

Voting data showed that Frost commanded great support from minority constituents, while Bonilla had relatively little support from Hispanics. The question to be considered by Justice Department lawyers was whether the new map was "retrogressive," because it diluted the power of minority voters to elect their candidate of choice. Under the adopted Texas plan, Frost's congressional district was dismantled, while the proportion of Hispanics in Bonilla's district dropped significantly. Those losses to black and Hispanic voters were not offset by other gains, the memo said.

"This result quite plainly indicates a reduction in minority voting strength," Rich wrote in his concurring opinion. "The state's argument that it has increased minority voting strength . . . simply does not stand up under careful analysis."

Staff writer R. Jeffrey Smith and researcher Julie Tate contributed to this report.


© 2005 The Washington Post Company

SA210
12-02-2005, 10:52 AM
Gtown, aren't these the guys that are gonna help the minorities? :tu

xrayzebra
12-02-2005, 12:00 PM
But the courts didn't! The courts sided with Texas. It is now going to the SC for their attention. Just a group of lawyers and bueracrats said it was bad for the minorities.

Mr. Peabody
12-02-2005, 12:09 PM
But the courts didn't! The courts sided with Texas. It is now going to the SC for their attention. Just a group of lawyers and bueracrats said it was bad for the minorities.

The court approved of it in part because the Justice Department found it to be legal. Now we find out that the staff at the Justice Department found it illegal, but were overruled by political appointees.

boutons
12-02-2005, 02:03 PM
A helpful call by a totally politicized, compromised law enforcement officer.

There's NO end to the slimebags working for dubya.

==================

Gonzales Defends Call on Texas Plan

By SUZANNE GAMBOA
The Associated Press
Friday, December 2, 2005; 1:35 PM

WASHINGTON -- Attorney General Alberto Gonzales defended the Justice Department's decision to ignore staff lawyers' concerns that a Texas redistricting plan orchestrated by former House Majority Leader Tom DeLay would dilute minority voting rights.

A Justice Department memo released Friday showed that agency staffers unanimously objected to the Texas plan, which DeLay pushed through the Legislature to help elect more Republicans to the U.S. House.

Senior agency officials, appointed by President Bush, brushed aside concerns about the possible impact on minority voting and approved the new districts for the 2004 elections.

Gonzales said the plan was approved by people "confirmed by the Senate to exercise their own independent judgment" and their disagreement with other agency employees doesn't mean the final decision was wrong.

The decision appears to have been correct, Gonzales said, because a three-judge federal panel upheld the plan and Texas has since elected one additional black congressman.

Of the state's 32 House seats, Republicans held 15 before the 2004 elections. Under the DeLay-backed plan, Republicans were elected to 22 of the state's seats in the House.

The redistricting plan has been challenged in court by Democrats and minority voting groups claiming it was unconstitutional and that district boundaries had been illegally manipulated to give one party an unfair advantage. The Supreme Court is expected to announce soon whether it will consider the case.

"The Supreme Court is our last hope for rectifying this gross injustice. We couldn't count on the (lower) court. We couldn't count on the state, and we obviously couldn't count on the politically corrupt Justice Department," said Gerry Hebert, an attorney representing the challengers.

The plan was approved by the Republican-controlled state Legislature in special sessions after Democratic lawmakers fled the state capital in an effort to block votes on the new congressional boundaries.

An effort by DeLay to use federal resources to help track down missing Texas lawmakers led to a rebuke by the House ethics committee.

Because of historic discrimination against minority voters, Texas is required under provisions of the Voting Rights Act of 1965 to get Justice Department approval for any voting changes it makes to ensure the changes don't undercut minority voting.

"The State of Texas has not met its burden in showing that the proposed congressional redistricting plan does not have a discriminatory effect," Justice Department officials said in the memo made public by the Lone Star Project, a Democratic group.

Eight department staffers, including the heads of the Voting Rights Division, objected to the redistricting map, according to the memo which was first reported in Friday editions of The Washington Post.

Hebert said when a case is a close call staff lawyers usually include counterpoints to their conclusions in their memo. But he said there is nothing in the 73-page memo suggesting a plausible reason for approving the map. "So that raises a lot of suspicions about the motives" of the senior officials who are political appointees, he said.

Texas Democrats, some who had been told years ago that agency staff had objected to the plan, were outraged.

"The fact that the White House has covered up this document for so long provides a smoking gun pointing out efforts, led by Bush political appointees and Tom DeLay, to systematically cripple the voting rights of minorities," said Texas Sen. Leticia Van De Putte, one of the Democratic lawmakers who fled to New Mexico to thwart passage of the redistricting plan.

DeLay is awaiting a Texas state judge's ruling on whether he must stand trial on charges of conspiracy and money laundering in connection with the 2002 elections. The charges forced DeLay to relinquish his House majority leader post in late September.

DeLay and two people who oversaw his fund-raising activities are accused of funneling prohibited corporate political money through the national Republican Party to state GOP legislative candidates. Texas law prohibits spending corporate money on the election or defeat of a candidate.

Several of the DeLay-backed candidates won election, giving Republicans a majority in the state House in 2001, when the congressional redistricting process began.

© 2005 The Associated Press

exstatic
12-02-2005, 07:50 PM
Under the Voting Rights Act of 1965, Texas and other states with a history of discriminatory elections are required to submit changes in their voting systems or election maps for approval by the Justice Department's Civil Rights Division.

Boy, did they ever know THIS state down to a 'T'. :lol

gtownspur
12-03-2005, 04:00 AM
Gtown, aren't these the guys that are gonna help the minorities? :tu


you must have selective comprehension, i never said the Republicans side with minorites better than Democrats. Republican's believe in the individual more than the collective. Just proves that you don't actually know what you talk about, and you type silly little thirteen year old post of how one is filled with hate and they made baby jesus cry.

SA210
12-03-2005, 12:30 PM
^^^ I never said all that. Seems you might have selective comprehension. Sounds like a 13 yr old post.

So, you agree? Republicans are not a better choice for minorities?

boutons
12-03-2005, 01:56 PM
The New York Times
December 3, 2005

New Twist in Texas Districting Dispute
By DAVID E. ROSENBAUM and ERIC LICHTBLAU

WASHINGTON, Dec. 2 - The Justice Department acknowledged on Friday that top officials had overruled a determination by its civil rights staff in 2003 that a Congressional redistricting plan for Texas, advantageous to Republicans, would violate the voting rights law.

Attorney General Alberto R. Gonzales defended approval of the plan, telling reporters on Friday morning that he was confident that the decision was correct. Conflicting views simply reflected a healthy deliberative process, Mr. Gonzales said.

The plan, which had largely been developed by Representative Tom DeLay and which was subsequently upheld by a three-judge federal appeals court panel, led to Republicans' gaining five seats in the House in the election last year.

Pointing to the court's acceptance, Mr. Gonzales said the skepticism of career lawyers did not "mean that it was an incorrect decision."

"Ultimately, someone has to make a decision," he said. "We're not going to politicize decisions within the department."
:lol :lol :lol

Democrats sharply disagreed. They said the rejection of the lawyers' conclusion was the latest example of how the Justice Department in the Bush administration substituted politics and ideology for sound judgment.

President Bush, a former governor of Texas, has referred to the redistricting dispute and the indictment of Mr. DeLay, who stepped down as House majority in October after being indicted in a campaign finance case, as purely Texas issues with no White House connection.
:lol :lol :lol

The general position of the staff lawyers in the Civil Rights Division was known. But on Friday, The Washington Post reported the details of a memorandum unanimously endorsed by the six lawyers and two analysts in the voting rights section that strongly criticized the plan, saying it would dilute the voting strength of minorities in violation of the Civil Rights Act of 1965.

"In sum, the proposed plan reduces the level of minority voting strength," the memorandum concluded. "The state failed to follow its traditional redistricting principles preserving communities of interest and forbidding fragmentation or packing of minority voters."

Despite that unequivocal finding, the Justice Department approved the plan, and Texas officials repeatedly referred to the approval in defending against the Democratic court challenge.

Under the Voting Rights Act of 1965, states like Texas with histories of racial discrimination in voting have to have the Justice Department approve their redistricting. The three-judge panel upheld the redistricting plan against the Democratic lawsuit in June. The case is pending before the Supreme Court.

In recent weeks, developments in the Justice Department and elsewhere in the government have involved instances in which political appointees countermanded the judgment of professional staff experts whose conclusions were not in line with the administration's philosophy.

On Tuesday, the Justice Department lawyer who has led the civil racketeering case against the tobacco industry for five years announced that she was retiring because of disagreements with supervisors.

"I didn't feel like I had the support at all times of the political team," the lawyer, Sharon Y. Eubanks, said.

Last month, the nonpartisan examiners at the Government Accountability Office said that the Food and Drug Administration had relied on politics and ideology rather than science in rejecting over-the-counter sales of the morning-after contraceptive Plan B.

In broadcasting, the inspector general of the Corporation for Public Broadcasting found that its former chairman, Kenneth Y. Tomlinson, had repeatedly crossed boundaries in the law intended to protect public television and radio from political interference.

Referring to the Justice Department cases, Mr. Gonzales said the decisions were "not based on politics."
:lol :lol :lol

Discussing the process, a spokeswoman for the White House, Dana M. Perino, said it was "entirely appropriate" that the president's appointees "develop policies for implementation by the federal government."
:lol :lol :lol
(especially when they are partisan political policies aimed at increasing dubya's party's power)

Democrats used the tobacco case and the voting rights memorandum to renew their argument that the administration was improperly politicizing government functions. The party's whip in the House, Representative Steny H. Hoyer of Maryland, said the disclosure "that political considerations at the Justice Department apparently overrode proper enforcement of the Voting Rights Act should appall and disturb every American."

In a clear allusion to the department's investigation of Jack Abramoff, the lobbyist, and his dealings with Republicans in Congress, including Mr. DeLay, Representative Rahm Emanuel of Illinois, chairman of the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee, said the Texas decision raised "real questions about what is going to happen with other sections of the Justice Department and ongoing investigations."

In 2002, Mr. DeLay, the Texan who was the Republican whip at the time, engineered enough Republican victories to take control of the state's Legislature.

Normally, legislatures redraw the maps of their states' Congressional districts once a decade, after the census. But Republicans in Texas used their majority to create a new map in 2003. It resulted in Republicans' gaining five House seats in 2004, substantially strengthening Mr. DeLay's position in Washington.

dubya's AG's are insults, like everything else dubya has done in 5 yeras, to federal law enforcement (covering statue tits is how high and justifying torture is how high they aim)

Mr. DeLay stepped aside as majority leader in October after being charged in a Texas court with conspiracy to violate the state's election laws by arranging for corporate contributions to be used in Republican campaigns for the Legislature in 2002.

Carl Hulse contributed reporting for this article.

* Copyright 2005 The New York Times Company

SA210
12-03-2005, 03:00 PM
^^^ exactly

gtownspur
12-04-2005, 04:25 AM
^^^ I never said all that. Seems you might have selective comprehension. Sounds like a 13 yr old post.

So, you agree? Republicans are not a better choice for minorities?

Neither party is a better choice for minorities. Race is not on the ballot intiatives or party platforms. Again you do have a comprehension problem because i never said that republicans were a better minority pick.

NEXT!!!!

SA210
12-04-2005, 04:38 AM
Why wouldn't they be?

gtownspur
12-05-2005, 12:30 AM
I just posted why.

SWC Bonfire
12-05-2005, 11:09 AM
Forget minorities, how is a representative going to effectively pursue projects and activities to benefit his constituents when his district is a narrow band stretching from Austin to the Rio Grande?

Gonzales County has the worst roads in this part of Texas (think I-10 from Luling-Harwood-Waelder), and our traffic has increased dramatically. The area TxDOT district is based in Yoakum. They are now in a different congressional district as far as having a representative fight for federal highway funds are concerned, so we are screwed as far as new/major projects are concerned (although it's not like we ever had nice roads, but they sure are nice within a few miles of Yoakum:lol). I live on a US Highway that has badly eroded shoulders, the traffic lane is 4-6 inches higher than the shoulder, and is getting destroyed by truck traffic detouring from I-10. Is some rep from the Austin area (Lloyd Dogget) going to give a flying you know what about the roads in Gonzales County?