
BISMARCK, N.D. (AP) โ The clock is running out on a Friday deadline for North Dakotaโs Republican-controlled Legislature to draw new legislative boundaries compliant with the Voting Rights Act for two Native American tribes who successfully sued for new lines.
Itโs unclear what will happen next, with the 2024 election calendar looming and a flurry of legal filings in recent days.
A federal judge last month ruled that the stateโs 2021 redistricting map violates the landmark 1965 civil rights law in diluting the strength of Native American voters. He gave the secretary of state and lawmakers five weeks, ending Friday, โto adopt a plan to remedy the violation.โ
Secretary of State Michael Howe is appealing the decision. The Legislatureโs Redistricting Committee began meeting this month to address the ruling and review options of maps. Requests to delay the ruling or extend the deadline have so far been unsuccessful.
WHAT IS THE CASE?
The Turtle Mountain Band of Chippewa Indians, the Spirit Lake Tribe and several tribal members sued North Dakotaโs top election official last year. They alleged the 2021 redistricting map โsimultaneously packs Turtle Mountain Band of Chippewa Indians members into one house district, and cracks Spirit Lake Tribe members out of any majority Native house district.โ
The tribes had unsuccessfully sought a joint district in 2021. Their reservations are about 60 miles (96.56 kilometers) apart. Their lawsuit went to trial in June.
In November, U.S. District Court Chief Judge Peter Welte ruled that the map โprevents Native American voters from having an equal opportunity to elect candidates of their choice,โ a violation of the Voting Rights Act.
WHAT HAPPENED NEXT?
Howe announced plans to appeal days after the ruling. He cited a new 8th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruling that private individuals and groups such as the NAACP canโt sue under a critical section of the Voting Rights Act.
Welte and the 8th Circuit denied his requests to delay the ruling pending appeal. On Wednesday, the 8th Circuit denied the Legislatureโs request to extend the Dec. 22 deadline to Feb. 9, 2024.
On Thursday, the Legislature asked Welte for the same extension, saying it โhas made substantial headway toward the development of a remedial redistricting plan.โ
In an 8th Circuit filing, Howe said an extension โinto February and March risks introducing significant confusion, hardship, and unfairness into the Stateโs 2024 elections.โ
โCertainty is absolutely everything our office is looking for. It doesnโt matter to us what the map looks like, and thatโs not our role. Thatโs the Legislatureโs prerogative and their constitutional duty to set laws and create maps, not the secretary of stateโs office,โ Howe said.
Republican House Majority Leader Mike Lefor said the Legislature is โgoing to continue to fight on all fronts, legally, to make sure that our voice is heard.โ He maintains the 2021 redistricting process was correct.
The Legislatureโs redistricting panel has met twice and reviewed maps, including two presented by the tribes in court and others that individual lawmakers presented Wednesday.
Republican state Sen. Ron Sorvaag, who chairs the committee, said his goal is to have the panel prepared โso when itโs called upon, if thereโs a session, weโre ready to present.โ
Turtle Mountain and Spirit Lake tribal chairs on Wednesday urged lawmakers โto finally follow the law and adopt one of the Tribesโ proposed maps, drop its appeal, and end this costly litigation.โ
WHAT HAPPENS AFTER FRIDAY?
Itโs unclear what the judge will do when the Friday deadline passes with no new map in place. The Legislature has no plans to convene.
Plaintiffsโ attorney Tim Purdon said the tribes plan to file before the deadline โto suggest a path forward for the court.โ
In his order rejecting Howeโs requested delay of his decision, Welte wrote that โthe public interest lies in correcting Section 2 violations, particularly when those violations are proven by evidence and data at trial. Concerns as to the logistics of preparing for an election cycle cannot trump violations of federal law and individual voting rights.โ
Comments