Maryland court blocks effort by Dem campaign committee to defend gerrymandered congressional map
Princeton Gerrymandering Project gave Maryland map an 'F'
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The Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee's (DCCC) attempt to defend Maryland's gerrymandered congressional map was blocked last week by a state court, a blow to the group that was being represented by Democrat attorney Marc Elias.
HOYER SAYS DEMS SHOULD GERRYMANDER TO PREVENT ‘UNFAIR COMPETITION,’ SINCE REPUBLICANS DO IT TOO
The Anne Arundel County Circuit Court denied the DCCC motion to intervene as a defendant in the case on Friday. If that motion was granted, it would have allowed the group to effectively take over the defense of the state's congressional map from the Maryland State Board of Elections in a lawsuit brought by several GOP candidates and the group Fair Maps Maryland.
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The DCCC sought to intervene in the case, it said, because the Maryland elections board doesn't "share Proposed Intervenor’s interest in ensuring its members of Congress have an opportunity to compete in and win congressional elections in properly constituted districts."
OBAMA, HOLDER SLAM GOP STATES FOR GERRYMANDERING, BUT SILENT AS DEMOCRATS DO THE SAME THING
The Maryland map passed by the Democrat-supermajority Maryland legislature over the veto of Republican Gov. Larry Hogan threatens to gerrymander Maryland's last Republican congressman out of his seat. It was given an "F" by the Princeton Gerrymandering Project, the same grade as Republican gerrymanders in states like Texas, Ohio and North Carolina.
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"Rejecting a partisan political organization’s brazen attempt to defend partisan maps drawn by politicians is the ultimate no-brainer," said Doug Mayer, a spokesman for Fair Maps Maryland, which is associated with Hogan. "The last thing Marylanders wanted was political operatives from Washington, D.C., interfering with their state elections."
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Also last week, a separate state court hearing a challenge to Maryland's legislative map pushed back the filing deadline for the state's primaries, a move Republicans say indicates courts may be open to tossing the maps.