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Strip the Anti-Democratic Courts of Their Powers to Gerrymander Congressional Districts

Earlier this week, the Supreme Court heard oral arguments in the Virginia redistricting case on appeal from a lower court decision to completely redraw the map in the middle of an election. Once again, the most important political questions of our time are all decided by the unelected branch of government – the one that was to have “neither force nor will.”

The practice of gerrymandering, drawing congressional district boundaries to benefit those in power, is as old as it is unfair. After all, this odious practice was named after one of its earliest practitioners, Elbridge Gerry, one of the top Founders and the fifth vice president of the United States. However, what is a new and even more pernicious practice is the federal court system disenfranchising the voters and redrawing congressional districts in the ultimate act of legislating from the bench.

After every decennial redrawing of the maps, a number of states run by either party tend to get carried away with their power to draw the boundaries and create districts that fail to respect the geographical, demographic, or cultural integrity of the region. The reality is that both parties engage in gerrymandering. Yes, it is unfair. But what should be the remedy? Using the electoral process to punish these trouble makers or having the unelected judges redraw even worse maps?

We are witnessing a pattern across the country ever since the districts were redrawn from the past Census and reapportionment. Democrat gerrymandering in blue states is consistently upheld, GOP redistricting is struck down by the courts, and the courts proceed to rashly redraw those districts, engendering an even worse outcome of disenfranchisement. While gerrymandering disenfranchises voters, having the courts redraw districts in the middle of an election is even worse because they do so arbitrarily, they tend to favor Democrats (surprise, surprise), their decisions are not uniform across the nation, and there is no recourse for the voters.

North Carolina

In the most egregious case of judicial activism, a three-judge federal district panel ruled on February 5 that North Carolina’s 1st and 12th districts were created based on race and mandated the redrawing of the state’s congressional map. This, after the map was upheld by the state’s supreme court. As such, they tossed out the entire map and forced the legislature to redraw the districts after voting in the March 15 primary had already begun. So much for John Marshall’s promise to George Mason at the Virginia Convention that “there is no danger, that particular subjects, small in proportion,” being given over to the federal courts “will render them [state courts] useless and of no effect.”

Now that the primary has been pushed off until June 7, all those absentee ballots have been thrown in the garbage, yet many voters are probably unaware of the fact that they need to vote again. Moreover, candidates who spent thousands of dollars and countless hours canvassing voters in one district are completely shut out of this election. All the hard work of those challenging Rep. Renee Ellmers in the primary for district 1 has been for naught.

Even if the North Carolina map was originally drawn in an unfair manner, having the courts toss out a map in middle of the election is egregious. While North Carolina is the worst example, given the proximity of the decision to the timing of the election, the Virginia case is almost as bad. We’ve witnessed a similar dynamic in Florida. In all these states, courts tossed out Republican-drawn maps because they felt the boundaries were drawn based too much on racial factors.

The Hypocrisy on Racial Gerrymandering

The twisted irony here is that it is Democrats who are factoring in race when they gerrymander in blue states; Republicans are, for the most part, respecting the natural boundaries (although not in North Carolina). Take Maryland for example. While the courts are tossing out one Republican-drawn map after another, the Maryland map, which is the most gerrymandered in the nation and is all about racial politics, is still standing after the first round of litigation through the court system.

Take a look at my home district, the 3rd district, which is possibly the most gerrymandered district in the country. A federal judge called it a “broken-winged pterodactyl, lying prostrate across the center of the state.” The city of Baltimore has a population of 621,000, easily within the confines of the roughly 721,000 limit for a congressional district. Under any pretense of fairness, the city should have its own congressional district. Yet, as you can see, Democrats divided it up into three separate districts.

Thus, while voters and candidates in North Carolina, and now possibly Virginia, have been disenfranchised in middle of an election, wasting two years of hard work on the part of insurgency candidates, Maryland Democrats have gotten away with this travesty. This is what happens when the courts become the final arbiter of election maps.

It’s also no secret that the courts side with the Democrats in believing that the black vote should be spread out rather than confined to its geographical jurisdiction. After all, this is not about ensuring blacks have equal representation; it’s about ensuring Democrats can maximize the map.

With exceptions in certain parts of the country, such as New England, the base of Democrat support is anchored in very strong support from minorities, most prominently African-Americans. These voters are largely clustered in small geographical areas, primarily in large cities. The historically high turnout from minorities was enough to push Obama over the top where electors are awarded in a winner-take-all basis statewide. But his dismal showing with white voters and non-urban areas cost Democrats heavily in congressional elections, which are localized to specific districts. Democrats want more urban areas to be apportioned like the Baltimore area. The courts agree with them.

This is why a three-panel district court tossed out Virginia’s map in the case pending before the Supreme Court today. They feel that the third district incorporates too many black voters, preventing Democrats from splitting up the black vote into two winnable districts. But take a look at the map and decide for yourself whether anything looks contorted or unfair. This map actually looks quite reasonable. The city of Richmond is not large enough to constitute its own district and must incorporate more counties in order to fill its population mandate based on reapportionment. Republicans simply choose to make the district lean southeast and incorporate more black counties. Had Democrats controlled the process at the time of redistricting, they would have drawn it differently. Either way, this is a reasonable and contiguous map, so why is it that Maryland’s third district is just fine while Virginia’s third district is problematic?

It’s quite evident that not only are the courts the final word on all political questions, they always decide them in favor of the Democrats. They have it exactly backwards. Article I, Section 4, Clause 1 of the Constitution explicitly grants state legislatures the authority to prescribe the manner and place of holding elections. Only the legislative branch of the federal government, not the courts, were given authority to “alter such regulations” of the states on electoral decisions, and even then, according to Hamilton it was only to be done under “extraordinary circumstances.”

We have now come to the point when the unelected branch of the federal government determines the outcome of every important societal question left up to the states, including life, marriage, prayer, and now elections themselves. As I warn in my upcoming book, if Congress fails to reclaim this power from the courts, using its Article III, Section II power to regulate the court’s jurisdiction, we will no longer have a functioning democracy.

Thomas Jefferson warned this day would come:

[T]he germ of dissolution of our federal government is in the constitution of the federal judiciary; an irresponsible body, (for impeachment is scarcely a scare-crow,) working like gravity by night and by day, gaining a little today and a little tomorrow, and advancing its noiseless step like a thief, over the field of jurisdiction, until all shall be usurped from the States, and the government of all be consolidated into one.

Indeed, the legislative branch of government has its own share of problems. But the minute we vest the power to legislate with the unelected branch of government, we cease to function as a democratic Republic.

This is the point Republicans must remind the media of as the fight over Merrick Garland reaches its crescendo. If the courts are now the final arbiters of all political issues, including elections, then shouldn’t we need an election to determine the balance of the court? (For more from the author of “Strip the Anti-Democratic Courts of Their Powers to Gerrymander Congressional Districts” please click HERE)

Watch a recent interview with the author below:

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Judiciary Chairman Accuses Democrats of ‘Charade’ on Supreme Court

A Senate Judiciary Committee hearing turned into a slugfest Thursday as Republicans and Democrats traded jabs over the GOP’s blockade of President Obama’s nominee for the Supreme Court.

Judiciary Chairman Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa, accused Senate Democrats of allowing “raw politics to infect the process” by stirring up a frivolous partisan fight.

“Everybody knows any nominee submitted in the middle of this presidential campaign isn’t getting confirmed. Everyone knows that. Why the charade?” Grassley asked.

“It’s because the other side is committed to using this process to score as many political points as possible. That’s it, plain and simple,” Grassley answered.

The White House has floated several potential nominees in the past few weeks, and Obama is expected to announce his final pick soon. But that doesn’t change much for Senate Republicans.

Since Justice Antonin Scalia died unexpectedly Feb. 13, the GOP has remained adamant that his seat on the bench remain open until after the November election, for the next president to fill.

If Republicans succeed, “the work of the committee and this Congress will be shamefully incomplete,” Sen. Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., said.

Democrats continue to blast Republicans for dereliction of their constitutional duty to offer advice and consent on judicial nominees. They want Obama to nominate and the Senate to consider a nominee as soon as possible.

Republicans have been quick to counter that they’re only following a precedent established by Vice President Joe Biden. While a senator, Biden urged the Senate to block any of President George H.W. Bush’s Supreme Court picks before the 1992 general election.

Schumer characterized that back-and-forth as “he said, she said” dribble.

“On both sides, everyone’s said a bunch of things,” Schumer said. “But let me repeat: Not once since this committee began holding hearings on Supreme Court nominees a century ago has the committee refused to report a nominee to the floor for consideration.”

To make his point, Schumer goaded Sen. Thom Tillis, R-N.C., who also sits on the Judiciary Committee, for saying he enjoys a “good scrap” in a Senate floor speech last week.

“After the president makes a nomination,” Schumer said, “let’s have the kind of serious, long, detailed, thorough debate—call it a scrap if you will—that we’ve had in the past.”

Past remarks of the third-ranking Democrat have provided Republicans with plenty of ammunition. In July 2007, Schumer called on the Senate to block any of President George W. Bush’s Supreme Court nominees. Democrats controlled the chamber at that time, and 18 months remained in Bush’s term.

Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., predicted that the current fight will generate a permanent standard, one “that will stand the test of time.”

“We are setting a precedent here today, Republicans are,” Graham said. In the last year of a president’s term, he said, “you’re not going to fill the vacancy of the Supreme Court based on what we’re doing here today. That’s going to be the new rule.”

Graham, who voted to confirm both of Obama’s previous nominees, Elena Kagan and Sonia Sotomayor, encouraged Democrats to hold Republicans to that standard in the future.

“You could use my words against me, and you’d be absolutely right,” he said.

Bipartisan criticism swiftly poured in after the committee meeting ended.

Carrie Severino, chief counsel of the conservative Judicial Crisis Network, praised Grassley for letting “the people decide the next justice through their votes for president.”

Wade Henderson, president of the liberal Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights, said it would “be refreshing to see the Senate Judiciary Committee embrace its constitutional duty to advise and consent on judicial nominees.” (For more from the author of “Judiciary Chairman Accuses Democrats of ‘Charade’ on Supreme Court” please click HERE)

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The Democratic National Committee Is Broke

The Democratic National Committee (DNC) is financially insolvent heading into the 2016 election year, Breitbart News has learned.

Federal Election Commission records reveal that the DNC is millions of dollars underwater and running up a deficit each month, lagging far behind its financially savvy counterpart, the Republican National Committee.

Just last month, the DNC turned a nearly million-dollar debt, marking the fourth month in a row that the DNC spent more money than it took in. In fact, the committee chaired by Debbie Wasserman Schulz took a loss in seven of the last ten months.

The DNC raised $4,456,789 in the month of October, according to its most recent filing. But the committee spent $5,254,928, for a net loss of $798,139 . . .

Four years ago, when it filed its November 2011 FEC report in preparation for President Obama’s re-election run, the DNC had more than $11 million in cash on hand, more than twice as much as it has now. (Read more from “The Democratic National Committee Is Broke” HERE)

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Democrat Ends Campaign After Sympathetic ISIS Tweet

A Democratic candidate for the Minnesota House ended his campaign Sunday, hours after he tweeted that the Islamic State group “isn’t necessarily evil” and its members were doing what they thought was best for their community.

Dan Kimmel, 63, announced the end of his bid for office on his campaign website and Twitter account. He said Saturday evening’s tweet was in response to a statement made during a candidate debate, not in response to Friday’s violent attacks in Paris that left more than 120 people dead and more than 350 wounded . . .

Kimmel, of Burnsville, sent a tweet Saturday that said: “ISIS isn’t necessarily evil. It is made up of people doing what they think is best for their community. Violence is not the answer, though.” He was criticized on social media, and sent out another tweet later that said: “I deplore the evil acts of ISIS. I do not defend their acts.” (Read more from “Democrat Ends Campaign After Sympathetic ISIS Tweet” HERE)

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Watch: Liberal MSNBC Hosts Were Minding Their Own Business During Democratic Forum When This Sign Pops Up

On Friday night, MSNBC sponsored the “Democratic Candidates Forum” in South Carolina. Bernie Sanders, Martin O’Malley, and Hillary Clinton were each given the opportunity to speak about their campaigns.

But just take a look at what appeared in the background while hosts Chris Matthews and Rachel Maddow were talking:

(Read more from “Liberal MSNBC Hosts Were Minding Their Own Business During Democratic Forum When This Sign Pops Up” HERE)

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Insurrection Erupts at the Democratic National Committee

Before things went awry, Democratic Representative Tulsi Gabbard of Hawaii had been planning to be in Las Vegas for her party’s first presidential debate. Gabbard is one of five vice chairs of the Democratic National Committee; of course she would be there. But instead of talking up her party’s prospects on the Strip earlier this week, Gabbard was in Honolulu. Her presence in Sin City was strictly virtual, and anything but boosterish: She spent debate day giving cable-news interviews via satellite, claiming that, as retribution for loudly calling for more Democratic debates than the DNC currently envisions, she was deemed unwelcome in Vegas by the committee’s chairwoman, Debbie Wasserman Schultz—who Gabbard suggested is an enemy of free speech, as well as a liar.

For most debate viewers and Democratic voters, the Gabbard flap, if it registered at all, was little more than a sideshow. But among Democratic officials and strategists, the dust-up was an embarrassing public spectacle—a boiling-over of long-simmering frustrations and resentments within the party hierarchy at a highly inopportune moment.

Of two dozen Democratic insiders with whom I spoke this week, including several DNC vice chairs, not one defended Wasserman Schultz’s treatment of Gabbard. Most called it ridiculous, outrageous, or worse. Many argued, further, that the debate plan enacted by the chairwoman is badly flawed—an assessment shared by many party activists, left-bent supporters of Bernie Sanders and Martin O’Malley, and those candidates themselves, all of whom see it as a naked effort to aid and comfort Hillary Clinton. And they maintained that the plan was a clear reflection of Wasserman Schultz’s management style, which many of them see as endangering Democratic prospects in 2016 and beyond.

One top Democrat who feels precisely this way is DNC Vice Chair R.T. Rybak, a former mayor of Minneapolis who, along with Gabbard, has publicly called for more debates. But Rybak’s indictment of Wasserman Schultz is more sweeping—and pointed—than that. “In the days before and after the debate I kept my mouth shut,” Rybak told me by phone on Thursday. “But I’ve begun to deeply question whether she has the leadership skills to get us through the election. This is not just about how many debates we have. This is one of a series of long-running events in which the chair has not shown the political judgment that is needed.” (Read more from “Insurrection Erupts at the Democratic National Committee” HERE)

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3 BIG Lies From the Democratic Debate Just Got Exposed, and Americans Need to Know It

The truth was a casualty of Tuesday night’s Democratic presidential debate.

Hillary Clinton shaded the facts about her use of a private email account while she was Secretary of State and fudged her position on the Trans-Pacific Partnership trade deal.

Sen. Bernie Sanders, D-Vt., wrongly placed the United States as the world’s leader in wealth and income inequality.

Clinton, whose defense of her private email server has shifted repeatedly over time, said during the debate that what she did was “allowed by the State Department.” However, Clinton was supposed to turn over her personal emails to the Department at the end of her tenure, not two years later as she did. Also, using a private account for all her work emails was “inconsistent with long-established policies and practices under the Federal Records Act and NARA regulations governing all federal agencies,” according to congressional testimony of Jason R. Baron, a former director of litigation at the National Archives.

Clinton recently spoke out against the Trans-Pacific Partnership, a trade agreement among Pacific Rim nations. Debate host Anderson Cooper called out Clinton on her changing positions at Tuesday night’s debate . . .

Clinton told Cooper that when the trade deal was unveiled, she “hoped” it would be the “gold standard” for agreements.

However, that’s not what she said.

(Read more from “3 BIG Lies From the Democratic Debate Just Got Exposed, and Americans Need to Know It” HERE)

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Democratic Debate Surprise: Candidates Cave to Matriarch Hillary

I predicted that Bernie Sanders would best Hillary Clinton during the first presidential debate, much as Donald Trump triumphed over the Republican presidential candidates. They both have an edginess and outsider willingness to challenge traditional conventions in a way that appeals to the base of their respective parties. Clinton was the establishment candidate, the Jeb Bush of the Democratic party, the candidate of the old ways the base was busy rejecting. It seemed an easy prediction.

I couldn’t have been more wrong. Instead, Sanders and most of the other candidates bent over backwards to let Clinton off the hook on the biggest scandal that could derail her campaign — Servergate. When asked about Hillary’s emails, Sanders responded,

I think secretary [Clinton] is right, the American people are sick and tired of hearing about your damn emails. Same with the media. The middle class is collapsing, and want to know if well have a democracy or oligarchy. Enough of the emails.

The crowd cheered wildly. O’Malley chimed in and agreed, “We don’t have to be defined by the email scandal, we can discuss affordable college, etc.”

Lincoln Chafee was the only Democrat who dared to criticize Clinton over her emails, saying in a curiously shaky voice, “This is an issue of American credibility. I think we need someone with the best ethical standards.”

Moderator Anderson Cooper of CNN asked Clinton if she wanted to respond to Chafee, and she responded in an arrogant tone, “No,” to much applause. This seems to be evidence something funny is taking place. Did Clinton promise the other candidates cabinet positions in exchange for keeping quiet about Servergate? Or more sinister, did the Clinton machine make some kind of threat to the candidates? Was that why Chafee’s voice was shaking as he challenged her?

While Clinton appears to have taken some voice training to improve her bland, monotone style, every time she opened her mouth it reminded me of her condescending line in the early 1990s about stay-at-home moms: “I suppose I could have stayed home and baked cookies and had teas, but what I decided to do was to fulfill my profession which I entered before my husband was in public life.” Her rhetoric was full of the usual braggadocio; she managed to get both the words “proud” and “privileged” into her opening statement.

When asked how her presidency would be different than President Obama’s, she declared, “It’s pretty obvious, being the first woman president would be a pretty stark change.” This is quite a contrast from Republican presidential candidate Carly Fiorina, who has pointed out that being a woman is not an accomplishment. When asked why the Clinton dynasty should continue, Hillary said with a straight face, “the first woman president is an outsider” and went on to repeat her favorite line that she would fight for women and children.

Practically everything she said was duplicitous, trying to have it both ways. The most quoted example was: “I’m a progressive, not a moderate. But I’m a progressive who likes to get things done.”

What about her competitors? Sanders didn’t help himself sound any less scarily socialist. He praised socialist countries: “We should look to Denmark, Norway, Sweden and what they’ve accomplished for their people.” He declared that he didn’t consider himself a capitalist, and when asked what the greatest national security threat facing us today, responded, “climate change.” The audience roared. He said he wants to make every university free and raise the minimum wage to $15 an hour everywhere. He also trotted out the much discredited myth that people are locked up in prison merely for smoking marijuana, as did Clinton.

Jim Webb, who has a prestigious history of military service, came across as the most moderate of the bunch, and was attacked for not fully supporting affirmative action. O’Malley did little to distinguish himself from Clinton. All of the candidates, with the possible exception of Chafee, had little sympathy for NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden and said he should be punished. The Planned Parenthood body parts selling scandal never even came up.

The candidates’ messages was one and the same: how to redistribute wealth, taking it away from the rich and setting up new government assistance programs to give it to the poor and middle class. The one thing the candidates did agree upon was that under Obama, the gap between the rich and the poor has increased, the middle class is disappearing and wages going down. And their non-message was also one and the same: There was a noticeable lack of patriotism or optimism about America.

With the other candidates unwilling to really challenge Clinton, it becomes less likely that Joe Biden will enter the race. If the other candidates had shown that they were strongly opposed to her candidacy and hammered her in the debate, or if she had imploded over Servergate, there would have been a natural void for him to enter and immediately become the frontrunner. Now, the Democratic race is up in the air, and Clinton again has a realistic chance at winning the nomination. (For more from the author of “Democratic Debate Surprise: Candidates Cave to Matriarch Hillary” please click HERE)

Follow Joe Miller on Twitter HERE and Facebook HERE.

Trump Says People Will Turn off Today’s Democratic Primary Debate Because He’s Not in It – You’ll Never Guess Who Agrees

Tuesday’s first Democratic presidential primary debate will be a low-ratings snoozefest, according to Donald Trump – because he won’t be on the stage in Las Vegas.

And a CNN executive is hinting that he might be completely right.

‘I think people are going to turn it on for a couple of minutes and then fall asleep,’ The Donald said Monday morning on ‘Fox and Friends’ . . .

‘I don’t want to say this in a braggadocious way, but a person at CNN and a couple of other people said, ‘We have to put Donald Trump in this debate. We’re going to die with it’,’ Trump claimed.

‘Let’s see,’ he said. ‘I don’t think they’ll do badly, because there is a curiosity factor. I don’t think they’re going to do great, and I think a lot of people will turn off after a little while.’ (Read more from “Trump Says People Will Turn off Today’s Democratic Primary Debate Because He’s Not in It – You’ll Never Guess Who Agrees” HERE)

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Terrorist Group Hamas Likes Democrats More Than Republicans

Photo Credit: WND When it comes to a choice between a Democratic or a Republican president, Hamas prefers Democrats.

That’s the conclusion reached by senior Hamas leader Salah Bardawil, who is also a member of Hamas’s parliament . . .

“Obviously the president of the United States sets the foreign policy for the Middle East,” stated Klein, “so it’s very important for what’s going on in Israel, in the Palestinian arena, in the Gaza strip, and beyond. Coming toward the 2016 election, obviously we have no idea right now who the candidates are going to be at the end … is there any candidate or party that Hamas has an interest in, that Hamas thinks will change things for the better in the Middle East?”

[Bardawil responded,] “When it comes to make the decision between who is bad and who is worse … there is no doubt that the Democrat candidate is less worse for us than the Republican.” (Read more from “Terrorist Group Hamas Official: Democrats ‘Less Worse’ Than Republicans” HERE)

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