Friday round-up

Court-watchers continue to report and comment on Wednesday’s oral argument in Benisek v. Lamone, a high-profile partisan-gerrymandering challenge by Republican voters to a Democratic-leaning congressional district in Maryland. At Governing, Alan Greenblatt reports that although the “argument suggested that a number of justices — perhaps a majority — would like to set a standard for when partisan gerrymandering crosses the constitutional line,” “there was no ready consensus about how to define what an unconstitutional partisan gerrymander would look like.” Debra Cassens Weiss looks at the argument for the ABA Journal, as does Lisa Soronen at CitiesSpeak. The editorial board of The Wall Street Journal contends that “[t]he GOP argument isn’t any better than the Democratic case last fall from Wisconsin, and both argue strongly against judicial intervention.” At FiveThirtyEight, Galen Druke highlights “three key differences between the Maryland and Wisconsin cases that might help us understand how the court is thinking about partisan gerrymandering.” At ElectionLaw@Moritz, Edward Foley observes that “there are reasons to be skeptical, at least early in the stages of the intellectual inquiry, that there would be a single ‘grand unified theory of partisan gerrymandering’ under the U.S. Constitution,” and that “no matter what the Court says in the Wisconsin and Maryland cases, don’t expect those opinions to be the last word one way or the other.”

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