Utah Lawmakers Approve New Congressional Map, โPotential for Democratic Gains Remains Slim
SALT โฃLAKE CITY – Utah โlawmakers on Monday approved a new congressional map following a court orderโ to redraw districts, a moveโค that couldโ offer Democrats a marginal chance to compete in a traditionally Republican state. The map, passed โคduring a special session, is now under review by Judge Diane Gibson, who previously struck down the state’s prior map for violating the Utah Constitution.
The revised map comes after public comment โคfavored a different proposal,but Republicans ultimately chose what they described as theโค least โขcompetitive option. State Sen. Scott Sandall, a co-chair of the Legislature’s redistrictingโข committee, expressed confidence โtheโข judge will uphold the new map, โstating, “there are a lot โฃof things they would have done differently if notโ for the time crunch,” but he believes she “will have โขno reason to reject the map.”
Democrats voiced concerns about the process, with โState Sen. โNate blouin suggesting the outcome was predetermined. He โคwas rebuked by Republican leaders on the Senate floor for implying the map chosen was specifically designed to โฃfavor their party.Sen. Sandall insisted the committee did not consider political data. Aโ small number of Republicans joinedโ Democrats in opposing the map.
Alongside the map approval, lawmakers amended Proposition 4, a 2018 voter-approved ballotโข initiative related to redistricting, to require new districts to reflect Utah’s overall partisan voting patterns. This amendment โคwas quickly challenged by voting rights groupsโค who โคargue lawmakers are attempting to “change the rules of the game,”โค prompting a motion in the ongoing legal case.
Redistricting expert Jonathan Cervas of Carnegie Mellon University analyzed the new mapโ and found Democrats would likelyโข lose every election under its โconfiguration, โcharacterizing it as uncompetitive, though anโค improvement over the previous map.The prior map, struck down by Judge Gibson, considerably divided Salt โLake County, a Democratic stronghold, and led to Republican dominance in โdistricts that were previously competitive.
Despiteโฃ the challenges,โฃ redistricting analyst Jason Fierman believes a Democratic victory isn’t unachievable. “An extremely strong candidate in a blue wave year might be able to possibly break this cycle,” he said, suggesting former U.S. Rep. Ben McAdams as a potential candidate.
Judge Gibsonโฃ will now review the approved map and consider alternative โproposals โฃfrom voting rights groups. If she rejects the map, aโค legal battle could ensue over the court’s authority to create its own redistricting plan.