Flagpole. (Athens, Ga.) 1987-current, August 10, 2011, Image 4
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ATHENS NEWS AND VIEWS Raise Your Voice: The Athens-Clarke County Democrats and Republicans will jointly spon sor a public "town hall" meeting on redis tricting this Sunday, Aug. 14 from 5:30-7:30 p.m. The meeting is the brainchild of Regina Quick and Shaye Gambrell, the Republican and Democratic representatives, respectively, on the committee appointed by Mayor Nancy Denson to produce a county district map for approval by the ACC Commission. But as faithful readers know, the com mission's approval is not the final word in the process—far from it, in this unusual instance. Rep. Doug McKillip says he's plan ning to attend the town hall, which means he'll have a chance to make his case to the public for whatever plans he has for the elec toral map. Those, according to Blake Aued's Aug. 7 Athens Banner-Herald article, will include the elimination of the county's two superdistricts—which, in the same article, Commissioner Harry Sims says will not be a feature of any map that comes out of the local reapportion ment committee, which he chairs. Assuming Sims is correct, that means that if McKillip intends to submit a map that eliminates superdistricts to his colleagues in the Legislature, he will in all likelihood be asking them to approve a local map not recommended by the local government- changing the local charter in the process. Though the General Assembly has always had the power to do that, it's never used— but there's a first time for everything, right? McKillip hit the Athens airwaves last week with an appearance on Tim Bryant's news talk show, in which he tried to allay citizens' fears instilled by the "liberal media" (which apparently includes not only Flagpole, but the passionately centrist Banner-Herald, as well) that he might be handling local redistrict ing by himself—then went on o explain why he should. And guess what: it's to increase African-American representation on the com mission! He also said he only wants to pro vide the public with additional "options" to the ones produced by the local government's normal process—options on which he and his fellow Republicans in the Legislature will, of course, have the final say, no matter what "the public" prefers. The task of drawing those alternative maps, McKillip announced, will be undertaken with the assistance of his consul tant Robert "Bo" Mabry, whose history—like McKillip's, as a Democrat, until recently—is as a strategist in bare-knuckled political campaigns. McKillip also took the opportunity of his appearance on Bryant's show to upbraid your own true Dope for "coyly" suggesting (on the same show a week earlier) that there may be a personal motive for his intentions regarding the superdistricts—a suggestion he called "utter absurdity." Fine: strained relation ships with commissioners probably account for little to none of McKillip's motivation in all this, and it was unwise to call attention to them when he has so many better reasons to insert himself into the redistricting process of the Athens-Clarke County government. When Bryant asked him about the best one—that he could benefit politically from being seen as a crusading conservative in the progressive bastion of ACC, especially as his own legisla tive district is being redrawn by the state Republicans—he ignored the question. But if you really want "coy," check out Mabry's recent Facebook posts (if he hasn't "blocked" you for asking him direct questions about them), in which he flippantly tweaks the current superdistrict commissioners about McKillip's redrawing project, to which Mabry has now been handed the keys. And if you're looking for "utter absurdity," look no further than the spectacle of a newly Republican legislator, elected as a Democrat in a strongly Democratic district, whose immediate politi cal future depends on the redrawing of that district specifically to erase its Democratic majority without harming the reelection pros pects of adjacent Republican representatives, insisting that his unprecedented interest in local electoral politics is purely motivated by a heroic thirst for "fairness." Again: McKillip has already disenfranchised the Democratic voters who elected him by switching parties, is in the process of making that disenfranchisement permanent by hav ing his district redrawn to favor Republicans, and would like you to believe that the only people around here getting cheated out of "fair" representation are local conservatives. As Aued has pointed out on his ABH blog, the ACC Commission district lines do not pre vent conservatives from being elected, nor are all the districts currently represented by ideologically like-minded liberals, as McKillip disingenuously claims. His scheme isn't to correct partisan gerrymandering; it's to create it. And the assertion that local district lines need to be radically redrawn to increase local African-American representation—by someone who just switched to a party whose electoral strategy routinely includes barely disguised attempts to suppress minority voting power— would be laughable if it weren't so depressing. Doug McKillip has shown himself to be as brazenly opportunistic a politician as can be imagined, and he is, right here and now, mak ing a play for increased po'itical power—with Athens' electoral self-determination as the price. "It's not personal!" he says. You'll have to forgive us, Doug, if we take it that way. Dave Marr news@flagpole.com Athens’ local electoral map is being redrawn, and Rep. Doug McKillip wants big changes. 4 FLAGPOLE.COM • AUGUST 10, 2011