What's going on with trial court 'consolidation'? It looks a lot like Florida-style gerrymandering
Whats going on with trial court consolidation? It looks a lot like Florida-style gerrymandering
A new push to consolidate Florida courts has people talking about politics more precisely, about gerrymandering.
A committee of 14 stakeholders in the judicial system met for the first time Friday. They have 4½ months to formulate an answer to this question: Does the state need all 20 of its trial court circuits?
But whats billed as a no-brainer, long overdue shake-up to streamline court operations and save money isnt so simple, knowledgeable observers say. They contend that consolidation has much more to do with redrawing the judicial circuit map so Republicans can put the voters they want in the places they want them; in a word, gerrymandering.
The observers consider who raised the court consolidation issue, whos leading the exploratory committee and the timing related to next years elections. They track a record that shows the Republican leaders of Floridas unitary government want a court system devoted to boosting the state partys standard-bearer, presidential candidate Gov. Ron DeSantis.
It would certainly seem incongruous for Republicans to claim they have no designs to increase their control of the judicial system, legal historian Neil Skene said.
Consolidation may mean that there are fewer courthouses and reduced availability to people, especially those with transportation challenges, he said. The committee probably wont focus on public access to courts, however.
A GOP-FRIENDLY MAP
Its way too early to predict how a new map would look, but if gerrymandering to favor the party in power is the objective, heres one possible scenario:
Imagine its not hard Republican legislators want to install a Republican as state attorney in the 13th Judicial Circuit, where DeSantis suspended Warren.
Hillsborough County, which comprises the entire 13th Judicial Circuit, leans Democratic. The neighboring 12th Judicial Circuit consists of Manatee, DeSoto and Sarasota counties, all Republican strongholds. So if the 12th and 13th circuits were combined, a Republican candidate for state attorney would have a greatly enhanced shot at winning.