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Senator Rails Against PA Redistricting, Calls For Conversation On Impeaching Justices

US Senator Pat Toomey spoke to reporters in the state Capitol rotunda and threw his support behind GOP lawmakers lobbying against the Pennsylvania Supreme Court's redistricting decision. (Photo by Katie Meyer)
US Senator Pat Toomey spoke to reporters in the state Capitol rotunda and threw his support behind GOP lawmakers lobbying against the Pennsylvania Supreme Court's redistricting decision. (Photo by Katie Meyer)

HARRISBURG, PA (WSKG) -- In a rare visit to Harrisburg, Republican US Senator Pat Toomey made clear his strong opposition to the Pennsylvania Supreme Court's decision to redraw the state's congressional maps.

Toomey threw his support squarely behind state Republicans seeking to get the decision stayed in federal court, and took up the arguments state House and Senate leaders have been making for several weeks.

"The Pennsylvania Supreme Court has engaged in a really amazing, highly partisan, unconstitutional power grab," he told reporters in the Capitol rotunda.

The court, he said, has no right to arbitrate congressional map-drawing under the US Constitution--no matter what the maps look like.

"Now, let me be clear," he said. "The current map, the legal map, has gerrymandered seats. But it was constitutionally drawn, constitutionally adopted."

Toomey also lent some legitimacy to a Republican-sponsored petition that has been circulating the state Capitol to impeach the four Democratic state justices who took part in redrawing the map.

So far, it hasn't gotten much acknowledgement from GOP leaders.

But Toomey told reporters he thinks that "state House members, state senators are going to be speaking amongst themselves and their constituents, and the fundamental question is, does this blatant, unconstitutional, partisan power grab that undermines our electoral process--does that rise to the level of impeachment?"

"That's ultimately their decision," he said. "But it's a conversation that has to happen."

For now, House and Senate Republican leaders appear to be keeping their attention on appealing to the US Supreme Court for a stay on the state court decision. Their specific argument is that State Supreme Court cannot invalidate congressional maps.

House Speaker Mike Turzai noted, when two similar cases were brought to federal courts, the courts held that Pennsylvania's congressional maps were constitutional.

Because congressional maps are federal maps--albeit, ones drawn by state representatives--Turzai is saying the matter should remain in federal court.

"There is no explicit language in the state constitution dealing with the drawing of congressional lines--that's in the federal constitution," he said. "We do not believe that the state Supreme Court had the power, based on the state constitution to invalidate the congressional map."

He added, "we believe it was a completely partisan, ultimate gerrymander."

State Democrats and a number of Republicans have differed with the case that Turzai and Senate President Pro Tempore Joe Scarnati are making.

The same morning that Turzai laid out his and Scarnati's argument, House GOP Spokesman Steve Miskin posted a tweet that appeared to contradict it.