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6 Election L.J. 1 (2007)

handle is hein.journals/enlwjr6 and id is 1 raw text is: ELECTION LAW JOURNAL
Volume 6, Number 1, 2007
© Mary Ann Liebert, Inc.
DOI: 10.1089/elj.2006.6001
Editorial
The Party Line
DANIEL H. LOWENSTEIN and RICHARD L. HASEN

T HIS WILL BE a shortish Party Line for a
longish issue of Election Law Journal. The
reason is that much of the issue is devoted to
the second installment of the symposium on
campaign finance disclosure. Background on
the symposium and a short description of the
articles appearing in this issue are contained in
the Introduction at page 36.
As was the case with the first part of the dis-
closure symposium, Lowenstein, who served as
Principal Investigator for the Campaign Disclo-
sure Project that commissioned the papers, re-
cused himself from evaluation of the papers for
the Election Law Journal. We thank Richard Brif-
fault and Associate Editor Sam Hirsch for their
time and effort in filling that gap. Information
about the Campaign Disclosure Project can
be found at <http://www.campaigndisclosure.
org/about.html>
Preceding the symposium is an article by
Bernard Grofman and Gary King. In the
Supreme Court's most recent case discussing
partisan  gerrymandering claims, LULAC     v.
Perry, various Justices on the Supreme Court ex-
pressed some interest in the partisan symme-
try standard for judging whether a redistricting
plan should count as a partisan gerrymander. In

their opinion in LULAC, Justices Souter and
Ginsburg asked that further attention ... be de-
voted to the administrability of such a criterion
at all levels of redistricting and its review. Grof-
man and King take up that call in this issue.
Building on their previous scholarly work, on
their amicus brief filed in the case (along with
Andrew Gelman and Jonathan Katz), on the ob-
servations of the Justices in LULAC, and on the
academic literature, they offer a social science
perspective on the conceptualization and mea-
surement of partisan gerrymandering and the
development of relevant legal rules.
This issue also contains four book reviews.
Wendy Tam Cho reviews The Election After Re-
form: Money, Politics and the Bipartisan Campaign
Reform Act, edited by Michael Malbin. Morgan
Kousser reviews two recent books on felon dis-
franchisement laws: Jeff Manza and Christopher
Uggen, Locked Out: Felon Disenfranchisement and
American Democracy; and Sasha Abramsky,
Conned: How Millions Went to Prison, Lost the
Vote, and Helped Send George W. Bush to the White
House. Michael Pitts reviews Spencer Overton,
Stealing Democracy: The New Politics of Voter Sup-
pression. Dan Tokaji reviews Roy Saltman, The
History and Politics of Voting Technology.

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