Monday, November 07, 2011
 
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Remap forcing Republican lawmakers to pick new districts

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[November 07, 2011]  CHICAGO (AP) -- U.S. Rep. Adam Kinzinger is certain he'll seek a second term -- he just doesn't know in which of Illinois' 18 congressional districts. Veteran congresswoman Judy Biggert isn't sure either, after being drawn out of her district in a Democrat-led state remapping that tries to erase recent Republican gains in Congress.

HardwareAcross the state, Illinois' GOP members of Congress are being forced to launch their 2012 re-election bids amid an atmosphere of uncertainty as they wait to see whether a federal court in Chicago upholds the congressional map signed into law by Democratic Gov. Pat Quinn. It throws many of them out of their old districts and into unfriendly Democratic territory or forces them to run against each other.

Kinzinger, whose current 11th Congressional District includes part of the Twin Cities and much of central Illinois, and Biggert, from the western Chicago suburb of Hinsdale, were among 10 of the 11 Republicans in Illinois' congressional delegation who joined a lawsuit against the state in a long-shot challenge over the new map. Democrats were in charge of map-making because they control the Illinois Legislature and the governor's office. Republicans have submitted an alternative map to the court, which is scheduled to hear the case starting on Nov. 17.

If the Democrats' map stands, Biggert will run in the new 11th Congressional District, where she doesn't live. But if the court adopts the Republican plan, she would run in that map's 13th District, where she does live.

Republicans also claim the map discriminates against Latino voters by packing most into one district and diluting their voting strength in other places, although some Latino groups support the map.

The importance of Illinois' legal skirmish involves simple arithmetic: Democrats nationally are out to win back control of the U.S. House after losing it last year to the GOP that sent five Illinois freshmen, including Kinzinger, to Washington.

Now, Kinzinger, 33, will be forced to hunt for a new home -- literally -- regardless of which map ultimately is used.

In October, Kinzinger, of Manteno, formally announced he would try to oust 10-term GOP congressman Don Manzullo in the new 16th District in next year's primary.

But if the Republican map is instituted by the court, he'd run in yet another district that captures rural areas as far west as McLean County and wouldn't prompt a primary fight, which would cost one of them their job. The remap has already cost Illinois one congressional district because of slowing population growth.

"It's inconvenient. It's an annoyance not being able to necessarily know, and it is what it is, and thankfully we don't have to go through this every two years," Kinzinger said.

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Meanwhile, Manzullo will run in the 16th District regardless of which map is used because Ogle County, where he lives, is included in both versions, said Rich Carter, the congressman's spokesman.

The uncertainty over re-elections happens every 10 years when new maps are drawn based on the latest census.

Republicans shouldn't count on winning their court battle, because the courts typically don't have a problem with partisan advantage in the maps and some Latino groups support the new version, said Chris Mooney, a political science professor at the University of Illinois Springfield.

"The current map's probably going to stand. It's quite unlikely that the court is going to overthrow this map," said Mooney, who also doubted whether the uncertainty was having an effect on anyone besides politicians waiting for the legal challenge to be resolved.

"It's more unsettling for the politicians than the voters. I don't think the voters are paying that much attention, especially in Chicago and the suburban area (where) people don't know their congressman really well," he said.

[Associated Press; By DEANNA BELLANDI]

Copyright 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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