U.S. judges order Ohio to revamp
Republican-drawn gerrymandered districts
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[May 04, 2019]
By Brendan O'Brien
(Reuters) - A panel of three federal judges
on Friday ruled that Ohio's Republican-drawn congressional map is an
unconstitutional partisan gerrymander and ordered the state to revamp it
before the 2020 presidential election.
The ruling comes a week after another federal court ruled that
Michigan's congressional maps were unconstitutionally drawn by
Republican politicians to dilute the power of Democratic voters.
Both Michigan and Ohio are expected to play a pivotal role in the 2020
election, as they have in recent elections. They were key swing states
in Republican U.S. President Donald Trump's 2016 electoral victory.
"We are convinced by the evidence that this partisan gerrymander was
intentional and effective and that no legitimate justification accounts
for its extremity," the U.S. District Court in Cincinnati panel wrote in
its decision, ordering the state to create a plan to fix the map by June
14.
The ruling in Ohio could be short-lived if the U.S. Supreme Court rules
in June that partisan gerrymandering cases cannot be brought in federal
court.
In partisan gerrymandering, one political party draws legislative
districts to weaken the other party's voters. The lines are typically
redrawn once a decade after the U.S. census, and in many states the
party in power controls the decision-making.
Republicans control both houses of the Ohio legislature, as well as the
governorship.
Four congressional elections have occurred under the map and each
resulted in 12 Republican representatives and four Democratic
representatives, the ruling noted.
Included in the 2012 map was the "'Snake on the Lake' — a bizarre,
elongated sliver of a district that severed numerous counties," the
judges wrote in their 301-page opinion, referring to the state's 9th
district that runs along Lake Erie.
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Voters cast their votes during the U.S. presidential election in
Elyria, Ohio, U.S. November 8, 2016. REUTERS/Aaron Josefczyk/File
Photo
Ohio Attorney General Dave Yost, a Republican, said in a statement
that the state will seek a stay and appeal.
The court said it will redraw the maps itself if Ohio fails to come
up with a solution that the judges deem fair.
The ruling comes in a lawsuit brought last year by the League of
Women Voters and the American Civil Liberties Union against the
state's attorney general.
"This opinion, declaring Ohio an egregiously gerrymandered state,
completely validates every one of our claims and theories in every
respect," Freda Levenson, legal director for the ACLU of Ohio, said
in a statement.
Ohio's secretary of state, Frank Larose, a Republican who oversees
the state's elections process, said his office will work to
"administer fair, accurate and secure elections in 2020, pending the
conclusion of the judicial process," he said.
The conservative justices who hold a 5-4 majority on the U.S.
Supreme Court at a March hearing focused on gerrymandering in
Maryland and North Carolina signaled that they were skeptical of
lower courts' authority to block electoral maps drawn to give one
party a lopsided advantage.
Critics have said gerrymandering has become increasingly effective
and insidious, guided by precise voter data and powerful computer
software.
(Reporting by Brendan O'Brien in Milwaukee; Editing by Bill Tarrant,
Leslie Adler and Bill Berkrot)
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