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		Congressman joins Statehouse GOP in calling for redistricting commission
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		[April 13, 2021] 
		By Peter HancockCapitol News Illinois
 phancock@capitolnewsillinois.com
 
 
  SPRINGFIELD – Illinois Congressman Rodney 
		Davis joined his Republican colleagues in the General Assembly Monday in 
		calling on Gov. JB Pritzker to support legislation to form an 
		independent commission to redraw congressional and state legislative 
		district maps. 
 “In the end, I think the public is demanding an open transparent 
		process,” Davis, of Taylorville, said during a Statehouse news 
		conference. “And many of our colleagues, including Gov. Pritzker, have 
		said in their own words, that they would like an open and transparent 
		process, one that's going to stop politicians from picking their own 
		voters.”
 
 Both the U.S. and Illinois constitutions require that district maps be 
		redrawn every 10 years using the latest census data to ensure equal 
		representation. The Illinois Constitution requires it to be done in the 
		year following the decennial census.
 
 
		
		 
		The state constitution also requires that the General Assembly complete 
		its work by June 30. After that, the process is handed over to an 
		eight-member bipartisan commission and, if that body fails to approve 
		new maps by Aug. 10, a ninth member is appointed by random selection to 
		give one party or the other a 5-4 majority.
 
 That’s the process that has been used in four of the last five 
		redistricting efforts. Only in 2011 did the General Assembly complete 
		the process before the June 30 deadline.
 
 But Republicans this year have proposed legislation, Senate Bill 1325, 
		that would authorize the Illinois Supreme Court to appoint a 16-member 
		commission made up of seven Democrats, seven Republicans and two 
		independents.
 
 The plan is similar to a proposed constitutional amendment that voters 
		petitioned to have placed on the November 2016 ballot but which the 
		state Supreme Court rejected on technical grounds.
 
 “In 2016, we had almost 580,000, Illinoisans that signed petitions to 
		put a commission on the ballot yet that was kicked off by Mike Madigan 
		and his legal team and by one judge, a single judge with the Supreme 
		Court, Judge Tom Kilbride, who wrote the majority decision that kicked 
		that off the ballot … or else we would be drawing maps a different way 
		this year, I believe,” said Rep. Tim Butler, R-Springfield.
 
 The idea of an independent redistricting commission has enjoyed 
		bipartisan support in the past. In fact, Monday’s news conference 
		featured a large poster board with a quote from then-candidate JB 
		Pritzker, who said during the 2018 campaign, “We should amend the 
		constitution to create an independent commission to redraw legislative 
		maps, but in the meantime, I would urge Democrats and Republicans to 
		agree to an independent commission to handle creating a new legislative 
		map.”
 
 Rep. Avery Bourne, R-Morrisonville, urged Pritzker to support the GOP 
		plan.
 
 “While the context may have changed, when he was asked that question, it 
		was assumed that Mike Madigan would be drawing the maps,” she said. “His 
		pledge has not and cannot change.”
 
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			Congressman Rodney Davis, center, joins state House 
			Republican Rep. Avery Bourne and others in a news conference calling 
			on Gov. JB Pritzker to honor his campaign pledge supporting an 
			independent redistricting commission. (Capitol News Illinois Photo 
			by Peter Hancock) 
            
			 
            In 2019, Sen. Julie Morrison, D-Lake Forest, proposed a 
			constitutional amendment that many believe would have passed Supreme 
			Court scrutiny. That measure had 36 cosponsors, including 17 
			Democrats, but it was never assigned to a substantive committee and 
			it died at the end of the 2020 session.
 Butler pointed to the city of Springfield as an example of how 
			legislative districts have been gerrymandered for partisan gain.
 
 When the current maps were drawn in 2011, he said, the capital city 
			was divided among three House districts and three Senate districts, 
			and initially none of the lawmakers holding those seats actually 
			lived in Springfield.
 
 “Why was that done,” Butler asked. “That was done for partisan 
			political reasons to try to get new Democrat seats in there. That's 
			what it was.”
 
 Republicans argue that legislative maps have been drawn 
			intentionally to favor Democrats, and they have alleged that 
			Democrats have a disproportionate advantage in the General Assembly 
			because of it.
 
 Democrats, however, have argued that the maps also ensure that 
			racial and ethnic minorities are fairly represented, and they have 
			accused Republicans of trying to break up those voting groups, who 
			traditionally vote Democratic.
 
             
			“As Republicans nationwide seek to silence Black and Brown 
			communities, Democrats in Illinois remain committed to the creation 
			of a fair map that reflects the great diversity of our state,” Sen. 
			Omar Aquino, D-Chicago, who chairs the Senate Redistricting 
			Committee, said in a statement Monday. “We have invited communities 
			of interest across Illinois to participate in this process, 
			including establishing an online portal that allows anyone to draw 
			and submit their own proposed maps.”
 Aquino also argued that the GOP bill would likely be found 
			unconstitutional because, without an amendment, the Constitution 
			currently requires the General Assembly to redraw maps every 10 
			years.
 
 Rep. Elizabeth Hernandez, D-Cicero, who chairs the House 
			Redistricting Committee, said after a hearing Monday that she does 
			not know whether the idea of an independent commission is dead for 
			this year.
 
 “It’s a continuing conversation,” she said. “I can’t tell you, until 
			really once we’re finalized with all the testimony, what direction 
			this will take.”
 
 She also said she had not spoken to Pritzker or House Speaker 
			Emanuel “Chris” Welch, D-Hillside, about the issue.
 
 Capitol News Illinois is a nonprofit, nonpartisan 
			news service covering state government and distributed to more than 
			400 newspapers statewide. It is funded primarily by the Illinois 
			Press Foundation and the Robert R. McCormick Foundation.
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