Only one testifies at first congressional redistricting hearing
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[October 08, 2021]
By PETER HANCOCK
Capitol News Illinois
phancock@capitolnewsillinois.com
SPRINGFIELD – The process of redrawing
congressional district maps in Illinois got off to a slow start Thursday
when only one person showed up to testify at the first legislative
public hearing, which was held in Chicago.
Ryan Tolley, policy director for the advocacy group CHANGE Illinois,
urged the House Redistricting Committee to listen to community groups
and afford them more opportunity than they had during the legislative
redistricting process to review any proposed new maps before they are
voted on.
“I had trouble finding one group that participated in the legislative
remap hearings that publicly endorsed the legislative maps. But there
are a lot that rejected those maps,” Tolley said. “And I just want us to
think about how can we have a map that reflects the interest of
communities if almost every group that tries to engage with this process
says their voices were ignored and their communities were harmed. Their
efforts really should not be in vain.”
In May, and again in August, lawmakers drew new maps for state
legislative districts. Those new maps are now the subject of two federal
lawsuits – one by Republican leaders in the General Assembly and one by
a Latino advocacy group – who argue, among other things, that the new
districts dilute Latino voting power.
But lawmakers have not yet addressed the issue of congressional district
maps, something required under the U.S. Constitution once every 10 years
following the decennial census.
According to the 2020 U.S. Census, Illinois’ population fell by 18,124
people over the previous 10 years, or about 0.14 percent. As a result,
Illinois will lose one of its congressional districts, bringing the
number down to 17.
Allie McNamara, a legislative aide who works on redistricting, said the
largest population losses occurred in downstate Illinois, led by
Alexander County, which lost 36.4 percent of its population. But
Calhoun, Coles, Gallatin, Greene, Hardin, Henderson, Jackson, Mason,
McDonough, Pike and Pulaski counties also all saw double-digit losses.
Meanwhile, there was a marked shift in the state’s overall population
away from rural areas toward urban centers and the suburbs. The city of
Chicago grew 2 percent, or about 50,000 people, McNamara said, although
there were significant demographic changes within Cook County. The white
population there declined by about 15 percent and the Black population
fell by about 2 percent, but the Asian and Hispanic populations both
grew substantially, she said.
Those changes will need to be reflected in whatever new maps lawmakers
draw, something they are expected to take up during the fall veto
session, which begins Oct. 19.
That process will be watched closely at both the state and national
level. Democrats hold only an eight-vote majority in the U.S. House
while three seats are vacant – two Democratic seats and one Republican
seat.
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Ryan Tolley, policy director for the group CHANGE
Illinois, speaks to the House Redistricting Committee via
videoconferencing during the first public hearing on redrawing
congressional district maps in Illinois. (Credit: Blueroomstream.com)
Historically the party that holds the White House –
currently, Democratic President Joe Biden – loses seats in the
president’s first mid-term election, which means there is a strong
possibility that Republicans could regain control of the House.
But Democrats are firmly in control of the Illinois General
Assembly, where they hold supermajorities in both chambers, and they
hold 13 of the state’s 18 congressional seats.
Because of the way Illinois’ population shifted in the 2020 census,
the most likely region to lose a congressional seat will be in
heavily-Republican southern Illinois. But Democrats in the General
Assembly are expected to use their strong majorities to draw maps in
a way that will help Democratic candidates in some of the state’s
more toss-up regions.
State Rep. Tim Butler, R-Springfield, the minority spokesman on the
Redistricting Committee, said he fully expects Democrats to engage
in gerrymandering in order to protect Democratic congressional
candidates.
“Illinois has a terrible history of drawing grotesquely
gerrymandered districts for political power,” he said. “And it's
been done on a bipartisan level. The current map that we're in,
certainly the congressional district that I live in – the 13th
congressional district – was no-bones-about-it drawn to try to elect
a Democrat by linking together university towns from Champaign,
Normal, Springfield, Edwardsille, across the state in a diagonal
manner, where friends and neighbors get divided for pure political
gain.”
That seat actually is now held by a Republican, Rodney Davis, who
has indicated that he might consider running for governor in 2022,
depending on how lawmakers redraw that district.
Both the House and Senate Redistricting committees have scheduled a
series of public hearings leading up to the fall veto session. The
Senate panel is scheduled to hold its first hearing at 10 a.m.
Friday at Oakton Community College in Des Plaines. The next House
committee meeting on congressional maps is slated for noon Tuesday,
Oct. 12, at the Plumbers Local 130 United Association building in
Joliet.
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. |