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Democrats introduce bill to end gerrymandering

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boards of FL

boards of FL

http://www.usatoday.com/story/news/politics/2015/04/30/house-democrats-gerrymandering-bill/26649507/


Can anyone guess which party will fight this?  When you can't compete in the world of ideas and policy, you have to gerrymander and disenfranchise simply to remain relevant.


WASHINGTON — A group of Democrats introduced legislation Thursday to overhaul and streamline the way the nation's 435 U.S. House districts are redrawn every decade to reflect population shifts determined by the U.S. Census.

"What we see now is too often a troubling reality in which politicians choose their voters instead of voters picking their elected officials," said Rep. Zoe Lofgren, D-Calif., a lead sponsor of legislation she says would create "a more transparent electoral process."

More than half of the states rely on legislatures to redraw district lines, a process swayed heavily by the party in power at the time of reapportionment. The partisan nature of the process has historically led to gerrymandered districts, or those manipulated to give one party a clear electoral advantage.

The cumulative effect over time has resulted in a U.S. House where today only about two dozen of the 435 seats are considered competitive by non-partisan election analysts, and Republicans — who controlled more state legislatures in 2012 when the current maps were approved — are favored to maintain control of the House until the next reapportionment round ahead of the 2022 congressional elections.

The bill, with 19 original co-sponsors, would require each state to establish an independent, multi-party commission tasked with redrawing the state's congressional maps. Commissioners would have to prove they have no conflicts of interest and would be charged with redrawing lines so they comply with voting rights law and be "geographically contiguous and compact."

Some 21 states already rely on redistricting commissions in some form to draw the lines, but this legislation would create one, uniform process nationwide.

With Republicans in control of both chambers of Congress, the Democrats' bill is unlikely to gain momentum unless it can bring on GOP sponsors and support. While gerrymandering has critics in both parties, Republicans are unlikely to support weakening the states' role in the process.


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Hospital Bob

Hospital Bob

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/North_Carolina%27s_12th_congressional_district#/media/File:North_Carolina_US_Congressional_District_12_%28since_2013%29.tif

boards of FL

boards of FL

Looking at districts like that, it should be common sense to everyone that we need to address this issue once and for all.


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ZVUGKTUBM

ZVUGKTUBM

The voters passed an amendment to make this a more straightforward process in Florida, and the GOP controlled legislature ended up being sued by the League of Women Voters because Republicans openly flaunted the law.

They would find a way to flaunt it on a national level, too.

http://www.best-electric-barbecue-grills.com

boards of FL

boards of FL

That's why district redrawing needs to be left to an algorithm.  It would be fairly easy to create a program that we could load updated census data into and then it would give us new districts based on some predefined criteria or constraints.  Politicians shouldn't be anywhere near this process as there is an obvious conflict of interest.


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Floridatexan

Floridatexan


https://www.fairdistrictsnow.org/news/300/

Congressional redistricting heads to state's high court just as lawmakers return to Capitol
John Kennedy | Palm Beach Post | 10/23/2014

The Florida Supreme Court set the day after the opening of the 2015 Legislature for a pivotal hearing into whether the state’s redrawn congressional districts are valid.
The court set March 4 for a hearing in the appeal by a coalition of voters’ groups calling for overturning a judge’s ruling that upheld the congressional plan recast by the Republican-led Legislature.
The move is the latest in a high-stakes political drama steeped in partisan politics.
Following a 12-day trial that ended in June, Leon County Circuit Judge Terry Lewis threw out district boundaries approved in 2012 by the Legislature, specifically finding that the districts held by U.S. Reps. Daniel Webster, R-Orlando and Corrine Brown, D-Jacksonville were drawn to help Republicans maintain overwhelming control of the state’s 27-member congressional delegation.
An August special session was held to rework the map. Lawmakers revised Webster and Brown’s districts, along with five adjoining districts in North and Central Florida and sent that plan back to Lewis, who approved it.
Lewis, though, ruled that it was too late for the redrawn plan to apply to this fall’s elections.

With the delay providing an opening, the Florida League of Women Voters, Common Cause and several Democratic voters who challenged the original congressional map, now dispute the revised plan.
They are asking the Supreme Court to review Lewis’ entire ruling, potentially revisiting arguments about the validity of the entire redrawn map.

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