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Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine recently said it is time for Ohio to take elected officials out of the process of drawing state legislative and congressional district lines. But voting rights activists see DeWine as part of the problem, not the solution.
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A major U.S. Supreme Court case from North Carolina about a once-fringe election theory may end up getting tossed out of the high court now that a state court in GOP hands is rehearing the case. But Republican state lawmakers from Ohio have already teed up another redistricting case about the theory that's currently waiting for the justices to decide whether to take on.
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Read 'em and weep. Or applaud, depending on your point of view.
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Ohio Senate leaders reflect on the long, drawn-out redistricting process that dominated legislative work at the Ohio Statehouse this year.
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But Ohio voters already did.
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There’s a new chapter in Ohio’s redistricting saga after Republicans picked up even more seats in the Ohio House and Ohio Senate using district maps that were ruled unconstitutional by the Ohio Supreme Court.
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Ohio House Speaker Bob Cupp and Ohio Senate President Matt Huffman went to the U.S. Supreme Court to get the Ohio Supreme Court off their backs on gerrymandering congressional districts. But a 2019 U.S. Supreme Court decision may doom their effort to failure.
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House Speaker Bob Cupp (R-Lima), Senate President Matt Huffman (R-Lima), Sen. Rob McColley (R-Napoleon), and Rep. Jeff LaRe (R-Violet Twp.) said in a joint statement that they believe the Ohio Supreme Court ruling on July 19, against their congressional district map, was “fundamentally flawed.”
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The chief justice is a Republican who is not at all fond of the partisan gerrymandering that Ohio Republicans are so devoted to.
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Voting rights advocates are looking into proposing a new redistricting process in Ohio after saying the Republican-led Ohio Redistricting Commission missed another deadline to draw a new congressional district map.