The Columbus Dispatch

My community’s power has been diluted by politician­s

- Your Turn Tika Adhikari Guest columnist

Two years ago, I didn’t know anything about gerrymande­ring.

I had never heard that term before, let alone understood the concept behind “packing” and “cracking” districts so that politician­s get to choose their voters. I didn’t learn about gerrymande­ring until I started working at OPAWL — Building AAPI Feminist Leadership in 2022.

As I’ve learned more about Ohio politics through working at OPAWL and volunteeri­ng for political candidates and citizen-led issue campaigns, I’ve seen how the concept of “one person, one vote” fails under unethical gerrymande­ring.

Yet, gerrymande­ring is a sneaky issue that can be hard for voters — especially non-native English speakers — to understand. It can be difficult to explain how electoral votes are manipulate­d to favor one political party.

Gerrymande­ring impacts members of my community

That’s why OPAWL set out to educate our Asian, Asian American, and Pacific Islander members across Ohio about the harms of gerrymande­ring, providing resources for them to share with their communitie­s.

OPAWL joined the Equal Districts coalition and provided testimony during the redistrict­ing process in 2022. Now, we’ve entered another stage of the redistrict­ing fight, with the Citizens Not Politician­s amendment.

As the civic engagement organizer at OPAWL, as a member of the Asian, Asian American, and Pacific Islander community — specifical­ly the Bhutanesen­epali community — and as an Ohio voter, I strongly support the creation of fair maps, drawn by citizens, that keep elections competitiv­e and communitie­s intact.

My community’s power has been sliced, diced and diluted

As AAPI Ohioans, we have a particular­ly high stake in ending gerrymande­ring. Central Ohio is home to the largest Bhutanese-nepali community in the world outside of Asia, a total of approximat­ely 28,000+ resettled refugees — of which I am one.

By cracking AAPI voters into multiple districts in recent maps, legislator­s have blatantly attempted to dilute the political power of the AAPI community and denied us fair political representa­tion.

As a result, my community’s unique concerns and challenges are rarely prioritize­d by policymake­rs.

The AAPI community is one of the fastest growing racial and ethnic demographi­c groups in Ohio and the country.

People of Asian or Pacific Islander descent now comprise 7.2% of the national population based on 2020 Census data. In Ohio, the Asian population grew by 58.3% and the Pacific Islander population grew by 44.2% between 2010 and 2020.

We need fair maps that minimize the division of AAPI communitie­s so that the interests of the growing population of AAPI Ohioans are fully represente­d.

Leaders shouldn’t pick their voters in Ohio

All voters, including AAPI voters, have a right to choose their leaders in this representa­tive democracy — not the other way around. Our communitie­s should be fairly and equally represente­d and deserve better than the maps that violated Ohio’s constituti­on and were drawn by politician­s behind closed doors in 2021, 2022, and 2023.

An independen­t citizen commission, as proposed by Citizens Not Politician­s, would ensure AAPI communitie­s — and all communitie­s — have a fair and equal opportunit­y to elect rightful candidates who truly represent their interests.

OPAWL members are helping to collect signatures to put the Citizens Not Politician­s amendment on the ballot, and if it qualifies, we’ll be organizing in our communitie­s until Election Day to make sure our neighbors and loved ones know what’s at stake for the AAPI community and Ohio voters.

We’re ready to put citizens in charge of the mapmaking process so that we can end gerrymande­ring in Ohio and give the AAPI community the fair political representa­tion we deserve and have long been denied.

Tika Adhikari is a former Bhutanese refugee and Ohio voter in Pickeringt­on. She is the civic engagement and immigratio­n organizer with OPAWL — Building AAPI Feminist Leadership. OPAWL is a multi-ethnic, intersecti­onal feminist grassroots community organizati­on.

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