Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Ohio Supreme Court rejects GOP voter map

- JULIE CARR SMYTH

COLUMBUS, Ohio — Ohio’s Republican-drawn congressio­nal map was rejected by the state’s high court Friday, giving hope to national Democrats who had argued it unfairly delivered several potentiall­y competitiv­e seats in this year’s critical midterm elections to Republican­s.

In the 4-3 decision, the Ohio Supreme Court returned the map to the Ohio General Assembly, where Republican­s hold supermajor­ities in both chambers, and then to the powerful Ohio Redistrict­ing Commission. The two bodies have a combined 60 days to draw new lines that comply with a 2018 constituti­onal amendment against gerrymande­ring.

The commission was already in the process of reconstitu­ting so it can redraw GOP-drawn legislativ­e maps the court also rejected this week as gerrymande­red. That decision gave the panel 10 days to comply.

With Feb. 2 and March 4 looming as the filing dates for legislativ­e and congressio­nal candidates, respective­ly, the decisions have raised questions of whether the state’s May 3 primary may have to be delayed.

Ohio Republican Party Chair Bob Paduchik called the situation a mess, criticizin­g the court for giving the commission less than two weeks to come up with new legislativ­e maps.

“That’s a lot to dump on a commission with a very short period of time,” he said Friday during a forum at the City Club of Clevelandy. “It’s hard to say what’s going to happen.”

Justices chastised Republican­s in both decisions for flouting the voters’ wishes and the Constituti­on and directed them to move with haste.

Writing for the majority, Justice Michael Donnelly wrote, “(T)he evidence in these cases makes clear beyond all doubt that the General Assembly did not heed the clarion call sent by Ohio voters to stop political gerrymande­ring.”

Donnelly and the court’s other two Democrats were joined by Chief Justice Maureen O’Connor, a moderate Republican set to depart the court at the end of the year because of an age limit.

The court’s three other Republican­s — including Justice Pat DeWine, son of Republican Gov. Mike DeWine, a named plaintiff in the cases — raised their objections in an unpreceden­ted “joint dissent” that did not identify its author. The majority called the format “unusual and inexplicab­le.”

The three said it was unclear how it should be determined that a map “unduly favors” one party over another.

“When the majority says that the plan unduly favors the Republican Party, what it means is that the plan unduly favors the Republican Party as compared to the results that would be obtained if we followed a system of proportion­al representa­tion,” the dissent said.

They said the U.S. has never adopted a system that requires congressio­nal seats to be proportion­ally distribute­d to match the popular vote, nor does Ohio’s Constituti­on require it.

In her separate opinion, O’Connor said voting-rights and Democratic groups that challenge the maps never argued strict proportion­ality was required.

“The dissenting opinion’s dismissive characteri­zation of all the metrics used by petitioner­s’ experts as simply being measures of ‘proportion­al representa­tion’ is sleight of hand,” she wrote. “No magician’s trick can hide what the evidence overwhelmi­ngly demonstrat­es: the map statistica­lly presents such a partisan advantage that it unduly favors the Republican Party.”

Friday’s decision affects separate lawsuits brought by the National Democratic Redistrict­ing Commission’s legal arm, as well as the Ohio offices of the League of Women Voters and the A. Philip Randolph Institute. The groups calculated that either 12 or 13 of the map’s 15 districts favor Republican­s, despite the GOP garnering only about 54% of votes in statewide races over the past decade.

 ?? (AP/Julie Carr Smyth) ?? Members of the Ohio Senate Government Oversight Committee hear testimony on a new map of state congressio­nal districts in this photo from Nov. 16, at the Ohio Statehouse in Columbus, Ohio. On Friday, the Ohio Supreme Court rejected a new map of the state’s 15 congressio­nal districts as gerrymande­red, sending the blueprint back for another try.
(AP/Julie Carr Smyth) Members of the Ohio Senate Government Oversight Committee hear testimony on a new map of state congressio­nal districts in this photo from Nov. 16, at the Ohio Statehouse in Columbus, Ohio. On Friday, the Ohio Supreme Court rejected a new map of the state’s 15 congressio­nal districts as gerrymande­red, sending the blueprint back for another try.

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