Post Tribune (Sunday)

Partisan gerrymande­ring could push Hoosiers of color further into the shadows

- By Cherrish Pryor Cherrish Pryor is a Democratic State Representa­tive for Indianapol­is, the Indiana House Democratic Caucus Floor Leader, and a member of the Indiana House Elections Committee and Indiana Black Legislativ­e Caucus (IBLC).

Every 10 years, following the census, states are required to redraw congressio­nal and legislativ­e district lines. In the coming weeks, members of the Indiana General Assembly will convene to decide on maps setting the precedent for the next decade of elections.

Systemic issues built into our society’s social, economic and political systems have left communitie­s of color behind for far too long.

We have a once-in-a-decade opportunit­y coming next month to finally give Black and Brown Hoosiers and their viewpoints proportion­al and fair representa­tion in Congress and the Statehouse.

Achieving this will require the state legislatur­e to reimagine our redistrict­ing processes to eliminate gerrymande­ring once and for all. Let’s be clear: partisan redistrict­ing using political data will only push communitie­s of color — which are already dramatical­ly underrepre­sented — further into the shadows.

It is already well-publicized that both Indiana’s state legislativ­e and congressio­nal districts are among the most gerrymande­red in the country. A study suggests that the maps last drawn by the Republican supermajor­ity skew towards the electoral favor of a single party — the Republican Party — more so than 95% of maps found across the

United States. Most gerrymande­red is not a category we should be proud to lead. It flips the sacredness of democracy on its head and puts power in the hands of politician­s and not The People.

In a practice where disproport­ionate representa­tion and diluted electoral power reign supreme, communitie­s of color suffer the most.

Indiana minority communitie­s are heavily concentrat­ed in districts represente­d traditiona­lly by Democratic lawmakers. While not a monolith, Hoosiers belonging to these typically underrepre­sented and underserve­d groups often identify disproport­ionately with one party, leaving them the most impacted by partisan redistrict­ing. Black and Brown Hoosiers are often “packed, stacked and cracked” to amplify certain voices and silence others.

The current culture of our political systems should no longer stand. Hoosiers deserve better, which is why I join the advocates and organizers calling for a fair and independen­t redistrict­ing system. The eliminatio­n of biases in the way we draw maps with an independen­t redistrict­ing commission is the way forward.

 ?? MICHAEL GARD/POST-TRIBUNE ?? The only two Democrats on the redistrict­ing committee, Fady Qaddoura and Cherrish Pryor, both of Indianapol­is, speak to a group of protesters demanding fair redistrict­ing maps at Ivy Tech Community College in Valparaiso on Aug. 6.
MICHAEL GARD/POST-TRIBUNE The only two Democrats on the redistrict­ing committee, Fady Qaddoura and Cherrish Pryor, both of Indianapol­is, speak to a group of protesters demanding fair redistrict­ing maps at Ivy Tech Community College in Valparaiso on Aug. 6.

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