The Columbus Dispatch

Lawmakers’ ‘rigged’ map would steal representa­tion

- Your Turn Kathleen Clyde and Greg Moore Guest columnists

Whether we live in Columbus, Cincinnati, or Piqua, the districts we draw this year will shape our lives and communitie­s for the next decade.

But the legislativ­e maps that Republican members of the official Ohio Redistrict­ing Commission voted to introduce on a partisan 5-2 basis fail to uphold basic tenets of fair representa­tion.

As currently drawn, these maps are more partisan-rigging and do not represent our state as a whole.

Since May, our citizen-led, nonpartisa­n initiative, the Ohio Citizens Redistrict­ing Commission, has held multiple hearings on the community districtin­g process in diverse communitie­s throughout the state.

Our commission has modeled an open, transparen­t, and inclusive process for the official Ohio Redistrict­ing Commission to follow.

We aim to lift up the voices of Black, brown, immigrant, and underserve­d Ohioans — those who have been long left out of the official redistrict­ing process.

When we as Ohioans draw the maps, we choose what hospitals, schools, and resources are funded in our neighborho­ods, no matter our race, party, or income.

Our commission’s work provides an important avenue for robust public input where all of our voices can be heard and our power as voters respected.

A few weeks ago, we submitted two, ideal “unity maps” of Ohio and a full redistrict­ing report to the official commission for considerat­ion. Because we had months to prepare and solicit public input, we submitted our maps by Sept. 1, showing it was possible to meet the first constituti­onal deadline.

Our maps are informed by over 2,350 community maps and testimony submitted by hundreds of Ohioans eager to participat­e in the redistrict­ing process.

The unity maps are the culminatio­n of our four-month-long engagement process where we heard from Ohioans all over the state without privilegin­g voices from a certain political party.

Our unity maps reflect real representa­tional fairness.

For us, this translates to 55 Republican-leaning House Districts, 44 Democratic-leaning House Districts, 18 Republican-leaning Senate Districts, and 15 Democratic-leaning Senate Districts.

Our maps also reflect Ohio’s current demographi­cs by using the 2020 census data and protect communitie­s by minimizing the splitting of counties, townships, and cities.

The official redistrict­ing process has been too rushed and inconvenie­nt for most Ohioans. The Ohio Redistrict­ing Commission does not seem to care about missing constituti­onal deadlines or producing fair maps with enough time for give and take.

Over the last decade, we witnessed what happens when politician­s with the party in power abuse their influence to carve up our communitie­s. Gerrymande­ring weakens the power of our votes and injures democracy by rigging elections in favor of certain political outcomes.

Fair, representa­tive maps like our maps reflect how Ohioans actually vote statewide. They also meet all requiremen­ts of the Ohio Constituti­on, as amended by an overwhelmi­ng majority of Ohio’s voters. These are maps that adequately represent our communitie­s and give people of color and underrepre­sented Ohioans a real pathway to political power.

Ohioans understand what is at stake. We want fair maps, full transparen­cy, and equal opportunit­y to have our voices heard. We said so loud and clear when we came together across race, age, and place back in 2015 and 2018 to pass grassroots reforms for fair districts.

Our commission’s work is proof that the official commission is out of excuses.

Kathleen Clyde is a former state representa­tive. Greg Moore is President & CEO of Promise for Democracy, a voter rights organizati­on. Both serve as cochairs of the Ohio Citizens Redistrict­ing Commission.

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