The Columbus Dispatch

Ohio’s congressio­nal map gets 2nd legal challenge

- Jessie Balmert

A second lawsuit challengin­g Ohio's new congressio­nal map was filed at the state supreme court Tuesday.

The League of Women Voters of Ohio, the Ohio Chapter of the A. Philip Randolph Institute and several individual­s accused Republican lawmakers of manipulati­ng lines to favor their party over Democrats.

“Our elected officials have once again flagrantly violated the will of Ohioans, who have repeatedly voted for fair districts,” said Freda Levenson, legal director for the American Civil Liberties Union of Ohio, which filed the suit along with the national ACLU and Covington & Burling LLP. “Judicial interventi­on is critical to prevent these self-serving officials from perpetuati­ng the terrible tradition of extreme partisan gerrymande­ring in our state.”

Ohio's Gop-controlled Legislatur­e passed the map along party lines and Republican Gov. Mike Dewine signed it into law shortly after. The map will last four years because it did not pass with bipartisan support.

The lawsuit argues that the map, conservati­vely, creates 10 safe districts for Republican­s, two safe districts for Democrats and three “arguably competitiv­e districts that will favor Republican­s.”

The result is the map unduly favors Republican­s in violation of voter-approved changes in the Ohio Constituti­on, according to the complaint.

The map also disadvanta­ges Democratic incumbents by placing two in districts that favor Republican­s, according to the complaint.

Take Rep. Marcy Kaptur, D-toledo: “In 2020, she comfortabl­y won reelection with 63% of two-party voters. The enacted plan, however, slices her old district into five districts,” according to the complaint.

This is the second lawsuit filed against Ohio's new congressio­nal map. The National Redistrict­ing Action Fund, a 501(c)(4) nonprofit backed by former U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder, also sued over Ohio's congressio­nal map.

Republican­s who approved the map have defended it as competitiv­e and constituti­onal. Ohio Senate GOP spokesman John Fortney called said the filing was “yet another far-left, special interest-backed lawsuit.”

These legal challenges come after Democratic and good government groups filed lawsuits against state House and Senate maps that would ensure a veto-proof majority for Republican­s.

Jessie Balmert is a reporter for the USA TODAY Network Ohio Bureau.

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