The Denver Post

Ohio’s congressio­nal map unconstitu­tional

- By Dan Sewell

CINCINNATI» A panel of federal judges ruled Friday that Ohio’s congressio­nal districts were unconstitu­tionally drawn by the Republican­s for their political advantage, and it ordered a new map for the 2020 elections.

The ruling, if it stands, could prove an important victory for the Democrats, who are hoping redrawn boundaries will not only help them pick up House seats but also energize voters and boost turnout in this longtime battlegrou­nd state, helping them defeat President Donald Trump. Republican officials said they would appeal.

The panel unanimousl­y declared the current map an “unconstitu­tional partisan gerrymande­r,” saying the GOP-controlled Ohio legislatur­e put the Democrats at a disadvanta­ge by packing lots of them into four districts and scattering the rest across the remaining 12.

“Democratic candidates must run a significan­tly longer distance to get to the same finish line,” the judges wrote in a 301-page ruling.

The Republican­s hold a 12-4 advantage in Ohio’s congressio­nal delegation under the current map, which went into effect for the 2012 elections.

The U.S. Supreme Court is already considerin­g a gerrymande­ring case that could lead to a major decision on how far politician­s can go in drawing districts. It involves challenges to congressio­nal maps in North Carolina, drawn by Republican­s, and Maryland, created by Democrats.

Republican Attorney General Dave Yost said he will seek to stay the court order while appealing to the Supreme Court. He also said Ohioans have already approved mapmaking reforms that will be in effect for redistrict­ing after the 2020 census.

He called the opinion “a fundamenta­lly political act that has no basis whatsoever in the Constituti­on.”

Some Democrats have said that after years of lopsided congressio­nal races, newly competitiv­e districts could generate voter excitement in a state that Trump won in 2016 after Barack Obama carried it twice. And that, in turn, could influence the race for the White House.

“That could very well change the turnout for the presidenti­al race,” said Ohio Democratic Party chairman David Pepper. “It’s a bad day for Republican­s in Washington, and it’s a bad day for Donald Trump.”

The Republican Party state chairwoman, Jane Timken, called the challenge to the map “a partisan political ploy . ... When Democrats can’t win at the ballot box, they try to change the rules.”

The judges — two nominated by Democratic presidents, one by a Republican — ordered a proposed new map by June 20. They heard arguments in U.S. District Court in Cincinnati in March.

Voters’ rights and Democratic groups had sued Ohio Republican officials, saying redistrict­ing after the 2010 census yielded a map that has produced an impenetrab­le GOP advantage. Among the examples cited was Cincinnati, a Democrat-dominated city split into two districts, both held by Republican­s.

Another example: Ohio’s 9th Congressio­nal District, which stretches in a long skinny line along Lake Erie and has been dubbed “the Snake on the Lake.” The judges described it as “a bizarre, elongated sliver of a district that severed numerous counties.”

Attorneys for the Republican­s said the map was drawn with bipartisan support. Before it took effect, the GOP held a 13-5 advantage in Ohio’s congressio­nal delegation. (Each party later lost one seat when the state’s representa­tion in Congress was reduced because of population shifts.)

“This is called democracy in action,” said GOP attorney Phil Strach, adding that both parties supported “incumbency protection” — or making it more likely an incumbent will win — because that benefits all Ohioans by giving their delegation more clout in Washington.

In a case similar to Ohio’s, a three-judge panel ruled last week that Michigan’s congressio­nal and legislativ­e maps were unconstitu­tionally gerrymande­red, and ordered the state Legislatur­e to redraw some districts for 2020. The judges wrote that the GOP created districts in 2011 with the goal of ensuring “durable majorities” for Republican­s. Republican­s have appealed that ruling.

The lawsuit challengin­g Ohio’s map called it “one of the most egregious gerrymande­rs in recent history,” one that has reliably done its job by allowing the GOP to capture 75 percent of the seats by winning a little more than half the state’s votes.

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