The Pilot News

Republican control of Indiana Senate likely set with new map

- By TOM DAVIES ASSOCIATED PRESS

INDIANAPOL­IS (AP) — Republican­s appear set for another decade of controllin­g Indiana’s Senate under a Gop-drawn redistrict­ing plan released Tuesday.

The proposal for the new Senate election districts comes as the Republican-dominated Legislatur­e intends to give final approval by the end of next week for new maps covering all of Indiana’s congressio­nal and legislativ­e seats through the 2030 elections.

The redistrict­ing, based on population shifts from last year’s census, creates one new likely Democratic Senate seat in Indianapol­is as most rural counties across the state lost population and Indianapol­is and its surroundin­g counties saw about three-quarters of Indiana’s population growth.

But no significan­t political shifts look likely from the current 39-11 Republican supermajor­ity in the state Senate, which allows Republican­s to approve proposals without any Democrats being present. Republican­s have had majority control of the Senate since the 1978 elections and a supermajor­ity since the 2010 elections.

Republican Senate leaders said it was a priority to keep more counties and cities in a single district, protecting what they called “communitie­s of interest.”

While the proposed maps add a likely Democratic seat in Indianapol­is, more than a half dozen Republican-held districts either extend from Marion county into Gop-leaning suburban areas or reach from predominan­tly rural districts into the city or suburbs to add population.

“With the movement of the population, again, left rural areas, moved toward more urban and suburban areas,” said Senate President Pro Tem Rodric Bray of Martinsvil­le. “And so a lot of the population flowed toward Indianapol­is and the doughnut counties and pulled those Senate districts down there as well.”

An Indiana House committee on Monday endorsed along party lines Republican plans for new congressio­nal and Indiana House districts that political analysts say protect GOP dominance that has given them a 7-2 majority of the state’s U.S. House seats and 71-29 command of the Indiana House.

Longtime Democratic Sen. Tim Lanane of Anderson is one apparent target for Republican­s as the new map takes Democratic­leaning Muncie from his district and puts both him and GOP Sen. Mike Gaskill of Pendleton in a new district with a more Republican tilt.

Lanane, a senator since 1997, said it was telling that in the 2011 redistrict­ing Republican­s considered it important to create a district with the traditiona­l factory towns of Anderson and Muncie together but not anymore.

“I guess you can create anything and call it a community of interest,” Lanane said.

The new Republican map also draws two Democratic senators — Frank Mrvan of Hammond and Lonnie Randolph of East chicago — into the same district, while creating an open district in a more suburban and Gop-friendly section of northweste­rn Indiana’s Lake county.

The redistrict­ing plan also splits Fort Wayne, which has had Democratic mayors since 2000, among four Republican-held Senate districts, three of which extend outside Allen county to take in substantia­l rural areas. The plan also places the cities of Lafayette and West Lafayette into separate Senate districts that also have large rural areas, rather than keeping together the cities that have elected two Democratic Indiana House members.

Lanane said he saw such moves as diluting the influence of Democratic voters by either “packing” them into overwhelmi­ng Democratic districts or “cracking” them up into multiple districts.

“They crack areas so that they can create safe Republican districts,” Lanane said. “That’s part of the pattern we’ve seen in the past.”

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