Category Archives: redistricting
“Kentucky Law Journal Symposium Friday: “Drawing the Lines: Redistricting After the 2020 Census”
Great lineup! Details. Videos of each session will be posted to the KLJ website by early next week.
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“How Ron DeSantis Blew Up Black-Held Congressional Districts and May Have Broken Florida Law”
ProPublica:
Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis was incensed. Late last year, the state’s Republican legislature had drawn congressional maps that largely kept districts intact, leaving the GOP with only a modest electoral advantage.DeSantis threw out the legislature’s work and redrew… Continue reading
“Why Republicans Could Prevail in the Popular Vote but Lose in the House”
Nate Cohn for the NYT:
Over the last few decades, we’ve gotten accustomed to the idea that Democrats could easily win the popular vote but struggle to win control of government.This time, there’s a chance of a reversal. After years… Continue reading
Redistricting Discussion at Heart of Leaked Racist Discussion by LA City Council Members; Jessica Levinson on the Legal Implications
From the LA Times bombshell report:
Still, much of the conversation focused on the maps that had been proposed by the city’s redistricting commission. Martinez voiced frustration that the panel had proposed removing a number of economic assets from her… Continue reading
Supreme Court declines to hear Pennsylvania Redistricting Case raising ISL theory
The U.S. Supreme Court has declined to hear Costello v. Carter, which involved a challenge to Pennsylvania’s court approved congressional map. The Pennsylvania Supreme Court adopted the map after a deadlock between the Republican legislature and the Democratic governor. Notably,… Continue reading
“Gerrymandering Isn’t Giving Republicans the Advantage You Might Expect”
Nate Cohn for The Upshot offers an intricate analysis of the 2022 congressional maps in historical perspective. Lots of interesting graphs to get to his basic take:
“In reality, Republicans do have a structural edge in the House, but it… Continue reading
Breaking–N.Y. Court Orders New Maps by April 2023
A New York court has ordered New York’s redistricting commission to reconvene and pass new state assembly maps for legislative consideration by April 28, 2023.
Insightful Preview of Upcoming VRA Case
Linda Greenhouse has written, John Roberts’s Long Game. Is this the End of the Voting Rights Act?–an insightful preview of Merrill v. Milligan, which will be argued on October 4. The lengthy Atlantic article cuts straight to the point:… Continue reading
“Newly gerrymandered districts might hurt Democrats less than you think”
Marion Campisi, Tommy Ratliff, Stephanie Somersille and Ellen Veomett for WaPo’s Monkey Cage:
This November, members of Congress will be running in new districts based on the 2020 Census data. So how might the new district maps… Continue reading
“Anti-Gerrymandering Reforms Had Mixed Results”
New analysis from Michael Li of the Brennan Center.
“Ohio Supreme Court Chief Justice Maureen O’Connor says she’ll join anti-gerrymandering effort after leaving office”
Cleveland.com:
Ohio Supreme Court Chief Justice Maureen O’Connor said Thursday she plans to campaign to try to end gerrymandering in Ohio once she leaves office at the end of the year.O’Connor commented Thursday on her future plans during her… Continue reading
Missouri Files Bonkers Amicus Brief in Moore v. Harper Case Arguing That Not Even Congress Can Limit a State Legislature’s Partisan Gerrymandering
The main dispute in Moore v. Harper, currently pending before the Supreme Court, is whether state legislatures may be constrained by other state actors (such as state courts applying state constitutional provisions protecting voting rights) when they pass rules… Continue reading
“New congressional maps dilute Black power, critics say”
AP reports.