×

New redistricting maps OK’d, same problems remain

Staff, wire report

COLUMBUS — The Ohio Redistricting Commission failed for a second time on Saturday to reach the bipartisan consensus necessary to pass 10-year maps of state legislative districts based on 2020 census totals.

Despite being scolded by the stateás high court, the seven-member panel approved new maps along party lines in the face of a court-set Saturday deadline. That means the maps would be good for just four years, rather than the 10 intended through the census-driven redistricting process.

The high court has reserved the right to review the new maps after voting rights and Democratic groups successfully challenged an earlier round of maps as an extreme partisan gerrymander.

Though the second round of boundaries got closer to the stateás 54 percent Republican to 46 percent Democratic partisan breakdown than the first set, they still created heavy GOP majorities in both the Ohio House and Ohio Senate: 57 Republican and 42 Democratic House seats and 20 Republican and 13 Democratic Senate seats. Many districts are divided so closely they could be election toss-ups.

The first round of maps included 62 of 99 Ohio House seats that favored Republicans, or about 62 percent, and 23 of 33 Ohio Senate seats that favored the GOP, or nearly 70 percent.

In the Mahoning Valley, the new map has the exact same legislative lines as the one rejected by the Ohio Supreme Court.

In Trumbull County, the 64th Ohio House District would be a safe Democratic district including the cities of Warren, Niles, Girard and Hubbard as well as the village of McDonald and the townships of Liberty, Weathersfield, Howland and Vienna.

The other House district, the 65th, would be a solid Republican one with the rest of Trumbull County along with more than half of Portage County.

Warren Township is divided between the two House districts.

The 32nd Senate District, which leans Republican, includes all of Trumbull and Portage counties. The district is currently represented by state Sen. Sandra OáBrien, R-Lenox, who isnát up for re-election until 2024. She lives in Ashtabula County, but would represent Trumbull and Portage counties for at least the rest of her term.

It keeps the 58th Ohio House District as a strong Democratic one and includes all of Youngstown, Austintown, Struthers, Lowellville, Campbell and Coitsville.

The 59th District is a solid Republican one and includes the rest of Mahoning County along with the Columbiana County townships of Knox, Butler and West.

The 33rd Senate District includes all of Mahoning, Columbiana and Carroll counties and is Republican.

House Democratic Leader-elect Allison Russo, who cast a no vote, called Saturdayás action shameful.

âUltimately, this is not an issue of geography or technical inability to draw fair maps,ã she said, on behalf of opponents. âIt is a lack of political courage and a blatant disregard for the courtás order and the will of the Ohio voters.ã

Republican Senate President Matt Huffman, who voted yes, said the maps âaddressã the courtás opinion.

âCommission members and their respective staff together worked tirelessly over the last week to produce a constitutional plan that no one else, including the Democratsá highly compensated outside contractors, could produce, including a six figure payment to their main consultant,ã his spokesman, John Fortney, said.

That consultant, Chris Glassburn, endured hours of grilling on Saturday, particularly by Huffman ä repeatedly offering to work cooperatively with the GOP on their concerns to bring the two partiesá proposals together.

âI believe we in our proposal have gone a long way to demonstrate it simply is not necessary to gerrymander or do dramatically strange things to achieve the proportionality as outlined in the Supreme Court,ã he said.

Republicans defended their own maps of districts as the only ones that abided by all the elements of the Ohio Constitution, pointing to the fact that they did deliver Democrats more seats than the previous plan.

The two parties failed to come together despite extensive behind-the-scenes negotiations. Panelists said those talks took place between the staffs of commissioners of both parties for nearly all 10 of the days since the courtás ruling. The transparency was a distinct change from the last time in September, when three Republican statewide officials on the panel said GOP lawmakers largely shut them out of backroom map-making deliberations.

Senate Finance Director Ray DiRossi helped lead Republican map-drawing efforts. He repeatedly declined to provide specific evidence of what exactly prevented the GOP from attempting to get closer to the stateás 54 percent Republican-46 percent Democratic political divide with its maps.

âWe have done nothing but attempt for the last nine-and-a-half days,ã he said. âEvery ounce of our effort, collectively and individually, and all of the other staff have been towards complying with the court rulings. Everything weáve done has done that, so my life for the last nine-and-a-half days would be my evidence.ã

Ohio is using a new redistricting process for this first time this year for both legislative and congressional maps established through statewide ballot issues in 2015 and 2018 that received overwhelming voter support.were left with little choice.

NEWSLETTER

Today's breaking news and more in your inbox

I'm interested in (please check all that apply)
Are you a paying subscriber to the newspaper? *
   

Starting at $4.85/week.

Subscribe Today