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OH Congressional Redistricting Reform on May Ballot


Ohioans will vote May 8th to change how the State Draws Congressional Districts to a process Supporters say will be more Fair, Transparent, and Bipartisan.

The General Assembly's proposed Constitutional Amendment will be Issue 1, the only Statewide issue on the May Primary Election Ballot.

The Ohio Ballot Board, a Bipartisan Panel led by the Secretary of State, met Tuesday and approved a Ballot Summary and arguments For and Against Issue 1. "I'd like to congratulate the members of the General Assembly for bringing this to us today, and I look forward to seeing it on the ballot in May," Secretary of State Jon Husted, a longtime Redistricting Reform Advocate, said after the Panel unanimously approved ballot Language.

The argument for Issue 1 was drafted by a Bipartisan group of Legislators who helped craft the Amendment. It touts the Amendment's Limits on Splitting Counties and Communities, requirement for Minority Party support at each step of the process and use of "anti-gerrymandering criteria."

The General Assembly did not assign anyone to write an Argument against the Measure, so Husted's Office did so. The Con argument States the Current process has served Ohio well for many years and Voters can hold Legislators making Maps Accountable by Voting them Out of Office.

The Amendment needs a simple Majority of Votes in May to become part of the Ohio Constitution. The proposed Changes would take effect for the next Redistricting process in 2021, following the 2020 Census.

Legislators passed the Amendment after about Three weeks of intense Negotiations in an effort to head off a Citizen-Initiated Amendment.

Under Issue 1, State Lawmakers would still Draw the Lines but significant Minority Party support would be needed to Pass a Map.

Strict Rules would kick in if the Majority Party decided to push through a Map on its own.

CLICK HERE to read the two page (pdf) of Issue 1 Ballot Question.









NYC Wins When Everyone Can Vote! Michael H. Drucker


     
 
 


This post first appeared on The Independent View, please read the originial post: here

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OH Congressional Redistricting Reform on May Ballot

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