Filmed
October 5,
2015, at the
League of Women Voters of the
Cincinnati Area's
2015 General Election Forum in partnership with the
Urban League Young Professionals of
Greater Southwestern Ohio and
Woman's
City Club of
Greater Cincinnati.
About 2015 Ohio
General Election's
State Issue is to create a bipartisan Ohio Redistricting
Commission.
League of Women Voters' Explanation of Issue 1:
Issue 1 would amend the
Ohio Constitution to change the way state legislative districts (but not
U.S. Congressional districts) are determined. Every 10 years, Ohio draws new legislative district lines based on changes in population as reported in
U.S. Census data. Issue 1 replaces the Apportionment
Board with a bipartisan Ohio Redistricting Commission. If Issue 1 passes, members of the Commission will include:
-
The Governor
- Auditor of State
-
Ohio Secretary of State
- Appointee by the Speaker of the
Ohio House
- Appointee by the
President of the Ohio Senate
- Appointee by the
Minority Leader of Ohio House
- Appointee by the Minority Leader of
Ohio Senate
The Ohio Redistricting Commission will be responsible for creating district maps for the Ohio House and the Ohio Senate. Issue 1 establishes rules for map-making. It ensures compactness and keeps
communities together by prohibiting splitting governmental units, like counties or cities, unless necessary. Issue 1 prohibits partisan gerrymandering. No
General Assembly map shall be drawn
primarily to favor or disfavor a political party. Issue 1 creates more transparent map-making by requiring public hearings
. If the amendment is passed, it will become part of
the constitution
immediately; however, the new rules for drawing districts will not be applied until the next time districts are redrawn beginning
January 1, 2021, after the next U.S. Census.
Issue 1 encourages bipartisan map-making. For the maps to last ten years, at least two members of the minority party will have to vote in favor of it.
If only one party supports a particular map, the district lines will only last four years. Map-making will be subjected to stricter criteria, including the requirement that the districts reflect the statewide partisan preferences of voters, sometimes called
representational fairness.
PRO Arguments
1. Prohibits partisan gerrymandering-- “No General Assembly district plan shall be drawn primarily to favor or disfavor a party” will be written into the rules in the Ohio Constitution.
2. Requires transparency and public hearings, encouraging accountability to the electorate.
3. Districts will better protect community cohesiveness by limiting government units such as counties and cities from being split.
4. Eliminates the continuation of previous gerrymandering by removing language from the current Ohio Constitution that requires new maps to be “reasonably consistent” with old maps.
CON Arguments:
1. Many Ohioans are not
Republican or
Democrat.
Third parties and
Independents are not represented on the Commission.
2. Issue 1 does not address the process for determining U.S. Congressional districts.
3. The Ohio Redistricting Commission is not independent from legislators; legislative members can still influence the process.
4. Bipartisan Commission members can make “sweetheart deals” that can result in districts that are not representative of the state’s overall partisan preferences.
Read more about all three state issues from League of Women Voters of Ohio Voter's
Guide:
http://lwvohio.org/assets/attachments/file/2015%20General%20Election%20Voter's%20Guide%20-%20Ballot%20Issues(1)
.pdf
The League of Women Voters is a nonpartisan political organization encouraging informed and active participation in government. It influences public policy through education and advocacy. We never support or oppose any political party or candidate.
Find out more and join us at http://www.lwvcincinnati.org
- published: 12 Oct 2015
- views: 561