Republican Legislators Propose Redistricting Bill
Joint resolution calls for prioritizing existing districts, giving Republicans electoral advantage.
Assembly Speaker Robin Vos and Senate Majority Leader Devin LeMahieu drafted a joint resolution on establishing new voting maps and referred it to the Legislature’s rules committee Thursday, which put it on the calendar for the Assembly’s floor session next week.
The resolution’s first two points are uncontroversial, stating that, in drawing new legislative districts based on population changes in the 2020 census, the Legislature should follow the law and attempt to create districts with nearly equal population.
Voting-rights groups have challenged the existing maps in court and Gov. Tony Evers’ People’s Maps Commission has invited the public to get involved in drawing district maps, encouraging people to redraw districts that, under the current maps, split up their “communities of interest” — such as watersheds, school districts and other matters of public concern.
“There are so few competitive districts because of the way the lines were drawn 10 years ago,” Rep. Deb Andraca (D-Whitefish Bay), the co-author of a bill to establish an independent, nonpartisan redistricting process in Wisconsin, told the Examiner. “I would like to see our redistricting process be more fair and drawn in a way that represents communities, not the interests of individual politicians.”
“This resolution is yet another piece of the puzzle as Speaker Vos and his right-wing allies try to rig the maps and disenfranchise voters,” Jacob Malinowski, communications director for the Fair Elections Project, said in a statement responding to the Republican leaders’ joint resolution. “The current map was thrown out in federal court for disenfranchising voters, and although that decision was overturned by a partisan Supreme Court majority, the substantive issues raised continue to go unrefuted.”
In 2019 advocates on both sides of recent redistricting battles in Wisconsin told the Examiner they believed that the Republican-controlled legislature might pass new, gerrymandered voting maps after the 2020 census using a joint-resolution process that would allow them to avoid sending the map to Evers for his signature or veto. The current joint resolution does not do that. Instead it sets out principles that lay the groundwork for designing a new map.
“It’s time we had a fair process and we start with our actual communities,” Malinowski added, “not the Speaker’s rigged 2011 maps.”
Republicans offer joint resolution on redistricting was originally published by the Wisconsin Examiner.
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More about the Gerrymandering of Legislative Districts
- Data Wonk: How the Gerrymander Wastes Votes - Bruce Thompson - Nov 29th, 2023
- The State of Politics: Justices Favoring New Legislative Maps Face Tough Questions - Steven Walters - Nov 27th, 2023
- Statement on Redistricting Case - Wisconsin Assembly Speaker Robin Vos - Nov 21st, 2023
- Data Wonk: What Can We Learn From Gerrymandering Case Briefs? - Bruce Thompson - Nov 1st, 2023
- Senate Does Bare Minimum, Holds Redistricting Hearing - State Rep. Deb Andraca - Oct 19th, 2023
- Gov. Evers, AG Kaul Asks Wisconsin Supreme Court to Declare Wisconsin’s Legislative Maps Unconstitutional - Gov. Tony Evers - Oct 16th, 2023
- Data Wonk: The Power of Wisconsin’s Gerrymander - Bruce Thompson - Sep 20th, 2023
- The State of Politics: Parties Bicker Over How to Do Iowa-Style Redistricting - Steven Walters - Sep 18th, 2023
- With Lawsuits Pending, Assembly Republicans Approve Redistricting Changes - Sarah Lehr - Sep 15th, 2023
- Rep. Deb Andraca Responds to Republican Redistricting Ploy - State Rep. Deb Andraca - Sep 15th, 2023
Read more about Gerrymandering of Legislative Districts here