Pressure to change how Ohio’s congressional maps are drawn continues even during the Legislature’s long summer break.
Two Northeast Ohio lawmakers – Democrat Rep. Kathleen Clyde and Republican Sen. FrankLaRose – will discuss the redistricting bill they’re sponsoring at Case Western Reserve University Thursday night. And other advocates, such as the League of Women Voters, have been pressing the issue all summer, including outside the Republican National Convention last month.
Susan Murnane of the Greater Cleveland chapter says the group has been trying to change gerrymandering for nearly 50 years.
“We have pushed for fair, nonpartisan, common-sense redistricting regardless of who it benefits. At times it has benefited the Democrats, at times it has benefited the Republicans. We don’t care," Murnane said.
Ohio voters overwhelmingly approved an overhaul last year of how the Ohio House and Senate districts are drawn., but it didn't affect Congressional redistricting. Among its key provisions in the state overhaul: A seven-member commission that requires the buy-in of at least two members of the minority party before its political maps become law.