The argument over Ohio's new state legislative district maps took center stage on Wednesday in the Ohio Supreme Court over the question of whether or not the new Ohio House and Ohio Senate maps violate the anti-gerrymandering reforms passed by voters in 2015.
As Freda Levenson, representing the League of Women Voters of Ohio, stood before the Ohio Supreme Court to argue for the newly drawn maps, she reflected on the court's decision to uphold the maps drawn in 2011.
She said the court ruled in favor of the maps because the state lacked constitutional language on how to draw fair districts.
"The court specified the kind of language it would need. 'No apportionment plan shall be drawn with the intent of favoring or disfavoring a political party.' Ohio voters listened, and in 2015 voted overwhelmingly in a bipartisan basis to supply this," Levenson said.
The voter-approved changes to the Constitution included a section that said maps must reflect a proportional district balance of Ohio voters' political preference.
Based on statewide elections, the state splits about 54% Republican and 46% Democratic.
But the new maps give Republicans a 63% advantage. The Ohio House map creates 62 Republican-favored seats to 37 Democratic-favored seats. The Ohio Senate splits 23 Republican seats to 10 Democratic seats.
Brian Sutherland, also with the group opposing the maps, said this creates other Constitutional violations.
"They can't organize and advocate and effectuate change the way they should. It's a right to alter and reform the government for the equal benefit and protection of people. That doesn't happen when people have totally unequal voting power," Sutherland said.
Phillip Strach, who's representing House Speaker Bob Cupp (R-Lima) and Senate President Matt Huffman (R-Lima) on the Ohio Redistricting Commission, argues that the provision saying the maps should reflect the partisan makeup of Ohio did not need to be followed because the commission complied with other sections of the Constitution.
Strach makes the argument that the commission showed an attempt of compromise by avoiding a map that would've been even worse for Democrats.
"The commission could have said, 'you know what? We can't cut a deal. We've complied with the anti-gerrymandering requirements. We're going to go back and we're going to adopt that 67 Republican-leaning House plan. We're going to do that because we can.' They didn't do that," Strach said.
The mapmakers have said the state's partisan breakdown could be considered 81% Republican since that's how many times a GOP candidate won a statewide race, an argument Chief Justice Maureen O'Connor called into question.
"You put them in the Republican column, and there's no equivalent number or representation of all of the other parties -- Democrat or Democratic-leaning independents that voted. There's no accounting for their vote," O'Connor said.
The chief justice, a Republican, is considered to be the possible swing vote on a court that splits 4-3 in favor of Republicans. She dissented against a ruling in favor of the maps created 10 years ago that also led to a Republican supermajority in the statehouse.
The justices will now consider the arguments and there's no telling when a ruling will come out. If the court rules against the maps, it's likely the Ohio Redistricting Commission will have to redraw the plans.
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