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Press Release

Ohio Supreme Court Orders Second Redrawing of Legislative Maps Due to Partisan Gerrymandering

Court Throws Out Second Plan from the Ohio Redistricting Commission, Finding that Revised Maps Also Violate the Ohio Constitution

Last Updated: February 7, 2022
Published: February 7, 2022
Contact: Romario R. Ricketts, Media Contact, rickettsr@brennan.law.nyu.edu, 646-925-8734

The Ohio Supreme Court today rejected legislative maps that the Ohio Redistricting Commission had redrawn per the court’s earlier order. The court found that this second set of maps violated the state constitution’s prohibitions against partisan gerrymandering and fell short of its proportionality standards. The order came after objections to the redrawn maps were filed on January 26 by petitioners in Ohio Organizing Collaborative v. Ohio Redistricting Commission, along with filings by petitioners in two other challenges to the General Assembly maps. Noting that the commission had used the original unconstitutional maps as a starting point when producing its new plan, the court ordered the commission to reconvene and draw an entirely new plan that conforms with the Ohio Constitution.

“The court has spoken, twice. The Ohio Redistricting Commission has a duty to follow the state constitution and produce fair maps that serve Ohio’s voters, regardless of party,” said Alicia Bannon, director of the Judiciary program at the Brennan Center for Justice at NYU Law.

“The court was not taken in by the commission’s sleight of hand. The second maps, like the first ones, show partisan gerrymandering, which is against the law in Ohio, thanks to the voters,” said Patrick Yingling, partner at Reed Smith. “Ohioans deserve district lines drawn with fairness as the top priority, not party control.”

The Brennan Center for Justice and Reed Smith represent the petitioners: the Ohio Organizing Collaborative, CAIR-Ohio, Ohio Environmental Council, Ahmad Aboukar, Crystal Bryant, Samuel Gresham Jr., Prentiss Haney, Mikayla Lee, and Pierrette “Petee” Talley.

The court’s order today, the petitioners’ objections, and more filings and background on Ohio Organizing Collaborative v. Ohio Redistricting Commission are available here.

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