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Archive for July, 2010


From the Miami Herald

A judge Thursday struck down the Florida Legislature’s proposed constitutional amendment concerning political districts because, he said, it is too confusing for voters to understand.

Amendment 7 was drafted by the Republican-led Legislature in response to two other proposed amendments that a liberal-leaning citizens’ group placed on the ballot. Those amendments, 5 and 6, would make it tougher for lawmakers to draw political districts that favor a political party or an incumbent.

The Legislature’s proposal — which lawmakers said would “clarify” the amendments of the Fair Districts Florida group — created far more confusion, Tallahassee Circuit Judge James Shelfer said in a ruling from the bench.

“I can hardly think that the average voter going in the voting booth would be able to make an informed decision,” Shelfer said. “It took me three days — in reading all of these cases, reading all of these briefings, hearing all of your arguments — to get a handle on what this amendment did and its effect on the existing laws and the Constitution.”

A written ruling by Shelfer is expected in the next few days. The case is likely to be appealed to the Florida Supreme Court.

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Last Updated on Friday, 9 July 2010 07:21

Via Southtown Star

Organizers of a failed attempt to amend the Illinois Constitution’s rules for legislative redistricting came up short this spring on more than just gathering signatures to get the plan before voters: They lacked cash.

Despite support from a number of good-government type groups, supporters of the Illinois Fair Map Amendment mustered $47,600 for their cause, including a whopping $25,000 from a single donor in March. The initiative, headed by the Illinois League of Women Voters, spent just more than $45,000, leaving about $2,200 in the bank.

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Last Updated on Thursday, 8 July 2010 07:07

Via Governing Magazine and Lou Jacobson

This fall’s legislative elections — the last before the start of a new once-every-decade redistricting process — are unique for two reasons. According to this author’s estimates, more chambers are in play this year than in any cycle since at least 2002. Even more strikingly, the Democrats have vastly more at risk than the Republicans do.

“This is going to be an extremely challenging year for Democrats for a variety of reasons,” says Tim Storey, who analyzes elections for the National Conference of State Legislatures. “History is not on their side. Since 1900, the party in the White House loses seats in the legislature in every midterm except for 1934 and 2002. That’s a 2-25 losing streak for the party in the White House — a tough trend to break. Add to that the fact that Democrats are riding high right now at over 55 percent of all seats, and it shapes up to be possibly the worst election for Democrats since 1994.”

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Last Updated on Thursday, 8 July 2010 07:04

From Politics in Minnesota

Minnesota’s population changes over the last decade will give rise to a complex set of moving pieces when lawmakers redraw legislative districts after the 2010 U.S. Census is completed.

Minnesota State Demographer Tom Gillaspy expects that lawmakers will have to react to growth on the fringes of the Twin Cities metropolitan area by cramming more of the state’s 201 legislative districts in the outer suburbs and semi-rural areas that are situated just beyond the metro. Gillaspy refers to the area as “the doughnut.”

“The doughnut ring around the Twin Cities has been growing rapidly,” noted Gillaspy, “and much of the rest of the state outside of that has not grown as rapidly. The central cities and inner ring suburbs have not grown as rapidly. Some have declined.”

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Last Updated on Friday, 2 July 2010 07:02