Ruling: Ohio’s new map can go to voters
Associated Press
COLUMBUS
A bill setting new U.S. House districts in Ohio can be put before voters despite efforts by Republicans to block a referendum, the state Supreme Court ruled late Friday.
In a 7-0 decision, the court ordered Secretary of State Jon Husted to accept signatures submitted by Democrats seeking to get a repeal issue on the 2012 ballot.
Senate Republicans had appropriated funds to boards of elections in the bill in an effort to make the law effective immediately, which would disallow any referendum effort.
Laws go into effect 90 days after passage with some exceptions, including those that make “appropriations for the current expenses of the state government and state institutions.” But the court ruled the appropriations in the redistricting bill don’t meet required criteria.
The justices all agreed in the ruling, with Justice Judith Ann Lanzinger agreeing with the judgment but not the written opinion.
Ohioans for Fair Districts, the group seeking the referendum, says it will ask the court to restart the 90-day time line to collect signatures for a referendum effort.
“We applaud this unanimous ruling that makes clear that the people of Ohio can exercise their right to stop these unfair Congressional maps,” state Rep. Kathleen Clyde of Kent, a member of the committee, said in a statement.
John McClelland, a spokesman for state Senate Republicans, said the new map complies with the Ohio constitution and state and federal election laws.
“We’re not debating the legality of this,” he said. “Maybe people don’t agree with the lines or don’t like the lines, but they are constitutional and they are legal.”
Husted spokesman Matt McClellan said the office was reviewing its options.
“This certainly throws a monkey wrench into the filing deadline for congressional offices,” he said.
The deadline for congressional candidates to file is Dec. 7, but the 90-day waiting period for enactment and referendum efforts means a map won’t be in place by that time.
Clyde said the Democratic group is “prepared to take whatever steps are necessary to make sure that the people’s voice is heard.”
“Statehouse Republicans now have a choice: They can come back to the drawing board and produce fair maps with bipartisan support, or they can create widespread uncertainty in our next election,” she said.
The map, which Republican Gov. John Kasich signed into law last month, has been widely derided by Democrats and voter groups who say the GOP gerrymandered the lines to protect their control of Ohio’s congressional delegation.
New boundaries were needed when Ohio lost two U.S. House seats because of slow population growth compared to the rest of the country. Voter advocacy groups, such as the Ohio League of Women Voters, say the new map makes 12 of those 16 seats safe for Republicans.
Ohioans are bolstered by the court’s decision, said Brian Rothenberg, executive director of the liberal policy group ProgressOhio that has helped gather signatures for the repeal effort.
“The lines were drawn grotesquely, and people could tell inherently this was wrong, that this was the wrong way to game the system,” he said.
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