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Professor: New Ohio Congressional district lines are ‘grotesque’

hendrickson.1085@osu.edu

Published: Tuesday, October 4, 2011

Updated: Friday, June 15, 2012 23:06

Republicans in Ohio redrew new congressional district lines that resulted in the loss of a Democratic district.

Gerrymandering is when the lines drawn for congressional districts favor one party over another. Ohio's new winding, curving districts are a perfect example.

Ohio faced a difficult redistricting process this year because the state lost two seats in the House of Representatives. Eighteen districts have been redrawn to fit 16 districts in the state.

Not everyone is happy with the new districts. Professor of political science at Ohio State Richard Gunther gave a testimony against the plan at the Ohio Senate Government Oversight and Reform Committee meeting on Sept. 20.

"This plan is the most grotesque partisan gerrymander that I, as a political scientist, had ever seen," Gunther said. "It should either be rejected by the Ohio Senate or the courts, or overruled in a referendum by the citizens of this state, who deserve better."

In his testimony, Gunther listed four criteria that are "crucial for the proper functioning of democracy:" community preservation, geographical compactness, competitiveness and fairness in representation. The new districts, Gunther said, fail in all four categories.

Herb Asher, a professor of Political Science at OSU, agrees with Gunther. Asher, however, said he believes the failure lies in the system used to draw the districts in Ohio.

"We could have had a better, less partisan system today," Asher said. "We've had opportunities to change it, but we haven't. We haven't been successful."

Asher said blaming the Republicans is not the solution because the Democrats would have done the same thing if they were the party in charge.

"They try to draw district lines to benefit their party: Pack as many members of the minority party into a smaller number of districts," Asher said. "That's wasteful, you don't need that much to win."

Gerrymandering, according to Gunther, makes districts less competitive, and therefore, more difficult for voters to make significant changes in their communities.

"In districts like this it is extremely difficult for voters to hold elected officials accountable, which is one of the core principles of democratic governance," Gunther said.

Mike Thompson, director of news and public affairs for WOSU Public Media, said that gerrymandering is a knee-jerk reaction for politicians and it has been going on for 200 years.

"The party in charge controls this process … they're trying to protect their candidates in their districts," Thompson said.

Thompson said because of Ohio's influence in presidential elections as a swing state, the new districts might have some impact next year, even with losing two electoral votes.

"You could say we're weaker, but there's only half a dozen states that are really up for grabs, and Ohio is one of them," Thompson said. "So that's why you'll have lots of presidential candidates visiting Ohio State and Columbus."

Asher said though there is little that can be done about the current plan, the next redistricting in 2021 could be done using different methods.

"We have gerrymandering, but gerrymandering is not illegal," Asher said. "As long as the districts meet population equality, as long as they are contiguous, you can then draw some pretty funny-looking lines."

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16 comments

Anonymous
Thu Oct 6 2011 13:00
Toledo now has three congresspersons - the Republicans are scared of Marcy Kaptur who has been wo successful in NW Ohio. Her district now runs across the shore of Lake Erie to Cleveland. She will do right by you but Toledo is (partly) losing a great champion!
Rick
Wed Oct 5 2011 22:03
So why do we not also publish the current congressional district lines, because when you compare them they are both very similar? Trust is earned not assumed.
Larry
Wed Oct 5 2011 20:08
That coming from a progressive mind bender at OSU. I'm Shocked! na not really I expected nothing less.
Anonymous
Wed Oct 5 2011 18:22
Oh, whine, whine, whine. The party in power always does this and they take turns being the party out of power and doing the whining. I mean, did you really expect anything else. If you did, you are naive and a little stupid.
Anonymous
Wed Oct 5 2011 16:41
Marcy has only held fast to the good of the Unions in Northwest Ohio. Every election cycle she shows up with oversized checks to appease the senior citizen voters and Union faithful. The tail of the Union has been wagging the dog of the politician for over 50 years in this area. Wake up Toledo! We are rapidly becoming "Little Detroit "
YES on issue2 and NO on Marcy
Anonymous
Wed Oct 5 2011 16:22
If you compare the new districts to the old visually , not too much has changed. They both look kind of ugly. I am not an expert on the population divisions of Ohio so I can not comment on correctness of how the lines were drawn. All I can say is that if the other party was in power the lines would be worse and so screwed up you would have guessed a three year old drew them. Actually a three year old could do better at drawing the lines and the would be more fair than if the other party drew them.
Anonymous
Wed Oct 5 2011 15:35
Toledo's Marcy Kaptur must be scary for Republicans as they have decimated her district. Marcy has always held fast to the good of NW Ohio. Toledo now has three (3) congresspersons to represent us with Marcy's district now touching the shoreline all the way to Cleveland. To all of those folks now under her jurisdiction: you are fortunate as she is a first class congresswoman with Ohio in her mind and heart. Ann Desmond
Anonymous
Wed Oct 5 2011 15:33
I live near Chicago,but in Indiana. Ifmr. Gunther wants to see real corruption and gerrymandering, he needs to check out Illinois!! heh heh
Diamond
Wed Oct 5 2011 12:35
Following the example of our president, "We won!" Republicans are in charge of Ohio!
Jordan
Wed Oct 5 2011 11:43
Anonymous said liberal and lefty because that's what Gunther is...a left-wing liberal. Where he went to school and whats his degree(s) were have nothing to do with his political affiliation and "keeping and open mind".
Anonymous
Wed Oct 5 2011 09:08
Liberal? Lefty? Why do you say that? Is it because he earned his BA, MA, and PhD at Cal Berkley between 1964 and 1977? C'mon people, let's keep an open mind here.
Buckeye in FL
Wed Oct 5 2011 08:12
Where was Mr Gunther when the Democrats did the same thing last time around?
Anonymous
Wed Oct 5 2011 08:05
Funny, when the Democrats did it, not a peep from the lefty Gunther.
Anonymous
Wed Oct 5 2011 07:56
This is a biased article. It fails to mention that Republicans are also losing a district, when the 3rd and 7th districts are combined. That means Mike Turner and Steve Austria have to run against each other for the nomination. Ohio is losing two Congressional distrcats because of a lack of population growth compared to other states. So each party is losing one. What's unfair about that?
Gary who's getting a college degree in the shower
Wed Oct 5 2011 06:54
Gene Smith is going to suspend you from Saturday's game for redrawing the districrts.
Busch
Wed Oct 5 2011 02:26
As part of the article, it would be nice to see a map with the districts from the last several decades along with reporting who was the more dominant party at the time. This case certainly does appear gerrymandered but providing visual evidence of how it was previously, including information about the party in power would allow a reader to make up their own mind.




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