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White House posts false Jan. 6 narrative on riot's 5th anniversary; Report: Big finance fueling climate crisis beyond tipping point; CA scores poorly on many issues in 2026 Children's Report Card; Voting rights groups brace for more federal interventions in 2026.

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Five years after the January 6th riot, watchdogs warn that disputes over voter data, mail-in ballot rules, could hamper smooth and fair midterms. They say misinformation is still undermining confidence in American elections.

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From electric oyster farming in Maine, to Jewish descendants reviving a historic farming settlement in New Jersey and the resurgence of the Cherokee language in North Carolina, the Daily Yonder looks back at 2025.

Will Redistricting Reform Become a Reality in Ohio?

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Monday, May 18, 2015   

COLUMBUS, Ohio - Redistricting reform may become a reality in Ohio this year. Voters will decide on Issue 1 in November, which would change the process for drawing legislative districts in the state.

Policy analyst with Common Cause Ohio, Catherine Turcer, says if approved by voters, political parties would be banned from drawing districts for partisan advantage through changes to the state's Reappointment Board.

"It focuses on keeping communities together so the end to the kind of odd-shaped districts and the kind of unnecessary splits of counties and townships, etc," she says. "It also ended the practice of doing the map making in secret."

Congressional maps are not included in the measure because of concerns related to the outcome of a U.S. Supreme Court case involving Arizona's redistricting process.

In the Arizona case, the high court will decide if congressional redistricting should be taken away from an independent commission and put back into the hands of state lawmakers. Turcer says depending on the ruling, states such as Ohio could be prohibited from using commissions to draw congressional lines.

"If U.S. Supreme Court determines that 'legislature' is narrowly defined as the actual legislative body rather than allowing the public to do this," says Turcer. "For Arizona this could mean their independent redistricting commission is unconstitutional."

Turcer says in Ohio, activists have been working on redistricting reform since the mid-1980s. She says gerrymandering prevents lawmakers from truly representing the interests of their communities.

"If in fact you can, every 10 years, go behind closed doors and actually slant the districts one way or the another so that the results are fairly predictable, then we need to do what we can do beef up democracy," says Turcer.

Meanwhile, the Redistricting Reform Act of 2015 was recently introduced in the U.S. House to address congressional districts by requiring that they be drawn by an unbiased citizen commission.



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