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The Ohio Redistricting Commission unanimously adopted new maps, but Democrats are not happy.
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The Ohio Redistricting Commission is working to approve new state House and Senate maps. The commission is holding its second of three public hearings on Monday.
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Majority Republicans on the Ohio Redistricting Commission reject maps drawn by Democrats and choose to go with their own working maps at next week's public hearings.
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Petition language for the amendment to put redistricting in the hands of a citizens commission is rejected a second time, on the same day as a meeting of the panel that currently draws maps for Ohio lawmakers' districts is postponed.
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The first meeting of the Ohio Redistricting Commission in 16 months was supposed to be short and organizational, but the map-drawing panel's session was cut short when members were unable to pick the co-chairs who would lead the panel.
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Expanded access and funding for a controversial school voucher program has intensified the tug-of-war over school funding in Ohio. On our weekly Reporter Roundtable, we discuss this as well as Ohio Rep. Bob Young's resignation, redistricting, property taxes and more.
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Secretary of State Frank LaRose, one of the five Republicans on the seven-member Ohio Redistricting Commission, wrote to his fellow commissioners that legislative maps should be approved in just a few weeks.
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The Ohio Attorney General’s Office rejected petition language Wednesday for a constitutional amendment aimed at remaking the state's troubled system for drawing political maps.
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The Republican former chief justice of the Ohio Supreme Court has joined an effort to come up with a new process to draw legislative and congressional maps.
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The proposal, championed by two former Ohio Supreme Court justices, would create a 15-member commission that could not include politicians, lobbyists or other partisans to draw district maps for Ohio's Congressional districts and the state's House and Senate.