Indiana redistricting plan criticized as aiding Republicans

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Republicans will keep greater control of Indiana’s Legislature than merited by the number of votes they receive, according to a political analyst who on Thursday called the state’s proposed new election districts among the most skewed in the country.

The analysis came as a legislative committee held a second day of public hearings on the Republican-drawn maps, with several people criticizing the fact that the new election district maps were released less than 48 hours earlier.

The redistricting plan review conducted for the left-leaning political group Women4Change found Republicans would likely win 69 of the 100 Indiana House seats while typically receiving 56% of the vote. Republicans now hold a 71-29 majority in the Indiana House.

Christopher Warshaw, a political scientist at George Washington University who analyzes election data, said the proposed maps that will be used for the next 10 years boost Republicans by creating overwhelmingly Democratic districts to limit the impact of those voters.

“I think that while geography or other factors could explain part of these biases, these are so extreme that really nothing but politically intentional gerrymander could really explain the extent of the bias in these maps,” Warshaw said.

House Republican leaders didn’t immediately comment Thursday on Warshaw’s analysis but said Wednesday they focused their map drawing on factors such as not splitting up cities and counties and that the new maps reflect the state’s political leanings.

Republicans have used the commanding majorities they’ve in the Legislature since the 2012 elections to advance issues such as expanding state funding of vouchers for students attending private schools, toughening anti-abortion laws and approving the contentious state religious objections law in 2015.

Rima Shahid, the executive director of Women4Change, argued the new maps create few politically competitive districts, meaning party primaries will decide most outcomes.

“These maps will lead to more extremist and polarized candidates, because it will result in more uncontested races where a small group of political party loyalists will choose candidates based on their narrow agenda,” Shahid said.

Republicans released their proposals for the new congressional and Indiana House districts on Tuesday, with new map for the Republican-dominated state Senate not being made public until next week.

Democrats and voting-rights complain that leaves the public little time to study and comment on the new maps ahead of the final votes for General Assembly approval expected on Oct. 1—making Indiana one of the first states to complete redistricting work.

The House elections committee, which is scheduled to vote Monday on endorsing the new maps, also heard bipartisan criticism of the redrawing of the state’s congressional districts aimed at protecting the 7-2 Republican hold on those seats.

The major changes shift the northern tier of Democratic-leaning Marion County from the 5th District that Republican Rep. Victora Spartz narrowly won last year to that of Indianapolis Democratic Rep. Andre Carson, while moving the GOP-leaning southside of Indianapolis from Carson’s district to the 6th District now held by Republican Rep. Greg Pence.

Misty Hollis of Richmond, the Republican chairwoman for the 6th District, said the district has been largely made up of eastern Indiana’s rural areas and small cities for decades and that the changes would reduce the influence of rural voters.

“In today’s polarizing environment, one would think that every attempt would be made to make sure that the voices of those who live in rural Indiana would be heard,” Hollis said.

The redrawn 5th District held by Spartz has the bulk of its population in affluent Hamilton County where she lives just north of Indianapolis, while extending north to include the cities of Anderson, Marion, Kokomo and Muncie that have faced factory closures and population declines for decades.

Democratic activist Andrew Ellison of Kokomo said it would be better for Spartz’s district to take in more of suburban Indianapolis and have a congressional district focused on the struggling counties north and east of Indianapolis. Ellison pointed out that no U.S. representatives have been from the area’s communities since 2000.

“They deserve a champion, they deserve somebody from one of these communities, who has lived in one of them, who knows the needs of the people that live in these places,” Ellison said.

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10 thoughts on “Indiana redistricting plan criticized as aiding Republicans

  1. These maps were released on a Tuesday. The hearings were Wednesday and Thursday. That’s not fairness; that’s not enough time for the public and experts to evaluate them.

    Maps from the Senate will be released in the next week, and the final vote is scheduled for October 1. Per the US Constitution, this process only happens once a decade. Indiana lawmakers have allocated about two weeks to make a decision that’s going to shape almost every aspect of politics in Indiana for the next 10 years.

    This is partisanship. Whoever is in power changes the rules of the game to keep themselves in power, rather than demonstrating they have the best ideas and the best message for voters.

    Hoosiers deserve better.

    1. Is it so wrong for citizens to want a fair election process? Where communities decide who they want representing them instead of politicians carving up neighborhoods to secure their stranglehold on the state?
      In our state, the issue is Republicans. So that’s who will be complained about. And actually, a lot of Democrats support independent redistricting precisely BECAUSE of this kind of partisan politics. I don’t see many on the right asking for the same…

    2. They would likely, yes.

      But do we want people to change the rules if the win, or do we want fair rules that everyone has to follow?

  2. Newsflash guys – other than parts of Marion County and the “Region” up by Chicago, Indiana is and always will be a Republican leaning state. If you don’t like it, there is no one keeping you here.

    1. It’s not about it being Republican leaning, it’s about a disproportionate amount of senate and house seats going to Republicans. Indiana’s population is not as R-leaning as the makeup of our representatives indicates, which is a problem.

  3. Perhaps Republican leaning, but completely dominating is anti-democratic (little d). 44%D should not result in 22% D seats in the IGA and certainly shouldn’t lead to 30% uncontested seats. It’s OK to be Republican leaning, but there should be the ability to have civic dialogue and hearing both sides.
    If Indiana had an independent redistricting commission to draw the maps, neither party would over power the other. This is what Indiana needs so all Hoosiers are represented and all votes count.

  4. I agree redistricting is partisan on both sides. Thats why voting legislation needs to be passed to require non-partisan redistricting commissions in all states. That would level the playing field everywhere.

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