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CLEVELAND, Ohio - A congressional district map that makes geographic sense. Political balance in line with Ohio's leanings. Competitive races so voters can hold politicians accountable.
Ohio is legally required to redraw its congressional district map ahead of the 2026 election, and early reports indicate that ...
The Ohio Supreme Court rejected a new map of state congressional districts Friday as gerrymandered, sending the blueprint back for another try. In the 4-3 decision, justices returned the map to ...
COLUMBUS, Ohio — A new congressional map proposed by Ohio Republicans favors the GOP to win an even greater share of the state’s congressional seats than they already have under the current ...
The National Redistricting Action Fund accuses Republicans on the Ohio Redistricting Commission of refusing to follow the directions of the Ohio Supreme Court in creating the latest 15-district ...
Republicans in the Ohio House and Senate unveiled two different maps Wednesday for the state's 15 congressional districts. Both would leave Democrats with two safe seats despite voter-approved ...
Members of the Ohio Senate Government Oversight Committee hear testimony on a new map of state congressional districts on Tuesday, Nov. 16, 2021, at the Ohio Statehouse in Columbus, Ohio.
The Ohio Senate voted 24-7 along party lines Tuesday in favor of the map. The Ohio House is expected to consider it Wednesday. Republicans say the new districts would be the most competitive seats ...
The governor signed off on a Republican-drawn Congressional map that creates 12 out 15 districts expected to result in wins for GOP candidates.
That’s particularly true in Ohio’s 13th Congressional District, which Sykes won last year even though the district, which covers Summit and part of Stark County, tilts slightly Republican.
Republicans probably did not end up redrawing their way into the five congressional seats they need to take control of the House of Representatives, at least not on paper.
Even as parties have engineered fewer competitive districts, control of Congress has changed hands with more regularity — three times since 2002 and decent odds for a fourth in November ...
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