GOP, ADVOCACY GROUPS SUBMIT CHANGES TO LEGISLATIVE DISTRICT MAPS IN COURT
Republican leaders in Illinois are asking a federal court to redraw multiple districts in the Chicago area and Metro East region to create more Latino-
majority and Black-majority districts. Plaintiffs in two other lawsuits have also submitted proposed changes to the maps lawmakers approved earlier this year. Credit: U.S. District Court, Northern District of Illinois
Capitol News Illinois
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Assembly earlier this year have submitted their proposed changes,
which would create more Latino and Black-majority districts in Cook
County and the Metro East region.
Wednesday night, will be the subject of a combined hearing that is tentatively set for the week of Dec. 6, although exact dates have not yet been announced.
testimony of expert witnesses and arguments as to why the plaintiffs believe the approved maps are unconstitutional and violate the federal Voting Rights Act of 1965.
Assembly, Sen. Dan McConchie, of Hawthorn Woods, and Rep. Jim
Durkin, of Western Springs, who hope to use the case to chip away at the Democrats’ current supermajorities in both the Illinois House and Senate.
NAACP, which argues that Black areas in and around East St. Louis that could have made up a Black-majority district were deliberately broken up and spread across separate House districts in order to protect two white incumbent Democrats.
Senate President Don Harmon and the Illinois State Board of Elections, along with its individual members, as defendants. They seek an order to block ISBE from implementing the maps that Gov. JB Pritzker signed into law Sept. 24 and to adopt the new maps
that they have submitted to the court.
of 1965 ... by diluting the votes of minority citizens and by preventing
such citizens from participating equally in the political process and
having an opportunity to elect candidates of their choice,” attorneys for the GOP plaintiffs argued. “Among other problems with the September Map, the drafters committed a fundamental error by falsely assuming there is no racially polarized voting in Illinois and failing to properly consider race and ethnicity when drawing the districts in the map as required by the VRA.”
Court precedent from North Carolina, Thornburg v. Gingles, which set out three factors needed to invalidate legislative district maps on the grounds of racial discrimination.
at issue are sufficiently large and geographically compact to constitute a majority in a single-member district; that the minority groups are politically cohesive; and that the majority votes sufficiently as a bloc such that it can usually defeat the minority’s preferred candidate.
During legislative debates over redistricting, Republicans declined to offer their own map proposals, arguing that they believed redistricting should be done by an independent commission rather than elected officials who have a direct interest in the outcome.
Districts 1, 2, 21, 22, 23, 24 and 32, all in Chicago’s southwest side and adjacent suburbs such as Berwyn, Cicero, and Burbank.
In the Metro East area, the GOP map would reconfigure House
Districts 112, 113 and 114 so that District 114, currently represented
by Democrat LaToya Greenwood, of East St. Louis, would be a majority- Black district.
history of anti-Latino discriminatory practices in Illinois elections,
particularly in Cook County, that have affected their ability to register,
vote, “or otherwise participate in the democratic process.”
Latino voting strength, lengthy residency requirements for voting
in some jurisdictions, voter intimidation and harassment at the polls,
and overt and subtle racial appeals in political campaigns.
Their proposal focuses exclusively on southwest Chicago and its adjoining suburbs. It would create a total of 10 Latino-majority House districts, Districts 1, 2, 3, 4, 21, 22, 23 and 24 – and four Latino-majority Senate districts – Districts 1, 2, 11 and 12.
of Edwardsville; the 113th, a safe Democratic district currently held
by Rep. Jay Hoffman, of Swansea; and the 114th, currently held by Democrat LaToya Greenwood.
prospects of the only Black state representative elected to the legislature from the entire Metro East area or even Southern Illinois, all in order to bolster the prospects of a white incumbent in nearby district HD 112.”
Press Foundation and the Robert R. McCormick Foundation.
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