VFW Club
along
Main
Street
with
American
Flag in
Galena,
Illinois
– taken
on June
11th,
2020(Shutterstock) |
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FILE -
In this
July 29,
2021
file
photo,
Rep.
Mary
Miller,
R-Ill.,
speaks
at a
news
conference
held by
members
of the
House
Freedom
Caucus
on
Capitol
Hill in
Washington.
The
release
of new,
detailed
census
data in
August
2021
means
Democrats
who
control
state
government
can
begin
the
once-in-a-decade
process
of
redrawing
Illinois'
congressional
district
boundaries.
With the
state
losing a
congressional
seat due
to
population
loss,
they're
certain
to
eliminate
a
district
in
heavily
Republican
areas of
central
and
Southern
Illinois.
(AP
Photo/Andrew
Harnik
File) |
|
Census
data
puts
target
on
rural,
Rust
Belt
House
districts
By
DAVID A.
LIEB
apnews.com
While
suburban
congressional
districts
are
swelling
with new
residents,
lawmakers
in large
swaths
of rural
America
and some
Rust
Belt
cities
are in
need of
more
people
to
represent.
In
rural
Illinois,
Republican
Rep.
Mary
Miller’s
district
is short
73,000
people.
In
northeastern
Ohio,
Democratic
Rep. Tim
Ryan
needs an
additional
88,000
people.
And the
Detroit-area
district
of
Democratic
Rep.
Rashida
Tlaib
lacks
over
100,000
people —
one of
the
biggest
shortfalls
in the
country.
That
makes
them all
potential
targets
for map
makers —
and
possibly
vulnerable
to job
loss —
as their
districts
are
redrawn
in the
coming
months
to
rebalance
the
nation’s
shifting
population.
The
numbers
come
from an
Associated
Press
analysis
of new
2020
census
data
revealing
the boom
of urban
and
suburban
America,
at the
expense
of small
towns.
The
emptying
out of
rural
areas
was
particularly
rough
news for
Republicans,
who have
increasingly
relied
on rural
voters
to win
seats in
Congress.
Of the
61 U.S.
House
districts
that
lost
population,
35 are
held by
Republicans.
The
party
needs to
net just
five
seats to
win
control
of the
House in
2022.
But it
is
guaranteed
to lose
a seat
in West
Virginia,
and
likely
to take
hits in
Illinois
and New
York.
However,
Republicans
are well
positioned
to make
up those
seats --
and
possibly
more --
in the
growing
states
of
Texas,
Florida
and
North
Carolina,
where
they
control
the
mapmaking
process.
Fast
growing
areas,
such as
Republican-held
congressional
districts
in
suburban
Texas,
are
fertile
ground
for
adding
new
districts
or
spreading
surplus
Democratic
voters
among
neighboring
districts.
That
tactic
is among
those
certain
to be
contested
both in
the
legislatures
and in
courts.
Democrats
on
Friday
wasted
no time
filing a
fresh
lawsuit
challenging
the
current
maps in
Wisconsin,
anticipating
a
redistricting
stalemate
in the
divided
state
government
and
arguing
the
courts
should
intervene.
The
political
parties
will be
battling
not just
over
where
they can
gain
seats
but also
where
they can
eliminate
seats
held by
their
opponents.
That
means
some of
the
toughest
battles
for
mapmakers
will
occur
over
districts
that
have
fewer
residents
than a
decade
ago,
like
those in
Illinois,
Michigan
and Ohio
— all
states
that
will be
losing a
U.S.
House
seat
because
of
lagging
population.
Ohio
will
drop
from 16
to 15
U.S.
House
seats
with
redistricting.
Among
the 10
districts
with the
largest
population
shortfalls,
three
were in
Ohio,
according
to the
AP
analysis,
based on
the
number
of
residents
required
per
district.
That
included
Ryan’s
district
as well
as
Republican
Rep.
Bill
Johnson’s
eastern
Ohio
district
and the
Cleveland-area
district
of
former
Democratic
Rep.
Marcia
Fudge,
who
resigned
to join
President
Joe
Biden’s
administration.
Fudge’s
district,
where
Democrat
Shontel
Brown
recently
won the
primary,
is on
the hunt
for
94,000
more
people.
Ryan’s
district,
though
still
voting
for
Democrats,
has been
trending
toward
Republicans
in
recent
presidential
elections.
Republicans,
who
control
redistricting
in Ohio,
could
“sort of
dismember”
Ryan’s
district
and
place
its
residents
in other
nearby
districts,
said
Paul
Beck, a
retired
political
science
professor
from
Ohio
State
University.
“I think
that
district
is going
to be on
the
cutting
boards.”
Ryan
has
announced
his
plans to
run for
the U.S.
Senate.
A
lost
Democratic
district
in Ohio
wouldn’t
necessarily
result
in a
Republican
gain,
because
the GOP
still
would
have to
defend
12 seats
that it
already
holds.
Republicans
are
guaranteed
to lose
a
congressional
seat in
West
Virginia.
That’s
because
they
currently
hold all
three
seats,
and one
must be
eliminated
in
redistricting.
Another
blow may
be
awaiting
Republicans
in
Illinois,
which
must
trim its
congressional
delegation
from 18
to 17.
Democrats
who
control
redistricting
there
are
almost
certain
to try
to
eliminate
a
district
in
heavily
Republican
areas of
central
and
southern
Illinois.
All five
of
Illinois’
congressional
districts
held by
Republicans
lost
population
between
2010 and
2020,
according
to the
census,
giving
Democrats
the
justification
to get
rid of
one.
“I
don’t
think
there’s
going to
be
anything
Republicans
can do
to stop
that,”
said
Alvin
Tillery
Jr., an
associate
professor
of
political
science
and
director
of the
Center
for the
Study of
Diversity
and
Democracy
at
Northwestern
University.
A
similar
scenario
could
play out
in New
York,
where
Democrats
also
control
redistricting
and thus
will
hold
sway
over
which
seat
must be
eliminated.
The
fight
could be
messier
in
Pennsylvania,
where
the
state’s
congressional
delegation
currently
is split
9-9
between
Democrats
and
Republicans.
The GOP
controls
the
Legislature,
which
will
draft a
new map
eliminating
one
seat,
but
Democratic
Gov. Tom
Wolf
holds
veto
power.
The
rural
Pennsylvania
district
of
Republican
Rep.
Glenn
Thompson
ranks
among
the top
10
nationally
in
population
shortfalls,
needing
to pick
up over
90,000
people
to meet
the
redistricting
target.
It’s one
of six
Pennsylvania
districts
that
lost
population
in the
2020
census,
all but
one of
which
are held
by
Republicans.
Citizens’
commissions
will be
responsible
for
deciding
how to
eliminate
one
district
each in
California
and
Michigan.
After
the 2010
census,
Michigan’s
districts
were
drawn by
a
Republican-led
Legislature
and
governor
and
provided
the GOP
one of
the most
enduring
advantages
in the
nation,
according
to an AP
analysis.
Michigan
lost
population
in the
2020
census
in some
rural
areas as
well as
in
Detroit
and
Flint,
which
was
scarred
by a
tainted
water
crises
this
past
decade.
The
districts
of
Democratic
Reps.
Dan
Kildee,
who
represents
Flint,
and
Rashida
Tlaib of
Detroit
each are
more
than
100,000
people
short of
the
redistricting
target —
the
largest
gaps
nationally
outside
of West
Virginia.
If
Republicans
were
still
drawing
the
maps,
one of
those
districts
might be
a likely
target
for
elimination.
But the
state
constitution
says the
citizens’
redistricting
commission
can
neither
favor
nor
disfavor
incumbents.
That
means
the new
map
could
look
significantly
different.
“The
commission
is very
unlikely
to just
sort of
start
from the
current
map and
make
small
adjustments,”
said
Matt
Grossmann,
a
political
scientist
who
directs
the
Institute
for
Public
Policy
and
Social
Research
at
Michigan
State
University.
“I
really
think
they’re
going to
be
closer
to
starting
from
scratch.”
___
Associated
Press
writer
Sara
Burnett
contributed
to this
report
from
Chicago.
___
This
story
has been
corrected
to
reflect
that
Shontel
Brown,
not
Shontel
Turner,
recently
won the
Democratic
primary
in a
Cleveland-area
House
district.
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