Nebraska Lawmakers Agree to Rules for Fall Redistricting

June 4, 2021 by TWN Staff
Nebraska Lawmakers Agree to Rules for Fall Redistricting
Storm clouds over the Nebraska State Capitol. (Wikimedia Commons)

Lawmakers in Nebraska have agreed to the framework they’ll follow for redrawing political districts lines in the fall.

Despite Nebraska’s unique one-house legislature being officially nonpartisan, the 30-16 vote in favor of the redistricting rules came down largely along party lines, with those self-identifying as Republicans supporting them and Democrats voicing their opposition.

During the debate before the vote, most of the Democrats argued the rules were just flexible enough to allow for imaginative line-drawing for political gain.

In the end, the resolution that was adopted stated: “District boundaries shall not be established with the intention of favoring a political party or any other group or person.

“District boundaries which would result in the unlawful dilution of the voting strength of any minority population shall not be established,” it continued.

Among the questions debated was whether lawmakers would ostensibly start from scratch when they get the latest population data from the U.S. Census, or whether they’ll try to preserve existing districts.

Republicans on the state legislature’s redistricting committee approved a provision allowing for the preservation of existing districts, but did not mandate it.

Getting down to the nitty-gritty, lawmakers debated how much deviation would be allowed in redrawing the legislative districts.

Republicans beat back a challenge to lower the deviation, arguing that the lower the number, the less flexibility they’d have in drafting a map.

Democrats, meanwhile, argued that the larger the deviation, the more likely that the map could be gerrymandered.

Ultimately, the two sides grudgingly agreed to a 10% deviation.

The actual start of redistricting isn’t expected to begin until the middle of August, when the U.S. Census Bureau will start releasing the pandemic-related results of the 2020 Census.

The nine-member redistricting committee will take a first stab at creating the new political boundaries, and once its work is done, it will hand the matter over to the legislature, which will be meeting in special session to complete the map-making process.

When it plays out, the process and the maps it produces will inevitably be controversial.

In 2010, Republicans drew criticism when they moved the Bellevue, Neb., area, which was home to a substantial number of Democrats, out of the 2nd Congressional District — which encompasses metropolitan Omaha — and placed them in the 1st Congressional District, which was dominated by rural Republicans.

Another controversy arose after a new legislative district was created, apparently solely to allow a Republican legislative aide who worked on the redistricting to run for office in it. That aide, John Murante, did actually run for and win the newly created seat. Today Murante is the state treasurer.

This year, all eyes will once again focus on the 2nd Congressional district, the only congressional district in the state won by President Joe Biden last year. Expectations are that another sliver of the district will be taken away and moved into the state’s hugely rural 3rd Congressional District.

Given the controversies associated with past redistrictings, there have been attempts to put the process in the hands of an independent redistricting commission.

In 2016, a bill creating such a body actually passed in the legislature, but was vetoed by Gov. Pete Ricketts.

Last year, a signature drive to put a ballot issue before voters on whether to establish such a commission was called off amid the pandemic.

A+
a-
  • Nebraska
  • redistricting
  • In The News

    Health

    Voting

    In The States

    May 1, 2024
    by Dan McCue
    Bipartisan Vote Spells End to Arizona’s Archaic Abortion Law

    PHOENIX — Arizona lawmakers voted to repeal the state’s controversial, Civil War-era ban on abortion on Wednesday with two Republicans... Read More

    PHOENIX — Arizona lawmakers voted to repeal the state’s controversial, Civil War-era ban on abortion on Wednesday with two Republicans joining with Democrats to ensure the measure passed. The vote in the Republican-controlled Arizona state Senate was 16-14, with every Democrat in the chamber and Republicans... Read More

    May 1, 2024
    by Tom Ramstack
    Congressmen Demand DC Police Remove Anti-Israel College Protesters

    WASHINGTON — Republican members of Congress sent letters to Washington, D.C.'s mayor Tuesday demanding an explanation of why local police... Read More

    WASHINGTON — Republican members of Congress sent letters to Washington, D.C.'s mayor Tuesday demanding an explanation of why local police have not cleared what the lawmakers called an "unlawful and antisemitic protest encampment" from the campus of George Washington University. Their dispute with the city administration... Read More

    Some North Carolina Abortion Pill Restrictions Are Unlawful, Federal Judge Says

    RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) — Some of North Carolina government's restrictions on dispensing abortion pills, such as requiring that doctors to... Read More

    RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) — Some of North Carolina government's restrictions on dispensing abortion pills, such as requiring that doctors to prescribe and provide the drug to the patient in person, are unlawful because they frustrate the goal of Congress to use federal regulators to ensure the... Read More

    Police Remove Encampment at University of Wisconsin’s Madison Campus

    AP — Police were removing an encampment of pro-Palestinian protesters at the University of Wisconsin’s Madison campus and have taken away... Read More

    AP — Police were removing an encampment of pro-Palestinian protesters at the University of Wisconsin’s Madison campus and have taken away several protesters. Several police officers arrived at the encampment on the campus’ Library Mall around 7 a.m. Wednesday and played a recorded message on a loop... Read More

    April 29, 2024
    by Dan McCue
    NYS Eyes Three ‘Underutilized’ Sites for Renewable Energy Development

    ALBANY, N.Y. — The New York State Energy Research and Development Authority has signed three agreements to explore the possibility... Read More

    ALBANY, N.Y. — The New York State Energy Research and Development Authority has signed three agreements to explore the possibility for renewable energy development in the Southern Tier, Western New York and Long Island.  Under the terms of memorandums of understanding, the agency’s Build-Ready Program will... Read More

    April 29, 2024
    by Dan McCue
    New Nuclear Facility Opens Near Waynesboro, Georgia

    WAYNESBORO, Ga. — Plant Vogtle Unit 4, a nuclear power project that backers describe as one of the “largest clean... Read More

    WAYNESBORO, Ga. — Plant Vogtle Unit 4, a nuclear power project that backers describe as one of the “largest clean energy projects in the nation” has begun commercial operation near Waynesboro, Georgia, a bucolic town about 30 miles south of Augusta. The unit’s entry into commercial... Read More

    News From The Well
    scroll top