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From The Hill:

I have said it before, and I’ll say it again. While many look at control of Congress as the biggest story of the 2010 elections, it’s likely that state legislative races across the nation and some Florida ballot measures will end up having more impact on party and other political fortunes in the long run.

The parties that control the legislatures after the 2010 elections and census will be masters of the redistricting process in many states, deciding which party is advantaged when legislative and congressional lines are redrawn for the next decade. And in Florida, where competing ballot measures pit supposed reformers against insiders who have dueling amendments on the ballot to tailor the districting process, the stakes are already high and evident, months before the election.

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Last Updated on Wednesday, 16 June 2010 07:32

From the Providence Journal

Deep within the new $7.8-billion state budget is a reminder that the next General Assembly will have the once-a-decade job of redrawing Rhode Island’s political map.

The tax-and-spending plan that cleared the Assembly last week included $1.5 million for lawmakers to find and hire a consultant to help them determine how population changes over the last decade might change the state’s legislative and congressional districts.

House spokesman Larry Berman said the General Assembly intends to begin by issuing a request for proposals this summer.

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Last Updated on Monday, 7 June 2010 04:14

From the Associated Press:

The General Assembly was unable to overcome differences in proposed bills updating how Ohio draws its political maps in a rush to finish business overnight Thursday.

GOP State Sen. Jon Husted (HYOO’-sted), the top proponent of redistricting, pledges to keep working on an agreement before an August deadline for placing the issue on the November ballot.

Husted’s bill would take the power of drawing legislative districts away from whichever party controls the state Apportionment Board and give it to a seven-member bipartisan panel.

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Last Updated on Friday, 4 June 2010 07:25

From the Marietta Times

The Ohio Senate this week is considering a measure recently passed in the House that would change the way the state’s legislative districts are drawn every 10 years.

The Senate passed its own version of a redistricting plan last year. If a compromise version can pass both chambers by Aug. 4, a constitutional amendment will appear on the November ballot. Voters must approve any change in the redistricting process since it’s a change to the state’s constitution.

State Rep. Jennifer Garrison, D-Marietta, co-sponsor of the House bill, said she’s hopeful the measure could be on its way toward those steps this week. The House bill’s sponsor in the Senate is currently working with the House to craft a compromise, she said.

“Stay tuned. This might be a good week for reapportionment,” Garrison said.

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Last Updated on Wednesday, 2 June 2010 04:33

From Jason Embry and the Austin American Statesman:

Hearing today led by lame-duck chairman, lobbyists are learning to shoot guns and check my math, folks, because the countdown is back.

At this point, it looks like there will be two big issues in the 2011 session of the Legislature: The budget and redistricting. We’ve talked plenty about the former, and will get to some more budget talk in a minute, but redistricting steps briefly into the spotlight today.

The House Redistricting Committee will join with the Judiciary and Civil Jurisprudence Committee for an 11 a.m. hearing today in E1.030. From the meeting notice: “The joint public hearing will consider recent legal, technological and demographic developments relating to the upcoming redistricting process.”

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Last Updated on Wednesday, 2 June 2010 09:15