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The Statehouse News Bureau provides educational, comprehensive coverage of legislation, elections, issues and other activities surrounding the Statehouse to Ohio's public radio and television stations.

Ohio Supreme Court rejects fourth set of state legislative district maps

The five Republicans on the Ohio Redistricting Commission - Gov. Mike DeWine, Auditor Keith Faber, Senate President Matt Huffman, Speaker Bob Cupp and Secretary of State Frank LaRose - look at draft maps before the Commission's meeting on March 27. [Karen Kasler / Statehouse News Bureau]
The five Republicans on the Ohio Redistricting Commission - Gov. Mike DeWine, Auditor Keith Faber, Senate President Matt Huffman, Speaker Bob Cupp and Secretary of State Frank LaRose - look at draft maps before the Commission's meeting on March 27.

The Ohio Supreme Court is ordering the Ohio Redistricting Commission to meet and adopt a new set of state legislative district maps after ruling the fourth attempt to be unconstitutional.

The district maps for the Ohio House and Ohio Senate were passed on March 28 after Republican commissioners made tweaks to an earlier plan that was also invalidated by the state Supreme Court.

The court had ordered the redistricting commission to implement a new process that included bringing in outside experts and creating a transparent mapmaking process.

The redistricting commission hired two mapmakers from outside of Ohio and required the district drafting to be streamed live. However, Republican commissioners used GOP legislative staff to make a separate map to meet the court-ordered deadline.

Democratic commissioners argued that the other redistricting members needed to give the outside mapmakers more time to finish their plan.

In the ruling, the Ohio Supreme Court told the redistricting commission to reconvene and adopt a new set of maps by May 6.

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