In November, Ohio residents will have an opportunity to vote on Issue 1, a constitutional amendment that would finally abolish the state’s extreme partisan gerrymandering. Voters will not, however, be informed of this fact on the ballot. Instead, the Ohio Supreme Court’s Republican majority ruled Monday that the amendment will be described in egregiously misleading terms on the ballot itself, with ultra-biased language designed to turn citizens against it. Incredibly, a proposal that would end gerrymandering will be framed as a proposal to require gerrymandering, a patently false representation of its intent and effect. The court’s 4–3 decision marks yet another effort to subvert democracy in Ohio by Republicans who fear that the citizenry—when given a voice on the matter—might dare to loosen their stranglehold on power.

https://slate.com/news-and-politics/2024/09/ohio-supreme-court-voter-fraud-gop.html

  • tiredofsametab@fedia.io
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    1 month ago

    FFS. Ohio’s officials need to actually face legal consequences for all its gerrmandering and other fuckery.

    • ashok36@lemmy.world
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      1 month ago

      The thing is, without gerrymandering they’d still have a majority of seats. They’re not content with that though. Why have 57% of the seats when you could have 79% and be completely inoculated from consequences or the feedback of any constituencies?

    • KillingTimeItself@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      1 month ago

      they admit to this, JD vance just did.

      Remember guys, it’s the democrats that are causing the problems, they’re the ones with the violent and destructive rhetoric, not the republicans. (obviously /s on the last bit here)

  • skoberlink@lemmy.world
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    1 month ago

    I don’t think the article included it and it’s a little difficult to find the phrasing.

    I found a sample ballot

    https://www.boe.ohio.gov/clark/c/upload/ELEC_BallotProofs.pdf

    The phrasing there is

    To create an appointed redistricting commission not elected by or subject to removal by the voters of the state

    However a vote of “Yes” would establish a non-partisan (or, IMO more accurately, a mixed partisan) committee of 15 (5R, 5D, 5 other) where a majority of the committee must approve the redistricting.

    The extended description starts with this

    1. Repeal constitutional protections against gerrymandering approved by nearly three-quarters of Ohio electors participating in the statewide elections of 2015 and 2018, and eliminate the longstanding ability of Ohio citizens to hold their representatives accountable for establishing fair state legislative and congressional districts.

    Technically all of this is correct but I can absolutely see how it’s misleading voters.

    Full disclosure, I’m not a lawyer or political scientist and I do not live in Ohio.

    • CaptDust@sh.itjust.works
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      As an ohioian, the current system isn’t enabling some nobel pursuit of holding people accountable. It’s blatantly “our team draws the lines, in a way that benefits our team, who can draw the lines next time, benefitting our team again”

      And even after the R weighted supreme court rules “the lines are biased - throw out the map”, they still find a way to use the map anyway. Yeah. Calling it a “repeal of gerrymander protection” is a joke and a half.

    • johker216@lemmy.world
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      1 month ago

      We don’t have sample ballots yet, but this matches our local reporting:

      Now LaRose is abusing his position on the Ohio Ballot Board to paint Issue 1 in a comically negative light. The Ohio Constitution bars ballot language that would “mislead, deceive, or defraud the voters.” Yet the board’s description of the amendment states that it would create “a new taxpayer-funded commission of appointees required to gerrymander the boundaries of state legislative and congressional districts” to produce “partisan outcomes” (emphasis added). It also declares that the amendment would “repeal constitutional protections against gerrymandering approved by nearly three-quarters of Ohio electors participating in the statewide elections of 2015 and 2018,” a gratuitous reference to the failed reforms of the previous decade.

      This is grossly misleading of what we approved in the past.

    • FireTower@lemmy.world
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      1 month ago

      Thank you for sharing this clear and succinct comment. Looked through the article and didn’t see it formated so clearly.

      • themeatbridge@lemmy.world
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        1 month ago

        The entire ballot measure is riddled with lies and doublespeak. This is just one example, and that’s what makes it hard to describe the problem in clear and succinct language. Vinny Gambini’s opening statement comes to mind.

    • dezmd@lemmy.worldM
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      1 month ago

      Wont the 5 others just be libertarians that always end up voting in lockstep with Republicans?

      • MutilationWave@lemmy.world
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        1 month ago

        Not necessarily. Half of Americans are registered unaffiliated. I imagine most of those aren’t libertarians. I’m registered unaffiliated because I’m a socialist.

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    This is when governments should be overthrown. The people spoke and the government did not follow through.

    In 2015 and 2018, its voters overwhelmingly approved two constitutional amendments designed to limit partisan influence over maps. The amendments required the Legislature to enact genuinely bipartisan redistricting plans; if lawmakers failed to do so, a new bipartisan board, the Ohio Redistricting Commission, had to draw fair, representative maps.

    This process proved easy to game by political actors, because Republican politicians held a majority on the new commission. In 2021 and 2022, this GOP majority enacted a series of flagrant gerrymanders, which the state Supreme Court struck down. The commission flouted the court’s decisions over and over again, running out the clock to the election. It then invited a conservative federal court to impose a gerrymander that the Ohio Supreme Court had already ruled unconstitutional. As a result, the state’s Republicans won a towering and unearned supermajority in the Ohio Legislature.

    • themeatbridge@lemmy.world
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      1 month ago

      Three things you can do without spending any money:

      Vote in every election.

      Talk to your family and friends and coworkers about politics. Make it OK to share your thoughts on current events, and challenge the people around you when their ideas are problematic. Most of all, encourage everyone to vote.

      Volunteer. Support a campaign by phone banking or writing postcards or working at the polls or driving voters who wouldn’t otherwise have access to the polls.

      • zbyte64@awful.systems
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        1 month ago

        If any of this sound overwhelming it’s because time is money. Find a community that can help you have more quality time that doesn’t involve spending money: D&D, nonthiestic church, yoga at the library, or crafting popup at the maker space. It’s an investment in your own energetic capacity and will make all of the parent’s ideas for political involvement more achievable.

        • KillingTimeItself@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          hell or find a local canvassing group or something like that, they most likely need people on the ground, either at events or door knocking. If you’re worried about it being overwhelming these things are great options. You might even be able to coordinate if that’s up your sleeve but that’s probably more overwhelming lol.

          local political groups are ironically pretty chill.

      • captainlezbian@lemmy.world
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        I do vote every election and I guess I should clarify: Ohio is a direct democracy with an unaccountable legislature and a brain drain spiral. It’s how we have marijuana, abortion, multiple anti gerrymandering laws that have been ignored by the legislature, all sorts of stupid unpopular laws, and a tendency towards moderate Republican governors.

      • KillingTimeItself@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        Talk to your family and friends and coworkers about politics. Make it OK to share your thoughts on current events, and challenge the people around you when their ideas are problematic. Most of all, encourage everyone to vote.

        talk to them about bi partisan issues btw. Shit like voter reform, everybody wants more representation, shit like voter security (the thing in georgia) anything that you can find common ground on you should be talking about.

        And remember, it’s important to respect people who do things that are admirable. As much of a cunt as mike pence may be, the dude stopped jan 6th single handedly, and i will never be able to thank him enough for that.

    • WindyRebel@lemmy.world
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      How about you start educating people on THIS issue? Post comments, link to easy to understand articles/explanations, and let people in your area or nearby know about this.

      If the answer is no one cares, well then god speed. Do your best to move?

      @[email protected] commented and said this already.

  • Liz@midwest.social
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    1 month ago

    Should have gone with multi-member proportional districts using something like Sequential Proportional Approval Voting so that gerrymandering would be near-impossible. Five members is generally considered the minimum needed to make gerrymandering pointless to even attempt.

    • Spedwell@lemmy.world
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      I don’t understand how SPAV fixes gerrymandering in this case. It seems like the re-weighting operation is meant for a pool of identical ballots. When you have district-level elections that differ between ballots, how is this meant to work?

      Edit: Ooooh you meant for selecting the redistricting committee, not for running the elections. Gotcha, makes sense now.

      • Liz@midwest.social
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        Nope. I meant for running elections. You need multiple winners in the same election for SPAV to be different from just straight Approval (vote for one or more, most votes wins). With my suggestion of 5 members per district, the candidates all run for legislator of the district, and then 5 winners are chosen using SPAV. Any semi-proportional method will work, but SPAV is arguably the way to go for a whole pile of reasons.

        Anyway, so if you’re a voter in that district, you will have 5 representatives you can go talk to. With a 2-party system, usually 2 or 3 of them will be from your party. The legislature as a whole would be made up of some number of these districts, each with 5 officials. They all participate in the legislature like normal, there’s no difference between the 1st awarded seat or the last.

        The reason you do this is because the people in each district will be much much more likely to have at least 1 legislator that actually represents them and their district. The legislature as a whole will also approximate the voting population as a whole in terms of votes per party vs seats per party. It makes it functionally impossible to gerrymander because if you try cracking and packing you’ll really just be moving around who wins the last couple seats in any given district, but you’ll have a hard time actually changing the overall makeup of the legislature.

        • Spedwell@lemmy.world
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          1 month ago

          Okay, that makes a lot of sense. Thanks for explaining it further. It does sound like a very nice system.

  • some_guy@lemmy.sdf.org
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    1 month ago

    I opened the article. I didn’t read it. I think I might need another break from being online. It’s a difficult time to do that, as we’re about to travel to visit family. Being in airports, catching connecting flights, taking rideshares to hotels… without being online? I know we used to do this with books and music. I might be facing a trial from hell.

    • KillingTimeItself@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      I might be facing a trial from hell.

      it really does annoy me how online everything is, i just want to exist in the woods away from people, not causing issues. And all i get in return is security breach after security breach leaking my personal information that nobody needs to have anyway.

  • KillingTimeItself@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    its times like this, that my very basic knowledge of the US governmental system and it’s structure make me happy.

    This is bad, but it’s inherently hard to fradulate and election across 50 states with 50 independent voting systems. The founding fathers, as cross dressing as they might have been, were certainly cooking when they wrote that shit.

    Now if only we could get supreme court reform.

  • Xenny@lemmy.world
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    People who would be fooled by this don’t read. Just make a political ad campaign telling them which way to vote and why.