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Groups file objections to new Ohio House, Senate maps as contempt hearing is delayed

 Voter rights groups gather in downtown Columbus to call on the Ohio Redistricting Commission to draw a "fair" Congressional map.
Andy Chow
/
Statehouse News Bureau
Voter rights groups gather in downtown Columbus to call on the Ohio Redistricting Commission to draw a "fair" Congressional map.

The Ohio Supreme Court still has to sign off on the House and Senate maps passed last week by the Ohio Redistricting Commission.

But the secretary of state has ordered boards of elections to start preparing May 3 primary ballots with candidates for the districts on those maps.

That got a response from the voting advocacy groups that filed the lawsuits over the maps.

The groups want the court to rule those maps invalid, but also to say Secretary of State Frank LaRose – who was among four Republicans voting for those maps – can’t use those maps for the May 3 primary.

The groups also want the court to declare the maps from Stanford Professor Jonathan Rodden filed in the initial case in December are constitutional, but stopped short of asking for the court to implement them. Cleveland State Marshall College of Law dean emeritus Steven Steinglass says that’s not possible.

“I don't think you can order the implementation of a map. It can’t require the adoption of a particular map, and that may seem like a very thin distinction," Steinglass said in an interview for "The State of Ohio".

The court has also delayed Tuesday’s contempt of court hearing for the Ohio Redistricting Commission while it looks at the new maps the panel passed last week and the filings in the case.

But there was a dispute amongst the justices about that hearing.

Justice Sharon Kennedy wrote in a dissent to the order to call the hearing: "The chief justice, acting alone, does not have the authority to reject the answers filed by respondents, the Ohio Redistricting Commission and the commission members, to the show-cause orders in these cases and order the commission members to appear in person. Rather, such orders require the assent of at least three other justices of this court."

And Kennedy said O'Connor didn't call for a vote of the court. "Nothing in the Ohio Constitution grants the chief justice of this court authority to rule on motions on behalf of the full court," Kennedy wrote.

Justice Pat Fischer also said he would be writing a dissent, but it hasn't been published to the court's website yet.

Justice Pat DeWine has recused himself from contempt proceedings since his father, Gov. Mike DeWine, could face individual consequences as a member of the Ohio Redistricting Commission. So he can't be called to vote on whether there should be a hearing.

Copyright 2022 The Statehouse News Bureau. To see more, visit The Statehouse News Bureau.

Karen is a lifelong Ohioan who has served as news director at WCBE-FM, assignment editor/overnight anchor at WBNS-TV, and afternoon drive anchor/assignment editor in WTAM-AM in Cleveland. In addition to her daily reporting for Ohio’s public radio stations, she’s reported for NPR, the BBC, ABC Radio News and other news outlets. She hosts and produces the Statehouse News Bureau’s weekly TV show “The State of Ohio”, which airs on PBS stations statewide. She’s also a frequent guest on WOSU TV’s “Columbus on the Record”, a regular panelist on “The Sound of Ideas” on ideastream in Cleveland, appeared on the inaugural edition of “Face the State” on WBNS-TV and occasionally reports for “PBS Newshour”. She’s often called to moderate debates, including the Columbus Metropolitan Club’s Issue 3/legal marijuana debate and its pre-primary mayoral debate, and the City Club of Cleveland’s US Senate debate in 2012.