Communiqué de presse

Hogan Proposes Bill to Curb Gerrymandering in Maryland

Today Gov. Larry Hogan of Maryland introduced a bill prohibiting the drawing of legislative districts for political advantage and establishing an independent citizen commission to draw district lines.

Today Gov. Larry Hogan introduced a bill prohibiting the drawing of legislative districts for political advantage and establishing an independent citizen commission to draw district lines. Hogan’s bill would end a redistricting process in Maryland that resulted in some of the most gerrymandered districts in the country. The proposal turns into legislation solutions the bipartisan Maryland Redistricting Reform Commission recommended in a report they released last year.

“Allowing elected officials to manipulate General Assembly and congressional districts to rig elections is a clear conflict of interest that keeps Maryland voters from holding politicians accountable,” said Jennifer Bevan-Dangel, executive director of Common Cause Maryland. “We urge the General Assembly to pass this fair and transparent approach to redistricting to give the people a true voice in who represents them.” 

Redistricting is required following each decennial census to update district boundaries so they have equal numbers of people. Current Maryland law gives the governor significant power to propose maps, which are too often drawn behind closed doors without meaningful public involvement. Following the 2010 census, former Gov. Martin O’Malley and General Assembly leadership used this power draw maps that have been criticized as the most contorted and gerrymandered in the nation. Following an extensive public education campaign by the Tame the Gerrymander coalition, Gov. Hogan created the Redistricting Reform Commission last year to make a detailed set of policy recommendations to end political gerrymandering.

The legislation includes the following proposals:

·       Les limites des districts doivent être compactes, contiguës et respecter les limites des comtés et des municipalités.

·       Les circonscriptions législatives du Congrès et des États devraient être délimitées par une commission indépendante.

·       The independent commission should be politically diverse, including three from the majority party, three from the minority party, and three members from neither political party. The applicants will go through a screening process and final members will be drawn through a lottery. Elected officials, candidates, lobbyists, and political staff are prohibited from serving.

·       La commission tracera les lignes sans tenir compte de l’affiliation politique ou du lieu de résidence du titulaire. La commission tiendra de « vastes » audiences publiques sur le plan proposé.

·       Le pouvoir législatif peut rejeter la carte par un vote à la supermajorité.

·       Les circonscriptions législatives des États doivent être beaucoup plus homogènes en termes de taille. Les circonscriptions doivent se situer dans la limite de 1% en termes de population (par opposition à 5% actuellement) et il doit y avoir une cohérence entre les circonscriptions à un ou trois membres.

Bill will be available on the General Assembly’s website.

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