This fall, every seat in Ohio’s House of Representatives is up for grabs, promising an exhilarating and dynamic campaign season as candidates strive to address voter concerns. However, due to district lines drawn by influential lawmakers and political insiders, many races are effectively decided before Election Day.
Ohio voters are frustrated by this familiar issue. This summer, over half a million Ohioans supported a ballot initiative aimed at eliminating gerrymandering in the state. The measure, now on the November ballot as Issue 1, faces a hurdle: misleading language crafted by politicians that could obscure its true intent.
On Monday, the group Citizens Not Politicians—backed by the Brennan Center for Justice—filed a lawsuit demanding a fair description of the measure. This lawsuit highlights the broader problem of extreme gerrymandering that affects not just Ohio, but several other states where election outcomes are predetermined due to manipulated district maps.
The Citizens Not Politicians initiative seeks to shift redistricting power from entrenched politicians to an independent commission of Ohio residents. This constitutional amendment would eliminate covert negotiations and backroom deals, ensuring that district maps reflect community interests rather than partisan gains. The proposal aims to create a transparent process where district boundaries are drawn by people without a vested interest in the outcome.
Despite past amendments to the Ohio constitution in 2015 and 2018 meant to address redistricting, changes have not materialized. Politicians continued to draw maps in secret, often finalizing them just before public hearings. The Ohio Supreme Court even intervened in 2022, ordering redrawn maps, but lawmakers ignored these directives, resulting in maps that still failed to comply with legal standards.
The initiative represents a broad coalition of Ohioans from all political affiliations who are determined to break the cycle of gerrymandering and ensure that their votes genuinely influence who represents them in government.