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Colorado�s Political Lineup
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1991 |
2001 |
Governor |
D |
R |
State
Senate |
24R, 11D |
17R, 18D |
State
House |
39R, 26D |
38R, 27D |
US
Senators |
1R,
1D |
2R |
US
Reps |
3R,
3D |
4R,
2D | |
Redistricting
Deadline
The
constitutional deadline for legislative
districts is 90 days after the first meeting of the Reapportionment
Commission for a preliminary plan, and an additional 90
days for a final plan. Given that the commission must convene by May
15, 2001, the current deadline for a preliminary plan is December 7,
2001, and the final plan is due on January 9, 2002. The state
Supreme Court must approve the plan before March 15, 2002. There is
no deadline for congressional
districts. |
Who�s in Charge of
Redistricting?
The legislature draws the
congressional districts, while the Reapportionment Commission is
responsible for legislative districts. There are no legislative
committees exclusively responsible for congressional redistricting.
Proposed bills on the subject are assigned to committee after they
are proposed. The governor has veto power over the congressional
plan only.
The Reapportionment Commission
has been in existence since 1974. It is an 11-member,
part-legislator, part-civilian body. The majority and minority
leaders of both houses each appoint one person, the governor
appoints three and the chief justice of the state Supreme Court
appoints four. No more than six members can be from one political
party. The governor has no veto power over legislative district
plans.
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Districting
Principles
Principle |
Congressional |
State
Legis. |
Compactness |
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+ |
Contiguity |
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Political sub. |
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+ |
Communities |
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+ |
District cores |
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Incumbents |
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VRA � 5 |
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| +
= required --
= prohibited a
= allowed |
Public Access
The statewide House
preliminary plan is now available online; follow the "State
Maps" link.
Reapportionment Commission meetings are open
to the public. Also, the Commission takes the preliminary plan to
public town meetings across the state for comment. Recent advances
in technology have prompted the Commission to set up a redistricting
section on the legislature's
homepage. The Denver Post recently published an article
with detailed maps of current districts and
the two proposed maps.
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Political Landscape
With an even split in the
congressional delegation and
divided control over redistricting, congressional district lines were changed
little in 1991-2. This cycle, control is divided and Republicans
now have an edge, meaning redstricting could turn particularly nasty. With the state
gaining a new seat, each party will want to craft
it for their party.
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Legal Issues
The Colorado State Supreme
Court approved the state legislative plan drawn by the
Colorado Reapportionment Commission in 1992, as it was
constitutionally required to do under Article V of the state constitution. The
final plan was upheld despite objections based on section 2 of the
Voting Rights Act by a group named Blacks for Fair Reapportionment
(seeking changes in northeast Denver) and a group of Latino voters (seeking
changes in San Luis Valley in house district 60). The two groups
claimed that the plan diluted minority voting strength in these
areas. The state Supreme Court upheld the plan against both
challenges based on the plan's adherence to state constitutional
principles. Specifically, the court noted the desire to keep San
Luis Valley intact as a community of
interest.
The Latino plaintiffs also challenged house district
60 in U.S. district court. The trial court rejected their claims,
but the 10th circuit reversed the district court's holding and sent
the case back to the district court to create a new house district
60. The new district was formed by splitting four counties to create
a new, majority-Latino district. The plan was approved in March
1998. |
Legislation/Reform
Efforts
There was a
measure on the November 2000 ballot
that would move the deadlines up for the state legislative plan to
provide more time for candidates to prepare for the 2002 primaries
that passed 60-40.
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Irregularly Shaped
District District6 |
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� 92% white; 3% black; 2% Asian; 6% Hispanic
� Affluent, white-collar suburbs of Denver
� Held by Republicans for many
years
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Contact Information
Jeremiah B. Barry Senior
Staff Attorney Colorado Reapportionment Commission 1600
Broadway, Suite 1020 Denver, Colorado 80202 (303)
866-6429 (303) 866-6434 Fax [email protected] |
For more information:
National Committee for an Effective Congress' Redistricting
Resource: Colorado -Overview -New congressional
map(.pdf)
EMILY's List Congressional Redistricting Report: Colorado -Overview -Colorado
Redistricting Chronicle
Glossary
Redistricting
Provisions 2000
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