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Connecticut�s Political Lineup
|
1991 |
2001 |
Governor |
I |
R |
State
Senate |
20D,
16R |
21D,
15R |
State
House |
88D, 63R |
100D,
51R |
US
Senators |
2D |
2D |
US
Reps |
3D,
3R |
3D,
3R | |
Redistricting
Deadline
The
deadline is Sept. 15, 2001; if
this deadline is not met, a commission must submit a plan by Nov. 30,
2001. |
Who�s in Charge of
Redistricting?
The legislature has the
responsibility for both state legislative and congressional
districting. If they fail to meet the deadline, the governor
appoints a nine-member redistricting commission. The Governor has no
veto power over redistricting at either the congressional or state
legislative levels.
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Districting
Principles
Principle |
Congressional |
State
Legis. |
Compactness |
|
|
Contiguity |
|
+ |
Political sub. |
|
+ |
Communities |
|
|
District cores |
|
|
Incumbents |
|
|
VRA � 5 |
|
| +
= required
-- = prohibited
a = allowed |
Public Access
The joint committee will hold a series of
public hearings in each congressional district and several in
Hartford. Any member of the public may submit a plan to the
committee, and a public viewing station is available on the capitol
grounds which graphically displays all plans submitted to the
committee for consideration.
*The new maps for Connecticut's state Senate and
House of
Representatives are now available online.* |
Political Landscape
Since reforms in the 1970s, house
and senate leaders have been required to appoint two members from
each of the four legislature caucuses to a joint Reapportionment
Committee in the February after the census year. Unlike most states,
the eight-member committee is required to introduce a redistricting
plan as a "joint resolution,� which is the means to effectively
nullify gubernatorial veto power. If the joint committee fails to
pass a joint resolution with a 2/3 vote of the legislature by its
constitutional deadline, the committee is disbanded and a
nine-member commission is formed by the Governor. Although not
required, generally the commission is made up of the members on the
joint committee; however, the ninth member is usually a retired
legislator. The last person to hold this 'tiebreaking' position
insisted that he would not vote until eight members of the
commission told him to vote for the same plan. Thus, consensus
appears to be an informal objective.
Connecticut lost a House seat
after federal reapportionment in 2001, which easily could lead to two incumbents having to
face one another. |
Legal Issues
Last decade�s state legislative
district plan was challenged on the basis that it violated state
constitutional requirements by creating house districts that divided
towns. The challenge was unsuccessful. The court explained that the
plaintiffs made no showing that towns were divided for reasons other
than the need to satisfy the equal population requirement. |
Legislation/Reform
Efforts
There apparently have been no major reform
efforts since the state constitutional amendments regarding the
committee's and commission's deadlines, which were instituted in the
1970s. |
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Irregularly Shaped
District District 5 |
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� 91% white; 5% black; 1% Asian; 6% Hispanic
� Some of the 5th is extremely rich, some is much less well-off
� Swing district
|
Contact Information
D'Ann Mazzocca Executive
Director, Office of Legislative Management, Room
5100 Legislative Office Building Hartford, CT 06106
860/240-0100 860/240-8881 Fax D'[email protected]
Dan Duffy Project
Coordinator, Reapportionment Committee Office of Legislative
Research, Room 5300, Legislative Office Building Hartford, CT
06106 860/240-8400 860/240-8881 Fax [email protected] |
For more information:
National Committee for an Effective Congress' Redistricting
Resource: Connecticut -Overview -Detailed
analysis, including new congressional map
EMILY's List Congressional Redistricting Report:
Connecticut -Overview -Connecticut
Redistricting Chronicle
Glossary
Redistricting
Provisions 2000
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