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Georgia�s Political Lineup
|
1991 |
2001 |
Governor |
D |
D |
State
Senate |
45D,
11R |
32D,
24R |
State
House |
145D,
35R |
105D,
74R,
1I |
US
Senators |
2D |
2D |
US
Reps |
9D,
1R |
8R,
3D |
. |
Redistricting
Deadline
There are no state constitutional
deadlines. However, the practical deadline is before the deadline
for candidate qualifying for the 2002 elections, which is in April
2002. |
Who�s in Charge of
Redistricting?
The legislature. The Senate
Reapportionment,
and the House Legislative
and Congressional Reapportionment standing committees have jurisdiction
over redistricting legislation. Plans will be
considered in a special session of the General Assembly
in the summer of 2001. The Governor has veto power over
both plans.
|
Districting
Principles
Principle |
Congressional |
State
Legis. |
Compactness |
|
|
Contiguity |
+ |
+ |
Political sub. |
+ |
+ |
Communities |
|
|
District cores |
+ |
+ |
Incumbents |
a |
a |
VRA � 5 |
+ |
+ | +
= required
-- = prohibited
a = allowed |
Public Access
The legislature holds joint public hearings
around the state. Interim
redistricting plans are posted on
this website as they are released. A map of the newly adoped Congressional
districts
is available online as
of September 28.
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Political Landscape
With control of redistricting and a 9-1 edge in
the U.S. House, in 1991 Georgia Democrats sought to break up
the district of Newt Gingrich, the state's sole House Republican and a narrow winner in
1990. In so doing and in creating
a total of three black-majority districts, Democrats� partisan
objectives backfired. The delegation is now 8-3 Republican.
Georgia
gained 2 additional seats in
2001, and Democrats will likely seek to modify
current districts to favor their party. During the last round of redistricting,
however, Democrats had a difficult time maintaining party
unity because many black and white Democrats were split on how many minority
opportunity districts to create. |
Legal Issues
In 1995, the Supreme Court in
Miller v. Johnson
declared Georgia's 2nd and 11th congressional
districts to be unconstitutional �racial gerrymanders.� After the
legislature failed to come up with a new map, the court in 1995
redrew these districts and the surrounding districts. The final
congressional plan converted the two black-majority districts into
�black influence" districts. The Supreme Court affirmed the revised
plan. Georgia�s state legislative plan also was challenged as
racially gerrymandered. All parties to the litigation agreed upon a
revised plan before the court ruled on the
lawsuit. |
Legislation/Reform
Efforts
No reform is likely before 2002, but the Georgia League
of Women Voters is active on redistricting. Its
position in support of a redistricting commission reads:
�The Commission should be diverse and include legislators, citizens, minority interests
and political party representatives. [The League of Women
Voters supports] an open process with citizen input and
public hearings on any proposed redistricting plan.�
In addition, U.S. Congresswoman Cynthia McKinney (D)
and some state legislators have proposed proportional voting
systems in multi-seat districts. |
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Irregularly Shaped
District District 6 |
|
� 91% white; 6% black; 2% Asian; 2% Hispanic
� Georgia�s most affluent district
� Leans very Republican (was Newt Gingrich�s
district)
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Contact Information
Linda Meggers Director Reapportionment Services
Unit Suite 407, Legislative Office Bldg. Atlanta, GA 30334
404/656-5063 404/651-8086 Fax [email protected]
Sewell R. Brumby Legislative Counsel Office of
Legislative Counsel 316 State Capitol Atlanta, GA 30334
404/656-5000 404/651-9292 Fax [email protected] |
For more information:
National Committee for an Effective Congress' Redistricting
Resource: Georgia -Overview -Detailed
analysis, including new congressional map
EMILY's List Congressional Redistricting Report: Georgia -Overview -Georgia
Redistricting Chronicle
Glossary
Redistricting
Provisions 2000
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