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Illinois' Political Lineup
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1991 |
2001 |
Governor |
R |
R |
State
Senate |
31D,
28R |
32R,
27D |
State
House |
72D,
46R |
62D,
56R |
US
Senators |
2D |
1D,
1R |
US
Reps |
15D,
7R |
10D,
10R |
Chicago
Area
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Redistricting
Deadline
The deadline for the legislature
to enact state legislative districts is May 31, 2001 or October 5,
2001 for the commission. There is no congressional
deadline. |
Who�s in Charge of
Redistricting?
The legislature. If the May
deadline is not met, an eight-member commission will draw the
plan. If the Redistricting Commission fails to file an approved
plan by the September deadline,
the state Constitution requires that
a ninth tie-breaking member of the panel be chosen by lottery
from the names of a Republican and a Democrat submitted by
the state Supreme Court. The Governor has veto power over both
congressional and state 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
There are no statewide public hearings specifically for
redistricting plans. The public has the same access to the redistricting process as it
would with any other bill.In addition, the Speaker of the House has a website for
redistricting with a schedule of
hearings, and proposed
districts.
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Political Landscape
The Illinois method of
redistricting consistently favors one party dramatically over the
other. In the �80s it was the Democrats, in the �90s the
Republicans.
Illinois lost a
congressional seat in the 2000 reapportionment
once again. Democrat Luis Gutierrez� Hispanic-majority
4th district may be especially vulnerable for being
redrawn. |
Legal Issues
In 1991, the legislative district
map approved by a Republican majority of the Illinois Redistricting
Commission was challenged in state court as violating certain state
constitutional requirements. The court upheld the
plan.
Minority voters in the state also challenged
legislative districts on Equal Protection and 15th Amendment
grounds. A federal district court upheld the same plan after finding
no discriminatory purpose or effect.
The Illinois legislature failed to redistrict its
congressional delegation after losing a seat in the 1990 census.
Thus, an action was brought in U.S. district court in 1992 claiming
that the use of the existing plan for election was unconstitutional
due to malapportionment. The court adopted a Republican proposed
plan based on its adherence to equal population and compliance with
other legal principles.
After Shaw was decided in 1995, the federal district
court approved plan fell under scrutiny again. Specifically, the 4th
congressional district, a majority Hispanic district, was challenged
as an unconstitutional racial gerrymander. The court decided that
although the district was indeed a racial gerrymander, it served the
compelling interest of the state of Illinois in redressing past vote
dilution of Hispanic voters. |
Legislation/Reform
Efforts
The contentious partisanship of
the redistricting process in 1981-82 and 1991-92 has contributed to
serious discussion of reform. A commission was formed in the
mid-decade to study the problem, but there was no consensus
proposal. In 1999, there was a proposed joint resolution which would
have amended the state constitution to ensure that each house draws
its own district lines separately. It would have abolished the
Redistricting Commission. If no plan could pass by the required
three-fifths vote, then state board of elections would use its
districting computer program to generate a random redistricting
plan. This measure died in committee.
A constitutional amendment proposed
in 1999 and again in 2001 would restore cumulative
voting for electing the state house of representatives. Cumulative
voting, a semi-proportional election system used in three-seat districts, was
used to elect the Illinois house from 1870-1980. A bi-partisan
group of current and former public officials, led by former
governor Jim Edgar and former Congressman Abner Mikva, recently studied the issue and
recommended its return. |
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Irregularly Shaped
District District 1 |
Irregularly Shaped
District District 4 |
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� Chicago� south side
� Historically, nation�s first majority black district
� several solidly-middle class black neighborhoods
� Democratic, but low voter turnout
� 27% white; 70% black; 1% Asian; 4% Hispanic
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� 49% white; 6% black; 3% Asian; 64%
Hispanic
� Hispanic district, surrounding a black district (the
7th)
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Contact Information
Dan Hagen Staff State Board of Elections P.O.
Box 4187 Springfield, IL 62708 217/782-1577 217/782-5959
Fax [email protected]
Timothy D. Mapes Chief of Staff House Democratic
Staff State House, Room 300 Springfield, IL 62706
217/782-6360 217/524-1794 Fax [email protected] |
For more information:
National Committee for an Effective Congress' Redistricting
Resource: Illinois -Overview -Summary
and map of new congressional districts
EMILY's List Congressional Redistricting Report: Illinois -Overview -Illinois
Redistricting Chronicle
Glossary
Redistricting
Provisions 2000
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