
The Virginia Senate passed a constitutional amendment Friday to pave the way for a mid-decade redistricting push, the final legislative step needed to send it to voters for approval. Subscribe to read this story ad-free Get unlimited access to ad-free articles and exclusive content. If voters support the amendment, which is expected to appear on the ballot this spring, Virginia’s Democratic-controlled Legislature would be able to redraw the state’s congressional map before the midterm elections.
Main Idea: Virginia lawmakers passed a constitutional amendment that could let the state redraw its congressional map before the next midterm elections, sending the measure to voters for approval.
Key Points:
Mid-decade redistricting could let Virginia lawmakers redraw House lines to favor one party, making elections less fair and more political for voters.
If voters approve the amendment, Virginians may get a new map that better reflects changing politics before the midterms.
Rate how each entity in this article affected the American people.
The state whose constitution, legislature, and congressional map are at the center of the article.
Passed the constitutional amendment that is the central action in the story and sent it forward for voter.
Central legislative actor driving the redistricting amendment and the potential redraw of Virginia’s congressional map.
As House Minority Leader, he is quoted attacking GOP redistricting efforts and framing the Democratic response.
Named organization involved in the Virginia redistricting effort and showing proposed maps to people involved.
His pressure on GOP-led states is a key trigger for the redistricting fight described in the article.
The commission is a central institution the amendment would temporarily bypass.
Comments here are the same thread shown when this article appears in The Pulse.
No comments on this article yet.
Sign in to commentMentioned as another political actor pursuing a redistricting effort to gain seats.