2021 Redistricting Forum Handouts
Our speakers and organizers have prepared additional materials for you if you'd like to explore our topics on redistricting and gerrymandering in more detail:
Topic | Speaker(s) | Speaker(s) | Additional Materials |
Welcome & Program Notes | Olivia Zink, Executive Director, Open Democracy | Louise Spencer, co-founder, Kent Street Coalition | |
Keynote Message | Ellen Freiden, Fair Districts Florida, on the successful constitutional amendment for an Independent Redistricting Commission |
YouTube of Ellen Freidin's TEDX talk: https://youtu.be/ka1RkguwSqs |
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Basics of Redistricting and the National Landscape |
Kyri Claflin, member, Kent Street Coalition, short video by Vox, "The Man Who Rigged America's Election Maps." |
"The man who rigged America’s election maps” —
Graphic of types of redistricting
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The history of redistricting in NH, what happened in 2011, the NH Supreme Court, and the U.S. Supreme Court | Liz Tentarelli, President, League of Women Voters - NH | Former NH Senator Sylvia Larson, Rep. Lucy Weber, Rep. Ned Gordon | |
Break | |||
The Special Committee on Redistricting: What it does, its Politics, and the criteria that will be used |
Liz Tentarelli, President, League of Women Voters - NH
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Members of the 2011 or 2021 Special Committee on Redistricting Member of both 2011 & 2021 SCR, Rep. Lucy Weber, and
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Redistricting Criteria from National Conference of State Legislatures Redistricting Criteria from the Brennan Center |
The technology of redistricting | Moon Duchin, or a member of the Tufts Univ. MGGG Redistricting Lab | Districtr.org | |
Messaging strategies & proposed tactics: The words matter! Talking points: Partisan Redistricting vs. Gerrymandering; Towns without House Rep districts. Transparency, fair elections, so public and municipal officials have input into the districts. |
Brian Beihl, Deputy Director, Open Democracy Action |
Zandra Rice Hawkins, Executive Director, Granite State Progress Louise Spencer, co-founder, Kent Street Coalition |
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Get involved in a working group or team! April 29, LWV National Day of Action Support the NH Resolution for Fair Nonpartisan Redistricting Getting your own state rep district Contacting the Special Committee on Redistricting Write a personal letter/email to your state rep to support fair redistricting
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Brian Beihl, Deputy Director, Open Democracy Action explaining the Action Page. Liz Tentarelli, President, League of Women Voters - NH: National Day of Action on April 29 Louise Spencer, co-founder, Kent Street Coalition, on getting involved in actions, and the importance of working locally, but also being connected. |
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Wrap up and Thanks! | Olivia Zink, Executive Director, Open Democracy, | Louise Spencer, co-founder, Kent Street Coalition |
NH Resolution for Fair Nonpartisan Redistricting
Thank you for visiting to learn more about New Hampshire's redistricting process, and the NH Resolution for Fair Nonpartisan Redistricting.
The Basics of Redistricting & Gerrymandering
In short, redistricting is an every-ten-year process that takes the U.S. Census data, and reapportions the population into more-or-less equal voting districts for state elected positions like the Executive Council, State Senate, and State House. It also includes the two U.S. House of Representatives seats for NH, as well as for county commissioner.
By current state law, the NH House is responsible for most of the redistricting, with the NH Senate doing the Congressional districts. The process is supposed to be fair, nonpartisan, and transparent to the public. Fair voting districts are geographic areas of close to equal population. Voters in those districts should have something in common, such as a school district, perhaps a lake, or a common economy. Our legislature appoints a "special committee" which reflects the percentage of legislators that each party got elected. That committee draws the voting maps, has public hearings and submits them to the full legislature for a vote.
Voting maps should NOT be drawn on the basis or race, religion, ethnicity or political party, or between areas which have nothing in common, or perhaps competing interests. When maps are drawn using this data are often are manipulated to cheat, and control the outcome of elections for the party in charge at the time. The graphic at right shows how this is done, called "gerrymandering."
What Happened in 2011
In 2011, a legislature hostile to fair, nonpartisan redistricting drafted new voting districts which gerrymandered dozens of NH towns, as detailed in the articles below. The Special Committee had no real part in the process; the maps were in fact drawn by a small group of legislators out of the sight of the public, using a software that was kept hidden from the public and even Democratic members of the committee. When public hearings were held around the state, there were no maps shown to the public or most state legislators. When state rep district maps were finally available, the NH House had only one week to review them, and the public only had 24 hours! There was little transparency in the process.
- Concord Monitor, Dec. 15, 2011: Politics-Election Redistricting plan unveiled
- New Hampshire Public Radio, June 7, 2017: How Gerrymandering Skewed the 2016 Elections
- NH Union Leader- Coming soon
- NH Supreme Court: Brief by NH Senator David Pierce
- League of Women Voters in the NH Union Leader: NH Voices: Liz Tentarelli -- Learning from the past
Gerrymandering Could Get Worse in 2021
In 2021, there's a very good chance that this gerrymandering could get worse, not better, unless voters speak up and make sure that legislators know that the voters demand a FAIR, NONPARTISAN and TRANSPARENT process. Without the proposed permanent solution of an "independent redistricting commission," which passed the legislature with bipartisan votes but was vetoed twice, we again are depending on the good consciences of our state legislators.
Passing the NH Resolution for Fair Nonpartisan Redistricting
While we would prefer to push for a permanent independent redistricting commission, that is unlikely to happen in time for the 2021 redistricting. So instead we are passing the NH Resolution for Fair, Nonpartisan Redistricting in as many towns as possible.
Read the sample Town Meeting/SB 2 Vote version
Read the sample City/Town Council version
Between Dec 2020 and early February 2021, volunteers working with Open Democracy and other organizations around the state will be proposing "petitioned warrant articles" in 100 town-meeting & SB 2 towns around the state. In cities, volunteers will be working with city councils and boards of aldermen. In both types of government, we will be asking for a non-binding resolution to be sent to our state elected officials. We're asking a town's voters to:
- Demand fairness and transparency in the process of drawing new maps
- Require that maps be drawn with no favoritism to one party or the other
- Make sure that the mapping process happens in public meetings
- That towns of 3300 citizens or larger be given their own state representative districts, rather than being split with other towns.
- And that the board of selectmen from that town communicate in writing the wishes of the town to the State and Federal delegations.
We have more details on our Town Meeting "How-To" page, or if you live in a city or a town with a town council, our Council Resolution page, but this initiative is designed to use our local town warrants to inform local voters on the evils of gerrymandering, and pressure our legislature to put party politics aside and create nonpartisan voting districts for state representative, NH senator, executive council, and U.S. Congress. The voters want fairness, but politicians want power. As a voter, it should be YOU calling the shots!
If you have further questions about the NH Resolution for Fair Nonpartisan Redistricting in your town, or want to pass a resolution in your town, contact Open Democracy's deputy director, Brian Beihl, for more information.
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