Poll: CA Voters Back Redistricting Body Newsom Wants To Bypass
A recent poll conducted by Politico and partners reveals that California voters strongly support maintaining the state’s self-reliant redistricting commission, which Governor Gavin Newsom is reportedly trying too bypass. The survey shows that 64% of respondents favor keeping the commission, including majorities across Republicans, Democrats, and independents, while only 36% support returning redistricting power to state legislators. Newsom and Democratic lawmakers are considering a move to override the commission to push through a congressional map favoring Democrats in response to GOP redistricting efforts in other states. The independent commission was established through voter-approved constitutional amendments in 2008 and 2010, and a previous attempt to repeal it was rejected by nearly 60% of voters. Newsom’s proposed plan may involve a legislatively referred constitutional amendment to present an choice map to voters this fall before returning authority to the commission in the future. Further details are expected soon.
California voters overwhelmingly support an independent redistricting commission Gov. Gavin Newsom is attempting to bypass to further gerrymander the state in Democrats’ favor, new polling shows.
Released Thursday by Politico, the survey conducted by the outlet, Citrin Center, and Possibility Lab shows that, “By nearly a two-to-one margin, [Golden State] voters prefer keeping an independent line-drawing panel to determine the state’s House seats.”
A whopping 64 percent of those surveyed expressed support for keeping the commission, including 66 percent of Republicans, 61 percent of Democrats, and 72 percent of independents. Just 36 percent of voters espoused support for “returning congressional redistricting authority to state legislators.”
The polling figures don’t bode well for Newsom, who, along with Democrat legislators, is gearing up to potentially bypass the commission to ram through a new congressional map more favorable to Democrats. As The Federalist previously reported, “The prospective move is aimed at helping his party offset any potential GOP gains resulting from Texas and other red states’ redistricting efforts.”
“[Republicans have] triggered this response. And we’re not going to roll over and we’re going to fight fire with fire, but we’re going to do so not just punching with the weight of the fourth largest economy, the most populous state in our union, the size of 21 state populations combined,” Newsom said earlier this month.
(Democrats currently hold 43 of the state’s congressional seats, while Republicans hold nine.)
The aforementioned restricting commission was adopted by Californians via two constitutional amendment proposals in 2008 and 2010. A competing 2010 amendment attempting to repeal the commission was overwhelmingly rejected by voters, with nearly 60 percent voting in opposition, as The Federalist previously reported.
In order to usurp the commission’s redistricting authority, Newsom and his allies have suggested potentially having the Democrat-controlled legislature pass a legislatively referred constitutional amendment that would go before voters later this fall. That proposal, according to CalMatters, “would temporarily set aside California’s independent redistricting commission and bring an alternative map” — one more favorable to Democrats — “directly to the public for approval.”
The state would then revert back to the independent commission for future redistricting under the suggested proposal, Newsom claimed.
The California governor is expected to reveal further details about his administration’s plan on Thursday, according to CBS News.
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He needs to go he is blocking Republicans from having a day in California Politics. It’s always been a Red State but Democrats in need to have control redistricting efforts gave them the power to stay in office