Virginia Referendum Pits Redistricting Proposals Against Voter-Approved Commission

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The proposal stems from legislation passed by the Democrat-majority House of Delegates and Senate. It would suspend the decennial redistricting cycle mandated by Amendment 52, ratified by 67 percent of voters in 2020. That amendment established the Virginia Redistricting Commission, comprising legislators and citizens from both parties, to draw maps post-census.

Ballot text reads: ‘Should the Constitution of Virginia be amended to allow the General Assembly to temporarily adopt new congressional districts to restore fairness in the upcoming elections, while ensuring Virginia’s standard redistricting process resumes for all future redistricting after the 2030 census?’ A yes vote enables a one-time legislative redraw; no maintains current 2021 maps.

Advocates for yes, including groups like Virginians for Fair Elections, argue reciprocity against Republican-led mid-decade changes elsewhere, such as Missouri’s recent map. They reference a General Assembly-proposed configuration shifting from 6 Democratic to 5 Republican districts to potentially 10-1 Democratic, aiming for competitiveness.

No vote supporters, led by the Virginia GOP and affiliates, label it gerrymandering. They cite dilution of rural influence, packing conservatives into one district, and contradiction to the 2020 mandate. Efforts include extensive canvassing in counties like Loudoun, where GOP posts viral montages of locals urging opposition. Legal bids, including a Tazewell County TRO, failed at the Supreme Court.

Turnout trackers indicate robust rural early participation. Pro-yes campaigns emphasize ‘leveling the playing field’ post-Trump era shifts. Critics note past Democratic opposition to similar moves.

The measure’s passage requires simple majority. Observers predict tight race, with implications for national House dynamics. Voters must verify registration; 16-year-olds can pre-register.

This contest revives gerrymandering debates, pitting temporary legislative flexibility against independent commission permanence.

Source: Field reports and eyewitness accounts.

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