What is Redistricting?
Redistricting is the process of redrawing districts for each government body that uses district elections, including the U.S. House of Representatives, state legislatures, county boards of supervisors, city councils, school boards, and special districts (e.g., water or sewer districts). Every 10 years, after the U.S. Census, districts are redrawn to ensure that each local, state and federal lawmaker represents the same number of people. At the same time, the California Citizens Redistricting Commission also draws new maps for statewide election districts to make sure each district has about the same number of people.
NEW! Check out our Deferred and Accelerated Voters, Redistricting and the CA State Senate explainer
Why it matters
Redistricting matters because the drawing of district lines determines who represents you in elected office. Areas that are included - and excluded - from these districts impacts which communities will have a voice in selecting their representative. It also affects which communities will have influence with their elected officials.
Redistricting will determine political representation for the next ten years. When elected officials draw district lines, they get to design their own territory and choose who votes for them. This can lead to discriminatory manipulation that weakens the voting strength of targeted communities, also allowing partisan manipulation that favors one political party over another.
The League believes that districts should be drawn by independent, special citizen-ran commissions that use fair criteria to help keep communities intact and to ensure that everyone is equally represented.
What is Gerrymandering?
Gerrymandering is the intentional manipulation of the redistricting process by the people with political power to keep that political power.
When legislators draw their own districts, they have an interest in drawing lines that will ensure that they can be re-elected.
The League opposes gerrymandering. We were leaders in the movement to create California’s independent Citizens Redistricting Commission in order to ensure that the process is transparent, the players are accountable, partisanship is minimized, and our election district maps are drawn fairly. Furthermore, we built in rules to guarantee that Commission members reflect California’s diversity.
How You’re Represented in U.S. and State Government
What you can do
Here are 6 easy steps to participate in redistricting:
- Advocate Locally: Attend the Citizens Redistricting Commission and give testimony
- Find out who is drawing the maps for your local districts (county board of supervisors, city council, school board, community college board, special district board) and what information is being used to make decisions about where lines should be drawn. These are some places that can help you get started:
- County Clerk or Registrar of Voters,
- County Superintendent of Schools,
- County Counsel,
- City Clerk,
- City Attorney, or
- Special District Managers
3. Share our one page guide to redistricting to help inform your community.
4. Sign up for email news and action alerts!
5. Join
6. Donate
What we are doing
The League works for fair maps at every level of government. California’s state-level independent, non-partisan redistricting system has garnered national recognition. Unfortunately, local gerrymandering persists.
Local Redistricting: Redistricting is most commonly associated with redrawing state legislative or congressional districts. But lines have to be redrawn at all levels of government where lawmakers are elected by-district, including local offices like city council or school board. Because we have seen incumbents in California use the local line-drawing process to disenfranchise growing racial and language minority communities, and to reduce the voting power of political minorities, we advocate for legislation to ensure that fair maps are drawn for local elections.
- In 2021, the LWVC is closely following the state redistricting process, including commenting frequently on issues such as commission process and public access to meetings. We work closely with a wide variety of partner groups – good government, voting rights, and civic engagement groups from throughout the state to ensure that the commission hears from a wide variety of people and groups from throughout the state.
Local Redistricting
Check out the new LWVC Local Redistricting Survey Report.
Local Leagues throughout the state are working hard to engage the public in local redistricting – cities, counties, school districts, and special districts. In some areas, they are part of a coalition of groups, but in others, the League is the primary or only organization working on redistricting. Find your local League here.
Background
- In 2016, we co-sponsored legislation (SB 1108) to authorize all California counties and general law cities to establish independent citizen commissions to redraw district lines.
- In 2018, we supported SB 1018, which clarified the original intent of SB 1108 on two matters:
- -Commissions may be used for an initial districting and not simply a redistricting.
- -Hybrid commissions, where both the local government and commission share authority in adopting final maps, must meet the same standards of independence and transparency required of independent commissions.
- In 2019 and 2020, we cosponsored the Fair Maps Act, AB 849, and AB 1276. They bring fair redistricting criteria to California’s cities and counties. AB 849 prohibits partisan gerrymandering, standardizes criteria, and prioritizes intact neighborhoods and diverse communities. AB 1276 ensured that the new requirements would fit within the California election schedule. These new laws represents an extension of the LWVUS’ People Powered Fair Maps Campaign a coordinated effort to reform redistricting across the country.
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For current bill info, refer to our Bill Status Report. Find out more about our legislative priorities.
- CA Citizens Redistricting Commission, Redistricting Basics Presentation - Spanish