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Redistricting maps passing on party lines

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Republicans hailed passage of legislative and congressional redistricting maps Friday in the Florida House as historic because they are the first to be drawn under new anti-gerrymandering standards, but Democrats and other critics said it's too soon to celebrate.

They contend the plans violate those requirements in part by favoring incumbents and the Legislature's GOP majority. It's an issue that's expected to be decided in the courts.

Both measures passed on identical 80-37 party-line votes, with Republicans in favor and Democrats against. They now return to the Senate, which earlier passed its own versions, for final action possibly next week.

The two Fair Districts amendments voters adopted in 2010 prohibit lawmakers from intentionally drawing districts to favor or disadvantage incumbents or political parties. They also protect minority voting rights.

The maps comply with those requirements as well as the federal Voting Rights Act, said Rep. Peter Nehr, a Palm Harbor Republican who co-chaired a redistricting subcommittee.

"Florida will become a national model of how redistricting should be accomplished," Nehr said.

Three groups in the Fair Districts coalition that put the amendments on the ballot through a petition drive critiqued the maps in a letter last week to House Redistricting Chairman Will Weatherford, R-Wesley Chapel.

Leaders of the Florida League of Women Voters, the National Council of La Raza and Common Cause Florida noted the state is almost equally divided between the two major political parties, but based on political performance data the maps would let Republicans maintain their current dominance.

The GOP now has overwhelming majorities of 81-39 in the House, 28-12 in the Senate and 19-6 in the congressional delegation. The new maps would give the GOP at least a 2-to-1 advantage in all three bodies, the letter said.

Nearly a third of state House members would be shifted to a new district or paired with another incumbent, but the Senate map protects all incumbents except for those who cannot seek re-election because of term limits.

Opponents also argued the plans "pack" large numbers of Democratic-voting minorities into a relatively small number of districts, leaving enough Republicans in surrounding districts to put them in the GOP column.

Republicans insisted they have to maintain high levels of minority voters in certain districts to comply with the amendments and federal Voting Rights Act.

The congressional map would go to Gov. Rick Scott, and the legislative plan to the Florida Supreme Court. Both also must get preclearance from the U.S. Justice Department.

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