Last week the state Supreme Court negated the 2020 votes of 2.8 million Virginians who supported redistricting reform.

by Scott Dreyer
On Friday, February 13, the Supreme Court of Virginia (SCOVA) overruled a lower judge and stated that an election about the redistricting of Virginiaโs 11 Congressional seats can proceed.
Democrats, angered by President Trumpโs urging GOP-led states to gerrymander their Congressional lines ahead of this yearโs midterm elections, claim they are changing Virginiaโs lines now to make elections โfair.โ They see adding four new Democrat Congressmen from Virginia as a way to offset possible new Republican Congressmen from other states such as Texas, North Carolina, and Missouri.
Republicans, on the other hand, claim that what other states are doing should not dictate what happens here, and also point to a 2020 election where over 65% of Virginia voters wanted to ban political gerrymandering by the General Assembly.
Moreover, to make it harder to amend the Virginia Constitution, state law requires a full election cycle to pass between the General Assembly voting to put an amendment before the voters and the actual vote for that proposed amendment. And for full disclosure, the text of such proposed amendments must be made public at least 90 days before voting begins.
Detractors of the new maps point out that state Democrats, in their fast push to get the issue before voters, failed to meet the above two criteria, and thus the proposal is illegal.
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