News

HARRISBURG, Pa. (AP) — The Pennsylvania Legislative Reapportionment Commission voted Thursday in favor of new preliminary district maps over sharp objections from the House's Republican leader ...
The Pennsylvania Constitution explicitly lists four requirements for state House and Senate districts: compactness, contiguity, minimal splits, and equal population.
Are Pa.’s state House and Senate maps gerrymandered? Depends on how you measure them While a court declared Pennsylvania's previous congressional map was drawn to benefit Republicans, the current ...
The Pennsylvania Constitution explicitly lists four requirements for state House and Senate districts: compactness, contiguity, minimal splits and equal population.
The Pennsylvania Senate map eliminates Senate District 34, which covers Centre County, and splits the district into two odd-numbered districts, 25 and 35. The map was approved by the Legislative ...
HARRISBURG, Pa. - A new Pennsylvania congressional district map is a signature away from becoming a reality. The Senate approved the map Monday. It was originally drafted by former Lehigh County ...
What the redrawn Pennsylvania legislative maps mean for Berks Under the maps, the county will see big changes to its state House and Senate districts.
HARRISBURG, Pa. (AP) — The five-member commission redrawing the boundaries of Pennsylvania’s state legislative districts voted to approve new maps for the next decade, with a focus on the ...
Candidates for the Pennsylvania Senate and House of Representatives, as well as state political party committees, can begin circulating and filing nomination petitions Friday to get on the May 17 ...
Two proposed congressional district maps — one formally released by House Republicans, one leaked from the Senate — are now public in Pennsylvania. Both would likely be better for Republican ...
The proposal for the new Pa. Senate map would likely keep the partisan composition of the chamber largely unchanged while improving fairness metrics.
The Pennsylvania Constitution explicitly lists four requirements for state House and Senate districts: compactness, contiguity, minimal splits, and equal population.