News

Within the next few months, the General Assembly is due to draw maps that will define Kentucky’s congressional and legislative districts for the next 10 years. This much is abundantly clear: The ...
Kentucky Democrats argue against gerrymandered House & Congressional maps that benefit Republicans to state Supreme Court.
FRANKFORT, Ky. — The showdown continues in Frankfort over the Kentucky legislature's redistricting plan to redraw the state's congressional and legislative map, affecting where your vote counts.
Kentucky judge rules that the GOP-drawn House and U.S. Congressional District maps are constitutional. He also opined that the maps were, indeed, gerrymandered for partisan advantage.
They argue lawmakers split up too many counties and are gerrymandering for political gain.Background: Kentucky Democrats file lawsuit challenging GOP-led redistricting plansAttorneys for the ...
The word “gerrymander” dates from 1812, when a political cartoonist likened a proposed Massachusetts legislative map supported by then-Governor Elbridge Gerry to a salamander. The word was a ...
Apart from the partisan gerrymandering claims, the lawsuit asserts the redistricting legislation for the Kentucky House map violates Section 33 of the state constitution by its "excessive ...
The state’s Supreme Court will consider whether gerrymandering in congressional district maps is unconstitutional. According to some analysis, only seven House districts had a 25 percent chance ...
Once again, Kentucky's courts find themselves at the center of the state's redistricting drama. And it's happening with less than 100 days until Kentucky's primary election.
A judge is upholding the redistricting plans passed by the Kentucky House and Senate.After the 2020 census, legislative bodies across the nation were required to draw new district maps.GOP ...
FRANKFORT, Ky. (CN) — It's now up to the Kentucky Supreme Court whether gerrymandered election maps vetoed by Governor Andy Beshear, but ultimately passed by a Republican supermajority in 2022, can be ...
The word “gerrymander” dates from 1812, when a political cartoonist likened a proposed Massachusetts legislative map supported by then-Governor Elbridge Gerry to a salamander. The word was a ...