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Notably, all four of Florida’s HBCUs are on or near legislative district boundaries in current maps. This leaves these communities vulnerable to division should map-drawers adjust district ...
With one redistricting win in the bag, could Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis go for more? Republicans hold a narrow edge in the U.S. House, and President Donald Trump is calling for GOP-led states to redraw ...
Florida's redistricting plan that Gov. Ron DeSantis supports is unconstitutional and must be redrawn, a state judge has ruled. Hotspots ranked Start the day smarter ☀️ Funniest cap messages ...
Florida's Supreme Court has upheld the state's current congressional redistricting map, rejecting a challenge over the ...
The Florida Supreme Court approved Gov. Ron DeSantis' redistricting map, arguing that it is not a dilution of Black political ...
Every 10 years, elected leaders in Florida are tasked with redrawing jurisdictional boundaries for local, state and federal elections to reflect the state’s population shifts. Unfortunately, … ...
A panel of federal judges is set to decide whether a Florida Senate district that stretches across Tampa Bay was racially ...
Unlike in 2012, when legislators did their once-a-decade redistricting and conducted hearings across the state for six months, there will be no roadshow this year.
Florida redistricting debuts this week in state House and Senate committees. In 2012, the procedure was marred by a “shadow process.” Click here for important updates to our privacy policy.
The 2012 redistricting process gave Florida two new congressional seats, and the GOP-controlled maps resulted in Republicans winning 17 of the state’s 27 districts, while Democrats saw a net ...
Florida redistricting plan sparks court battle. ... That district stretched from Jacksonville to Gadsden County, west of Tallahassee, as it linked communities with significant Black populations.
Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis' state redistricting map is unconstitutional and discriminates against Black voters, Florida Circuit Judge J. Lee Marsh ruled.