˜yĐÄvlog

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redistricting

[ ree-dis-trik-ting ]

noun

  1. the activity or process of dividing an area or region into new districts, such as for administrative or electoral purposes:

    The program is focused on issues of voting rights and elections, money in politics, and redistricting and representation.

    As school committee chair, she was tasked with a complicated and controversial redistricting of the town’s elementary schools.



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Example Sentences

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Wisconsin's supreme court is expected to play a key role in several upcoming cases, including laws around abortion and congressional redistricting ahead of Midterm elections in 2026 and the next presidential election, in 2028.

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So the first attack is always on the elections, to try to make sure they’re not free and fair, to try to keep people from voting, to try to rig the redistricting lines.

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It also comes ahead of consequential cases that will land before the court on abortion rights, congressional redistricting and voting rules that could affect the 2026 midterm elections.

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Musk himself has framed the election as a chance to stop redistricting which could give Democrats favour in Congress.

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Under Supreme Court precedent, the 14th Amendment’s equal protection clause prohibits race from being the “predominant factor” in state legislatures’ redistricting decisions.

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