League of Women Voters of Ohio v. Ohio Redistricting Comm. (Slip Opinion) , 2022 Ohio 789 ( 2022 )


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  • [Until this opinion appears in the Ohio Official Reports advance sheets, it may be cited as
    League of Women Voters of Ohio v. Ohio Redistricting Comm., Slip Opinion No. 2022-Ohio-
    789.]
    NOTICE
    This slip opinion is subject to formal revision before it is published in an
    advance sheet of the Ohio Official Reports. Readers are requested to
    promptly notify the Reporter of Decisions, Supreme Court of Ohio, 65
    South Front Street, Columbus, Ohio 43215, of any typographical or other
    formal errors in the opinion, in order that corrections may be made before
    the opinion is published.
    SLIP OPINION NO. 
    2022-OHIO-789
    LEAGUE OF WOMEN VOTERS OF OHIO ET AL. v. OHIO REDISTRICTING
    COMMISSION ET AL.
    BENNETT ET AL. v. OHIO REDISTRICTING COMMISSION ET AL.
    OHIO ORGANIZING COLLABORATIVE ET AL. v. OHIO REDISTRICTING
    COMMISSION ET AL.
    [Until this opinion appears in the Ohio Official Reports advance sheets, it
    may be cited as League of Women Voters of Ohio v. Ohio Redistricting Comm.,
    Slip Opinion No. 
    2022-Ohio-789
    .]
    Redistricting—Original actions under Ohio Constitution, Article XI—The Ohio
    Redistricting Commission’s second revised plan violates Article XI,
    Sections 6(A) and 6(B) of the Ohio Constitution—Second revised plan is
    invalid—The Ohio Redistricting Commission shall be reconstituted,
    convene, and adopt an entirely new plan in conformity with the Ohio
    Constitution.
    (Nos. 2021-1193, 2021-1198, and 2021-1210—Submitted March 9, 2022—
    Decided March 16, 2022.)
    ORIGINAL ACTIONS filed pursuant to Ohio Constitution, Article XI, Section 9.
    __________________
    SUPREME COURT OF OHIO
    Per Curiam.
    I. INTRODUCTION
    {¶ 1} This is now the third time we are called upon to consider the validity of
    a General Assembly–district plan adopted by respondent Ohio Redistricting
    Commission. In League of Women Voters of Ohio v. Ohio Redistricting Comm., ___
    Ohio St.3d ___, 
    2022-Ohio-65
    , ___ N.E.3d ___, ¶ 2 (“League I”), we held that the
    commission’s original plan was invalid because the commission had not attempted
    to meet the standards set forth in Article XI, Sections 6(A) and 6(B) of the Ohio
    Constitution. The commission then adopted a revised plan, but in League of Women
    Voters of Ohio v. Ohio Redistricting Comm., ___Ohio St.3d ___, 
    2022-Ohio-342
    ,
    ___ N.E.3d ___, ¶ 67-68 (“League II”), we invalidated that plan because the
    commission again had not satisfied Sections 6(A) and 6(B). We now consider
    petitioners’1 objections to the commission’s second revised plan, which the
    commission adopted on February 24, 2022.
    {¶ 2} We hold that petitioners have shown beyond a reasonable doubt that
    the second revised plan violates Article XI, Sections 6(A) and 6(B). We do not
    reach the additional argument raised by some of the petitioners that the commission
    violated Article XI, Section 1(C).             We again order the commission to be
    reconstituted and to adopt a new plan in conformity with the Ohio Constitution.
    II. BACKGROUND
    A. The commission failed to adopt a new plan by February 17
    {¶ 3} In League II, we ordered the commission to adopt a new district plan
    no later than February 17, 2022. League II at ¶ 68. On February 9—two days after
    the release of League II—respondent Senator Vernon Sykes, a Democratic member
    and cochair of the commission, sent respondent Speaker of the House Robert Cupp,
    a Republican member and the other cochair, a letter requesting that the commission
    1. Petitioners in case No. 2021-1193 are the League of Women Voters of Ohio, the A. Philip
    Randolph Institute of Ohio, and six individual voters: Tom Harry, Tracy Beavers, Valerie Lee, Iris
    Meltzer, Sherry Rose, and Bonnie Bishop. Petitioners in case No. 2021-1198 are ten individual
    voters: Bria Bennett, Regina C. Adams, Kathleen M. Brinkman, Martha Clark, Susanne L. Dyke,
    Carrie Kubicki, Meryl Neiman, Holly Oyster, Constance Rubin, and Everett Totty. Petitioners in
    case No. 2021-1210 are the Ohio Organizing Collaborative, the Ohio chapter of the Council on
    American-Islamic Relations, the Ohio Environmental Council, and six individual voters: Pierrette
    Talley, Samuel Gresham Jr., Ahmad Aboukar, Mikayla Lee, Prentiss Haney, and Crystal Bryant.
    2
    January Term, 2022
    reconvene as soon as possible. Senator Sykes noted that this court had “directed the
    Commission to attempt to draw district plans” and that “[i]n order to do so, the
    Commission, rather than individual Commissioners, must meet and give direction to
    our staff and consultants.” (Emphasis sic.) Senator Sykes also pointed out that in
    January 2022, he and the only other Democratic member of the commission,
    respondent House Minority Leader Allison Russo, had proposed their own General
    Assembly–district plan (the “Sykes-Russo plan”), which he believed could be used
    as a starting point for the commission’s deliberations.2 Senator Sykes claims that in
    response to his letter, House Speaker Cupp indicated that he was having difficulty
    scheduling a commission meeting due to the limited availability of the Republican
    commission members.
    {¶ 4} On February 11, Senator Sykes and House Minority Leader Russo
    sent a letter to all commission members urging them to meet as soon as possible to
    comply with the February 17 deadline. They also noted that they were awaiting
    feedback on the Sykes-Russo plan, and they asked other commission members to
    share any map proposals so that the commission could “work cooperatively.”
    {¶ 5} On February 15—eight days after the release of League II—the
    commission announced that it would hold a meeting on February 17. Also on
    February 15, counsel for the petitioners in League of Women Voters of Ohio v. Ohio
    Redistricting Comm. and in Bennett v. Ohio Redistricting Comm. submitted to the
    commission an updated version of a proposed General Assembly–district plan
    created by Dr. Jonathan Rodden (the “Rodden III plan”).3
    2. Some parties refer to the Sykes-Russo plan as the “Glassburn Plan.” Chris Glassburn is a
    consultant retained by the Democratic legislative caucuses for map-drawing purposes.
    3. As noted in League I, Dr. Rodden is a professor of political science at Stanford University and an
    expert retained by the Bennett petitioners. In October 2021, Dr. Rodden submitted an expert report in
    which he claimed that he had drafted a district plan that complied with the line-drawing requirements
    of Article XI, Section 3 of the Ohio Constitution. Respondents did not contest those assertions. In
    League I, we suggested that Dr. Rodden’s plan “complied with Article XI.” 
    Id.,
     ___ Ohio St.3d ___,
    
    2022-Ohio-65
    , ___ N.E.3d ___, at ¶ 126. But Dr. Rodden later discovered that his plan included splits
    that were impermissible under Section 3. During the first redrawing process, Dr. Rodden submitted a
    revised version of his plan, referred to as the “Rodden II” plan, in which he had purportedly corrected
    the violations. League II, ___Ohio St.3d ___, 
    2022-Ohio-342
    , ___ N.E.3d ___, at ¶ 14, fn. 5, and ¶
    32, fn. 8. The commission argued that the Rodden II plan also violated Section 3. The Bennett
    petitioners did not agree. Nevertheless, during the second map-redrawing process, Dr. Rodden
    3
    SUPREME COURT OF OHIO
    {¶ 6} At the start of the commission’s February 17 meeting, House Minority
    Leader Russo said that except for one email from respondent Auditor of State Keith
    Faber’s office, she and Senator Sykes had not received feedback about the Sykes-
    Russo plan. When House Minority Leader Russo moved the commission to adopt
    the Sykes-Russo plan, respondent President of the Senate Matthew Huffman—with
    the assistance of prepared posters and visual aids—asked her a series of questions
    indicating that he believed that the plan was unconstitutional. He suggested that
    the Sykes-Russo plan violated Article XI, Section 6(A)—which requires that no
    plan be drawn primarily to favor a political party—because a number of Republican
    incumbents would be unable to seek reelection under it, since they were either
    drawn into the same district as other Republicans or drawn into Democratic-leaning
    districts. He also said that several districts were not compact and that the plan
    would be struck down in federal court as a racial gerrymander.4
    {¶ 7} At one point during Senate President Huffman’s comments, Senator
    Sykes stated again that neither he nor House Minority Leader Russo had received
    substantive feedback about their proposed Sykes-Russo plan before the meeting.
    Senator Sykes reminded the other members that this court had directed the
    commission—not the majority or minority parties—to draw a map and that the
    commission members would need to work together to comply with the court’s
    order. Senate President Huffman responded by saying that in September 2021,
    submitted a third proposed plan—the “Rodden III” plan. The Bennett and League petitioners indicated
    that Dr. Rodden had made minor, technical adjustments to the plan to avoid any disputes about the
    plan’s compliance with Section 3.
    4. Senate President Huffman also suggested that this court had introduced a “new concept [of]
    partisan symmetry” in League II. In fact, we relied on a partisan-symmetry analysis in both League
    I and League II. See League I at ¶ 122; League II at ¶ 41-42. Senate President Huffman—at
    commission meetings and in his response to petitioners’ objections—appears to conflate “partisan
    symmetry” with our analysis in League II in which we explained why the first revised plan’s
    disproportionate number of toss-up districts leaning Democratic was evidence of an intent to favor
    the Republican Party. See League II at ¶ 40. For the sake of clarity, “partisan symmetry” is a metric
    used by political scientists to measure partisanship in redistricting. It “measures whether each party
    would receive the same share of legislative seats assuming that each had identical percentage vote
    shares.” League I at ¶ 122. In League II, we relied on Dr. Michael Latner’s partisan-symmetry
    analysis as evidence of a Section 6(A) violation. League II at ¶ 41-42. We also relied on a different
    factor as evidence of a Section 6(A) violation—the first revised plan’s inclusion of a
    disproportionate number of Democratic-leaning toss-up districts. Id. at ¶ 40. The two concepts are
    different.
    4
    January Term, 2022
    during the first map-drawing process, he spent three days trying to reach a
    resolution with Senator Sykes and other commission members but “that didn’t
    happen” and that he now was focused only on the map that was currently before
    the commission.
    {¶ 8} The commission voted five to two against adopting the Sykes-Russo
    plan. No other commission member proposed a General Assembly–district plan
    for consideration at the February 17 meeting. Instead, after a recess, several
    commission members made statements. Senate President Huffman suggested that
    it was impossible to draw an entirely new plan within ten days as ordered by this
    court and that he did not believe the commission could “ascertain” a General
    Assembly–district plan that complies with the Ohio Constitution, as interpreted by
    this court, and with federal law. Respondent Secretary of State Frank LaRose said
    that the map drawers—Ray DiRossi and Blake Springhetti, who Secretary LaRose
    noted, “work for the speaker and for the president”—told him that the commission
    cannot “constitutionally do what the court majority has asked [the commission] to
    do.” Respondent Governor Mike DeWine said that the commission did not have
    the “luxury of saying we’re just quitting” and that it had an obligation to attempt to
    comply with the court’s order “and to send a map to the court.” House Speaker
    Cupp declared that the commission was “in an impasse.”
    {¶ 9} The commission adjourned its February 17 meeting without adopting
    a General Assembly–district plan. The commission did not specify the steps it had
    taken to attempt to comply with this court’s order. The next day, the commission
    filed in this court a “Notice of Impasse.”
    B. Respondents are ordered to show cause
    {¶ 10} On February 18, petitioners filed motions to require respondents
    either to explain their reasons for failing to adopt a new General Assembly–district
    plan or to show cause why they should not be held in contempt. Later that day, this
    court ordered respondents to show cause by February 23 why they should not be
    held in contempt for failing to comply with our order in League II. 
    166 Ohio St.3d 1402
    , 
    2022-Ohio-498
    , ___ N.E.3d ___; 
    166 Ohio St.3d 1403
    , 
    2022-Ohio-498
    , ___
    N.E.3d ___.
    5
    SUPREME COURT OF OHIO
    {¶ 11} On February 22, the commission met to discuss congressional
    redistricting. At that meeting, Governor DeWine reiterated his position that the
    commission had an obligation to follow this court’s orders regarding General
    Assembly redistricting. Auditor Faber suggested that the commission schedule a
    meeting within the next two days to discuss a General Assembly–district plan that
    “may be being discussed and/or prepared” or to discuss, in the alternative, the
    Rodden III plan. House Speaker Cupp agreed to schedule a meeting for the next
    day to “report on any progress that may be made on a General Assembly district
    map.” House Minority Leader Russo said that she and Senator Sykes had not been
    included in any discussions regarding a potential General Assembly–district plan,
    and she requested that other commission members’ staff include the minority
    members in those discussions.
    {¶ 12} On February 23, respondents filed five separate responses to the
    show-cause order. Senate President Huffman and House Speaker Cupp argued that
    a contempt hearing was unnecessary because they anticipated that the commission
    would vote on a new plan “this week.” At the commission’s meeting later that day,
    House Speaker Cupp reported that “progress [was] being made” on a proposed
    General Assembly–district plan and that the map would be made available soon.
    House Minority Leader Russo again requested that if work was being done on a
    map “that the majority caucuses please make their staff available” to the minority
    members and their staff so that they could “meet to discuss what these maps may
    look like.”
    C. The commission adopts a second revised plan on February 24
    {¶ 13} On February 24, respondents were ordered to appear in this court for
    a March 1 hearing on the show-cause order. 
    166 Ohio St.3d 1407
    , 
    2022-Ohio-518
    ,
    ___ N.E.3d ___. According to House Minority Leader Russo, also on February 24,
    House Speaker Cupp informed her and Senator Sykes that DiRossi and Springhetti
    could meet with them to show them the new proposed General Assembly–district
    plan. House Minority Leader Russo states that during the meeting with DiRossi
    and Springhetti, she and Senator Sykes asked whether they would have an
    6
    January Term, 2022
    opportunity to provide feedback on the proposed plan, and DiRossi responded that
    such decisions were “above his pay grade.”
    {¶ 14} About an hour later, the commission reconvened and discussed the
    proposed plan. Presumably referring to himself, House Speaker Cupp, and their
    map drawers, Senate President Huffman said, “[W]e’ve been working a lot of these
    past several days to try to resolve the General Assembly maps,” and it was his
    understanding that “all of the Republican commissioners” had had an opportunity
    to review the proposed plan. Senator Sykes asked whether the other Republican
    commission members had participated in drafting the plan. Senate President
    Huffman responded: “I don’t have a daily log or diary of what each of the other six
    members of the commission did.             Everyone’s had a chance to see it, make
    comments, suggestions, whatever it may be.”
    {¶ 15} After a recess, Senate President Huffman and House Speaker Cupp
    spoke in favor of the newly proposed plan. They indicated that the plan complied
    with this court’s orders and had 54 Republican-leaning and 45 Democratic-leaning
    seats in the House and 18 Republican-leaning and 15 Democratic-leaning seats in
    the Senate. House Speaker Cupp further said that the plan had been “developed
    anew” and that about 73 percent of the districts were different from those in the
    commission’s first revised plan. And he noted that in the House, the first revised
    district plan had had 12 “asymmetrical districts, as defined by the court” but that
    the newly proposed plan had “only five asymmetrical districts.”5
    {¶ 16} Senator Sykes expressed disappointment that other commission
    members were expecting him to vote on a proposed plan that he had received only
    hours earlier and without having had any opportunity to give input on the plan. He
    asked how the commission had complied with this court’s directive that the
    commission itself—rather than individual commission members—engage in map
    drawing. Senate President Huffman replied, “[W]e’re here now and we can talk
    about it.” Senator Sykes and House Minority Leader Russo expressed concerns
    about the increased number of districts leaning Democratic by a margin of only 50
    5. This court has not used the term “asymmetrical district.” It appears that House Speaker Cupp
    was referring to districts leaning Democratic within the range of 50 to 51 percent.
    7
    SUPREME COURT OF OHIO
    to 52 percent with no Republican-leaning districts within that range, which they
    believed violated League II. House Speaker Cupp said that he interpreted this
    court’s decision differently.    The commission did not engage in any other
    discussion and voted four to three to adopt the newly proposed plan as the final
    General Assembly–district plan (the “second revised plan”).
    {¶ 17} Because both Democratic members of the commission voted against
    the plan, it did not have the bipartisan support required by Article XI, Section 8(B)
    to remain in effect for ten years. Therefore, the plan would remain in effect for no
    more than four years. Ohio Constitution, Article XI, Section 8(C)(1)(a).
    {¶ 18} The “Article XI, Section 8(C)(2) Statement” adopted by the
    commission members who voted for the second revised plan noted that the
    commission had drawn an entirely new plan that met strict proportionality. The
    statement further noted that staff for all commission members had had access to the
    map drawers and that all commission members had been included in the map-
    drawing process.    And the statement indicated that the second revised plan
    “addressed the asymmetry problem” identified in League II by having only five
    House districts and two Senate districts with a “partisan lean between 50 and
    50.99%,” which was the “same number of asymmetric House and Senate districts”
    found in the Sykes-Russo plan.
    {¶ 19} Senator Sykes and House Minority Leader Russo submitted a
    separate statement indicating that the second revised plan failed to satisfy the Ohio
    Constitution and League II—especially this court’s admonitions relating to the
    disproportionate allocation of toss-up districts. They also noted that despite this
    court’s directions for the commission members to put aside partisan interests and
    work together to draw a constitutional General Assembly–district plan, the second
    revised plan had been “drawn entirely by Republican legislators on the
    Commission” without Senator Sykes’s and House Minority Leader Russo’s
    involvement and without allowing them an opportunity to give feedback. Auditor
    Faber, who voted against adopting the second revised plan, clarified that he did not
    concur with Senator Sykes and House Minority Leader Russo’s statement.
    8
    January Term, 2022
    {¶ 20} On February 25, the commission notified the court that it had
    adopted a General Assembly–district plan. That same day, the March 1 contempt
    hearing was continued and petitioners were ordered to file objections, if any, to the
    second revised plan by February 28. 
    166 Ohio St.3d 1410
    , 
    2022-Ohio-558
    , __
    N.E.3d __; 
    166 Ohio St.3d 1411
    , 2022-Ohio 558, ___ N.E.3d ___.
    D. Petitioners file objections
    {¶ 21} Petitioners in all three cases filed objections to the adoption of the
    second revised plan, arguing that it violates Article XI, Sections 6(A) and 6(B) of
    the Ohio Constitution. They argue that the plan is unconstitutional because it
    disparately allocates all toss-up districts to the Democratic Party. The Bennett
    petitioners also argue that the plan violates Article XI, Section 1(C). With their
    objections, petitioners collectively submitted three new expert reports. Some
    petitioners ask this court to grant additional remedies, such as declaring that the
    Rodden III plan is constitutional or ordering the adoption of the Rodden III plan as
    the final General Assembly–district plan.
    {¶ 22} Respondents submitted five separate responses to the objections.
    The commission members who voted to adopt the second revised plan argue that it
    complies with both Article XI and this court’s orders in League I and League II and
    that we lack authority to grant the additional remedies petitioners seek. Senate
    President Huffman and House Speaker Cupp submitted an affidavit from
    Springhetti and a new expert report that evaluated the partisan properties of the
    second revised plan, the Rodden III plan, and the Sykes-Russo plan. Senator Sykes
    and House Minority Leader Russo filed a response asking this court to invalidate
    the second revised plan and, among other things, declare the Sykes-Russo plan
    constitutional. They also submitted affidavits detailing what they describe as the
    “secretive” and one-sided process leading to the commission’s adoption of the
    second revised plan.
    III. ANALYSIS
    A. The burden and standard of proof
    {¶ 23} As we noted in our prior decisions in these cases, a district plan
    adopted by the commission is presumptively constitutional. E.g., League I, ___
    9
    SUPREME COURT OF OHIO
    Ohio St.3d ___, 
    2022-Ohio-65
    , ___ N.E.3d ___, at ¶ 76. Petitioners therefore have
    the burden of proving that the second revised plan violates the Constitution. See
    id. at ¶ 76-77. They must prove factual issues beyond a reasonable doubt. Id. We
    do not defer to the commission’s legal interpretations. Id. at ¶ 80.
    B. Article XI, Section 6(A)
    {¶ 24} Article XI, Section 6(A) of the Ohio Constitution provides that the
    commission must attempt to meet the standard that “[n]o general assembly district
    plan shall be drawn primarily to favor or disfavor a political party.” Section 6(A)
    “requires this court to discern the map drawers’ intent.” League I at ¶ 116.
    Substantial and compelling evidence shows beyond a reasonable doubt that the
    main goal of the individuals who drafted the second revised plan was to favor the
    Republican Party and disfavor the Democratic Party.
    {¶ 25} To start, evidence again shows that the commission did not follow
    the process that Article XI requires. See League I at ¶ 119-120; League II, ___ Ohio
    St.3d ___, 
    2022-Ohio-342
    , ___ N.E.3d ___, at ¶ 34. Article XI, Section 1(C) of the
    Ohio Constitution provides: “The commission shall draft the proposed plan in the
    manner prescribed in this article.” (Emphasis added.) The commission has adopted
    three plans so far, but it still has not drafted one. Staff members of Senate President
    Huffman and House Speaker Cupp have drafted all three of the plans adopted by
    the commission.
    {¶ 26} In League I, we noted that Senate President Huffman and House
    Speaker Cupp had controlled the map-drawing process to the exclusion of the
    minority-party and other commission members. League I, ___ Ohio St.3d ___,
    
    2022-Ohio-65
    , ___ N.E.3d ___, at ¶ 118-120. And in League II, we observed that
    although the first revised plan had been adopted through more collaboration, the
    map-drawing process had still been controlled by Republican map drawers who
    answered only to Senate President Huffman and House Speaker Cupp. League II
    at ¶ 34. Senate President Huffman and House Speaker Cupp’s nearly exclusive
    control over the first two rounds of map drawing was strong evidence of partisan
    intent. See League I at ¶ 120, quoting Davis v. Bandemer, 
    478 U.S. 109
    , 129, 
    106 S.Ct. 2797
    , 
    92 L.Ed.2d 85
     (1986) (plurality opinion), abrogated on other grounds
    10
    January Term, 2022
    by Rucho v. Common Cause, ___ U.S. ___, 
    139 S.Ct. 2484
    , 
    204 L.Ed.2d 931
     (2019)
    (“When a single party exclusively controls the redistricting process, ‘it should not
    be difficult to prove that the likely political consequences of the reapportionment
    were intended’ ”).
    {¶ 27} The evidence here is just as strong, if not stronger. The Democratic
    members of the commission had no opportunity to provide input in creating the
    second revised plan, and they had no meaningful opportunity to review and discuss
    it or to propose amendments once it was presented at the commission hearing on
    February 22, 2022.
    {¶ 28} According to Senator Sykes, when the commission failed to adopt a
    plan by the February 17 deadline and House Speaker Cupp declared an impasse,
    the Republican commission members gave no indication that they were going to
    continue trying to develop a new district plan. In fact, Senate President Huffman
    said during the February 17 meeting of the commission that he did not think that it
    was possible to draw a compliant plan. And Secretary LaRose said that DiRossi
    and Springhetti had told him that the commission cannot “constitutionally do what
    the court majority has asked [the commission] to do.” Senate President Huffman
    and House Speaker Cupp did not reveal that they were working on a new district
    plan until the commission meeting on February 22, when congressional
    redistricting was on the agenda and after this court had issued the show-cause order
    in these cases. At that point, Senate President Huffman told members of the media
    that he and House Speaker Cupp had been working on a new plan since February
    11. Neither Senator Sykes nor House Minority Leader Russo had been included in
    that process. Moreover, it is clear that the commission again adopted a plan drawn
    by employees of the Republican caucuses, who, as even Secretary LaRose
    acknowledged (at the February 17, 2022 commission meeting), “work for the
    speaker and for the president.” See League I at ¶ 119-120; League II, ___ Ohio
    St.3d ___, 
    2022-Ohio-342
    , ___ N.E.3d ___, at ¶ 34.
    {¶ 29} Similarly, not until 12:30 p.m. on February 24—the day the
    commission voted on and passed the second revised plan—were the minority-party
    commission members given a copy of the proposed plan for review. According to
    11
    SUPREME COURT OF OHIO
    House Minority Leader Russo, she “had no assurance that these exact maps would
    be the ones introduced at the Commission meeting.” The commission convened to
    vote on the second revised plan at 6:00 p.m. that day, less than two hours after the
    final version had been posted on the commission’s website. Until the final version
    was posted, House Minority Leader Russo did not know whether the plan to be
    voted on was the same one that she and Senator Sykes had been given earlier that
    afternoon.
    {¶ 30} The process leading to the adoption of the second revised plan was
    at least as one-sided as the process that we found problematic in League I and even
    more one-sided than the process addressed in League II. Senate President Huffman
    and House Speaker Cupp did not allow the minority-party commission members to
    provide input on the second revised plan, much less let them participate in its
    creation. Nor does the record indicate that the other members of the commission—
    the statewide officeholders—engaged in any map drawing. According to House
    Minority Leader Russo, Secretary LaRose told her that he did not have staff with
    the technical expertise to draw maps. As before, the process was controlled entirely
    by Senate President Huffman and House Speaker Cupp. Just as in League I and
    League II, the one-sided process is evidence of an intent to draw a plan that favors
    the Republican Party at the expense of the Democratic Party. The commission
    should retain an independent map drawer—who answers to all commission
    members, not only to the Republican legislative leaders—to draft a plan through a
    transparent process.
    {¶ 31} In all three of our opinions in these cases, we have identified a flawed
    process in which the General Assembly–district plan adopted by the commission
    has been the product of just one political party. The first dissenting opinion posits
    that our decision operates to “micromanage the commission,” dissenting opinion of
    Kennedy and DeWine, JJ., ¶ 67, and to compel its seven members to “gather around
    a computer with the redistricting software and jointly draft a plan,” id. at ¶ 68. But
    nothing in League I, ___ Ohio St.3d ___, 
    2022-Ohio-65
    , ___ N.E.3d ___, League II,
    ___ Ohio St.3d ___, 
    2022-Ohio-342
    , ___ N.E.3d ___, or our opinion today suggests
    that we expect seven commission members to have “seven hands on the computer
    12
    January Term, 2022
    mouse,” dissenting opinion of Kennedy and DeWine, JJ., at ¶ 66. Instead, we
    expect the commission to abide by its Article XI duty to draft a plan, not to simply
    adopt one drafted by legislative staff at the direction of members of one political
    party. While the dissenters may interpret the words of the Constitution that instruct
    the commission to draw a plan as meaning that members of one political party alone
    may draw the plan, we do not.6
    {¶ 32} The evidence shows that the map-drawing process for all three
    districting plans we have reviewed has been controlled by the Republican Party.
    The evidence shows that the individuals who controlled the map-drawing process
    exercised that control with the overriding intent to maintain as much of an
    advantage as possible for members of their political party. The commission has
    again adopted a plan in which a disproportionate number of toss-up districts are
    labeled Democratic-leaning. The second revised plan includes 19 Democratic-
    leaning House districts in which the Democratic vote share is between 50 and 52
    percent. And it includes at least seven Senate districts in which the Democratic
    vote share is in that range. There are no Republican-leaning House or Senate
    districts that have a Republican vote share that is less than 52.7 percent. Indeed,
    only two Republican-leaning House districts have a Republican vote share of less
    than 55 percent, and no Republican-leaning Senate districts have a Republican vote
    share of less than 54 percent.7 The result is that the 54 percent seat share for
    Republicans is a floor while the 46 percent share for Democrats is a ceiling—an
    6. The first dissent’s suggestion that we expect the commission members to have “seven hands on
    the computer mouse,” dissenting opinion of Kennedy and DeWine, JJ., at ¶ 66, is itself a
    demonstrable fallacy. The dissenters already know that innumerable constitutionally compliant
    maps may be drawn by simple adjustments to an algorithm, something that political operatives,
    academics, and everyday citizens have shown may be easily generated. Because the party
    controlling the map-drawing process has intractably chosen outlier maps solely to maximize that
    party’s partisan advantage, any “chaos” is of respondents’ own creation. Article XI, Section 9
    assigns to this court the sole responsibility for interpreting and enforcing the rules and standards that
    the people approved through their adoption of Article XI, notwithstanding the dissenters’ persistent
    attempts to emasculate its core reforms. Resolving this self-created chaos thus depends not on the
    number of hands on the computer mouse but, rather, on the political will to honor the people’s call
    to end partisan gerrymandering.
    7. The weakest Republican-leaning House district has a vote share of 52.7 percent; the weakest
    Republican-leaning Senate district has a 54.3 percent vote share.
    13
    SUPREME COURT OF OHIO
    observation similar to the one we found persuasive in League II. See League II at
    ¶ 40.
    {¶ 33} To be clear, the presence of toss-up districts in the plan is not alone
    the basis of our determination. The core of our determination is the plain language
    of Article XI, Section 6(A) of the Ohio Constitution: “No general assembly district
    plan shall be drawn primarily to favor or disfavor a political party.” And the
    evidence here shows that the second revised plan, like the first two plans, was
    drawn primarily to favor the Republican Party and to disfavor the Democratic Party.
    The remarkably one-sided distribution of toss-up districts is evidence of an
    intentionally biased map, and it leads to partisan asymmetry. Under the second
    revised plan, if the statewide vote split 50/50 for Democrats and Republicans,
    Democrats would be expected to win approximately 44 percent of the House seats.
    In contrast, Republicans would be expected to win 53 percent of the House seats.
    Based on this calculation, Dr. Michael Latner, an expert retained by some of the
    petitioners, opined that “under likely election scenarios,” the second revised plan
    performs worse than the first revised plan because it has a greater number of
    Democratic-leaning toss-up districts while containing no Republican-leaning toss-
    up districts. Dr. Rodden also addressed the partisan asymmetry of the second
    revised plan, noting that a 5 percent uniform swing in favor of the Republican Party
    across all districts would result in up to 23 additional Republican seats, while the
    same swing in favor of the Democratic Party would result in a gain of, at most, two
    seats. This asymmetry is further discussed below in relation to Article XI, Section
    6(B).
    {¶ 34} In League II, we held that “the quality of partisan favoritism” in the
    first revised plan was “monolithically disparate” because “every toss-up district
    [was] a ‘Democratic district.’ ” (Emphasis sic.) League II, ___ Ohio St.3d ___,
    
    2022-Ohio-342
    , ___ N.E.3d ___, at ¶ 40. We explained that when a plan labels
    every “competitive” or “toss-up” district as a Democratic-leaning one, that is
    evidence of intent to favor the Republican Party. 
    Id.
     The second revised plan bears
    the same hallmarks of improper partisan intent.            The evidence shows—
    overwhelmingly—that the individuals who drafted the second revised plan
    14
    January Term, 2022
    primarily intended to favor the Republican Party and disfavor the Democratic Party.
    The second revised plan therefore violates Article XI, Section 6(A) of the Ohio
    Constitution.
    {¶ 35} The first dissent suggests, however, that this court lacks the
    constitutional authority to determine whether the commission has acted primarily
    to favor Republicans and disfavor Democrats because we do not have judicial
    authority to review the “subjective requirements” of Section 6(A). Dissenting
    opinion of Kennedy and DeWine, JJ., at ¶ 115. Because compliance with Section
    6(A)’s “subjective requirements” is “solely a matter of degree,” id. at ¶ 133, the
    first dissenting opinion contends that we may not review those requirements,
    because we have no objective guides to confine our review. But as we explained
    in League I, the original jurisdiction conferred by Article XI, Section 9 does not
    limit this court’s ability to review a General Assembly–district plan for compliance
    with Section 6(A). ___ Ohio St.3d ___, 
    2022-Ohio-65
    , ___ N.E.3d ___, at ¶ 94-96.
    Nor do we agree that the requirements of Section 6(A) are somehow beyond judicial
    ken. See Rucho, ___U.S. at ___, 
    139 S.Ct. at 2507
    , 
    204 L.Ed.2d 931
     (“We do not
    understand how * * * a provision saying that no districting plan ‘shall be drawn
    with the intent to favor or disfavor a political party’ provides little guidance on the
    question”).
    {¶ 36} As a final matter, we note that Senate President Huffman appears to
    have voted against the Sykes-Russo plan based, at least in part, on a
    misunderstanding of Section 6(A).        Invoking Section 6(A), Senate President
    Huffman criticized the Sykes-Russo plan because, he said, it would have made it
    hard, if not impossible, for some Republican incumbents to retain their seats.
    Making that observation demonstrates, beyond a reasonable doubt, that Senate
    President Huffman misunderstands the requirements of Article XI and the reasons
    for their adoption.    Currently, the General Assembly is marked by extreme
    disproportionality, with the Republican Party holding substantial majorities in both
    the Senate and the House. The district plan that facilitated that disproportionality
    was the basis for the adoption of Article XI. Senate President Huffman’s concern
    for protecting incumbents is not grounded in Article XI.
    15
    SUPREME COURT OF OHIO
    {¶ 37} The dissenting opinions suggest, however, that incumbent protection
    is a legitimate and neutral goal in legislative redistricting. Dissenting opinion of
    Kennedy and DeWine, JJ., at ¶ 104; dissenting opinion of Fischer, J., ¶ 176.
    Therefore, the argument goes, the protection of incumbents does not show intent to
    favor or disfavor a political party. But while incumbency protection may be a
    legitimate and neutral goal, it is not always so.          “[E]xperience teaches that
    incumbency protection can take various forms, not all of them in the interests of
    the constituents.” League of United Latin Am. Citizens v. Perry, 
    548 U.S. 399
    , 441,
    
    126 S.Ct. 2594
    , 
    165 L.Ed.2d 609
     (2006) (lead opinion). In this case, we analyze
    the evidence of Senate President Huffman’s concern for not drawing any incumbent
    Republican caucus member out of a district (based on current voting residence) to
    be grounded in a desire to protect Republican office holders. Those office holders
    hold office under a current district plan that is neither compact nor proportional
    according to the terms of Article XI. Thus, efforts to protect these incumbents in
    noncompliant districts can neither be a legitimate and neutral goal nor comport with
    Article XI, Section 6(A).
    C. Article XI, Section 6(B)
    {¶ 38} Article XI, Section 6(B) of the Ohio Constitution provides that the
    commission shall attempt to draw a district plan that meets the following standard:
    “The statewide proportion of districts whose voters, based on statewide state and
    federal partisan general election results during the last ten years, favor each political
    party shall correspond closely to the statewide preferences of the voters of Ohio.”
    In League II, we held th.at the first revised plan violated Section 6(B) because a
    high percentage of the districts allocated to the Democratic Party had a Democratic
    vote share between 50 and 51 percent. See League II, ___ Ohio St.3d ___, 2022-
    Ohio-342, ___ N.E.3d ___, at ¶ 40 and 61. In fact, nine House districts had a
    Democratic vote share between 50.0 and 50.5 percent, and the plan included no
    Republican-leaning districts with a Republican vote share less than 52.6 percent.
    Id. at ¶ 57. Although we clarified that Section 6(B) does not prohibit competitive
    districts, we concluded that competitive districts “must either be excluded from the
    16
    January Term, 2022
    proportionality assessment or be allocated to each party in close proportion to its
    statewide vote share.” Id. at ¶ 62.
    {¶ 39} The second revised plan reduces the number of Democratic-leaning
    districts with a Democratic vote share between 50 and 51 percent, but it
    dramatically increases the number of Democratic-leaning districts with a
    Democratic vote share of 52 percent or less. As explained above, under the second
    revised plan, there are 19 House districts and 7 Senate districts—43 percent of all
    Democratic-leaning districts—that have Democratic vote shares between 50 and 52
    percent. There are no Republican districts with a vote share less than 52.7 percent.
    {¶ 40} In League II, we did not define the outside limit of what makes a
    district competitive. We did not need to, because the districts at issue—those
    between 50 and 51 percent—were “surely” competitive “under any reasonable
    measure” and therefore had to be excluded from the proportionality assessment. Id.
    The question now is whether districts between 51 and 52 percent can be allocated
    to a political party for purposes of the proportionality assessment. That is, we must
    determine whether districts with vote shares in that range “favor” a political party
    within the meaning of Section 6(B). See id. at ¶ 61.
    {¶ 41} The expert evidence discussed above leads us to conclude that the
    26 districts in the second revised plan with a Democratic vote share between 50 and
    52 percent do not “favor” the Democratic Party. Indeed, the evidence shows that
    those districts represent the foundation of a politically asymmetric plan. According
    to Dr. Latner, with a two-point statewide swing in their favor, Republicans could
    expect to win 74 percent of House seats and 79 percent of Senate seats under the
    second revised plan. The same two-point statewide swing favoring Democrats
    would result in no seat gains for the Democratic Party in either the House or the
    Senate. Dr. Rodden opines that even with “a truly historic 7 percentage point
    uniform swing in favor of the Democrats” (meaning that their statewide vote share
    rose to 53 percent), the Democrats still would not gain a majority of seats in the
    House. According to Dr. Rodden, Democrats would need to obtain “a truly
    17
    SUPREME COURT OF OHIO
    remarkable 8 percentage point swing” to give them a one-seat majority in the
    House.8
    {¶ 42} Based on this evidence, we conclude that the sub-52-percent districts
    allocated to the Democratic Party under the second revised plan are “competitive”
    districts and, under our holding in League II, must be excluded when assessing the
    plan’s overall proportionality. See League II, ___ Ohio St.3d ___, 
    2022-Ohio-342
    ,
    ___ N.E.3d ___, at ¶ 62. When the 26 so-called Democratic-leaning districts in that
    range are excluded, the second revised plan has 72 Republican districts and 34
    Democratic districts, for a total of 106 non-excluded districts.                         This gives
    Republicans a 67.9 percent share of the non-excluded districts (72 out of 106) and
    Democrats 32.1 percent (34 out of 106). That disproportionality is further from
    even the original plan we invalidated in League I, in which 64.4 percent of the
    districts favored Republicans. League I, ___ Ohio St.3d ___, 
    2022-Ohio-65
    , ___
    N.E.3d ___, at ¶ 105. The second revised plan thus does not “correspond closely”
    to the statewide preferences of Ohio’s voters and violates Article XI, Section 6(B)
    of the Ohio Constitution.
    {¶ 43} In reaching this conclusion, we note, again, that the existence of
    competitive districts is not inherently problematic. The gross and unnecessary
    8. In League II, we observed that the commission “knowingly adopted a [revised] plan in which all
    the House districts whose voters favor Republicans do so at vote shares of 52.6 percent and above,
    while more than a quarter (12 out of 42) of the House districts whose voters ‘favor’ Democrats do
    so at a vote share between 50 and 51 percent (meaning that a 1 percent swell in Republican vote
    share would sweep 12 additional districts into the Republican column).” ___ Ohio St.3d ___, 2022-
    Ohio-342, ___ N.E.3d ___, at ¶ 40. The first dissenting opinion highlights the “1 percent swell,”
    noting that this factor no longer applies to the second revised plan. Dissenting opinion of Kennedy
    and DeWine, JJ., at ¶ 102. Thus, they say we are “rewriting the rules” by “assert[ing] that a 5
    percent swing of voters to the Republican Party would result in 23 more Republican seats while a
    similar swing would net Democrats at most two seats.” (Emphasis sic.) Id. at ¶ 102. But the first
    dissent mischaracterizes League II, ___ Ohio St.3d ___, 
    2022-Ohio-342
    , ___ N.E.3d ___. We did
    not rely in League II on the hypothetical 1 percent swing as the baseline rule for evaluating a plan’s
    partisan favoritism. To be sure, the “monolithically disparate,” id. at ¶ 40, distribution of districts
    whose vote shares were between 50 and 51 percent was an important factor in our evaluation of the
    revised plan in League II because it was evidence of unconstitutional partisan favoritism and
    illustrated the absurdity of characterizing such districts as Democratic-leaning. In this case,
    petitioners’ experts have analyzed the effects of 2, 5, 7, or 8 percent swings in vote share and
    concluded that Democrats would gain far fewer seats with vote swings in their favor than would
    Republicans. This is evidence of partisan asymmetry that is indicative of the second revised plan’s
    partisan bias.
    18
    January Term, 2022
    disparity in the allocation of close districts is what offends Article XI, Section 6(B).
    See League II at ¶ 62.
    IV. CONCLUSION
    {¶ 44} We sustain petitioners’ objections relating to the second revised
    plan’s violation of Article XI, Sections 6(A) and 6(B) of the Ohio Constitution. We
    invalidate the second revised plan in its entirety. We further order the commission
    to be reconstituted and to convene and that the commission draft and adopt an
    entirely new General Assembly–district plan that conforms with the Ohio
    Constitution, including Article XI, Sections 6(A) and 6(B) as we have explained
    those provisions in each of our three decisions in these cases.           To promote
    transparency and increase public trust, the drafting should occur in public and the
    commissioners should convene frequent meetings to demonstrate their bipartisan
    efforts to reach a constitutional plan within the time set by this court. We deny
    petitioners’ requests for additional relief at this time.
    {¶ 45} We further order the commission to file the district plan with the
    secretary of state no later than Monday, March 28, 2022, and to file a copy of that
    plan in this court by 9:00 a.m. on Tuesday, March 29, 2022. We retain jurisdiction
    for the purpose of reviewing the new plan.
    {¶ 46} Petitioners shall file objections, if any, to the new plan, by 9:00 a.m.,
    three days after the new plan is filed in this court. Respondents shall file responses,
    if any, to the objections, by 9:00 a.m., three days after the objections are filed. If
    the deadline for the objections or responses falls on a Saturday, Sunday, or holiday,
    then the objections or responses shall be filed by 9:00 a.m. on the next business
    day. Petitioners shall not file a reply or any motion for leave to file a reply. The
    clerk shall refuse to accept any filings under this paragraph that are untimely or
    prohibited.
    {¶ 47} No requests or stipulations for extension of time shall be filed, and
    the clerk of this court shall refuse to file any requests or stipulations for extension
    of time.
    19
    SUPREME COURT OF OHIO
    {¶ 48} Because we sustain the objections as to Article XI, Sections 6(A)
    and 6(B) and invalidate the plan in its entirety, we do not reach petitioners’
    objections regarding Article XI, Section 1.
    Objections sustained in part.
    O’CONNOR, C.J., and DONNELLY and STEWART, JJ., concur.
    BRUNNER, J., concurs, with an opinion.
    KENNEDY and DEWINE, JJ., dissent, with an opinion.
    FISCHER, J., dissents, with an opinion and joins paragraphs 138-143 of the
    dissenting opinion of Justices Kennedy and DeWine.
    _________________
    BRUNNER, J., concurring.
    {¶ 49} I fully join the majority opinion, but I write separately to address the
    contentions set forth in both dissenting opinions that Article XI of the Ohio
    Constitution should be interpreted to mean that redistricting is an inherently
    political process that should be left to the politicians. This court is not a rubber
    stamp. By interpreting and enforcing the requirements of the Ohio Constitution,
    we do not create chaos or a constitutional crisis—we work to promote the trust of
    Ohio’s voters in the redistricting of Ohio’s legislative districts according to Article
    XI, which the voters adopted.
    {¶ 50} That elections will occur in our system is a given, regardless of
    whether they occur in a year following redistricting. When the redistricting process
    is interjected with abject and continuous refusals to abide by the requirements of
    our Constitution and the orders of this court, remedies may become consequences
    in order to permit an election to happen, promoting both ballot access by candidates
    and voter enfranchisement. Driving litigation to the brink of making it impossible
    to hold an election is not a substitute for nor a permissible threat against doing what
    is necessary to draft a district plan that complies with Article XI of the Ohio
    Constitution.
    {¶ 51} The dissents emphasize that because the Ohio Redistricting
    Commission is comprised of partisan elected officials, Article XI contemplates that
    bipartisan agreement may not be possible. This is a subjective and inaccurate
    20
    January Term, 2022
    conclusion. For example, the Constitution does not limit the number of political
    parties to two. See Ohio Constitution, Article XI, Section 1(A). It refers to the
    “largest political party” and “two largest political parties,” not merely “two political
    parties.” Id.
    {¶ 52} The tenor of this “let politics decide politics” approach is not
    grounded in the Ohio Constitution.         Rather, it is an oversimplistic, myopic,
    parochial, two-party view that would have us look askance at our duties and treat
    the redistricting process as a political duel or mud-wrestling match between
    political competitors to decide a very serious endeavor: the decennial exercise
    adopted by the voters of Ohio to ensure fair and accurate representation in the
    government.
    {¶ 53} The colored map of Ohio inserted into the first dissenting opinion
    showing a single year’s (2020) partisan statewide general-election results is not
    evidence submitted by any party in these cases. See dissenting opinion of Kennedy
    and DeWine, JJ., ¶ 89. It was created by or on behalf of one or both drafters of that
    dissenting opinion to make a point that is not based in the Constitution. Article XI,
    Section 6(B) requires that the statewide proportion of districts whose voters, based
    on “statewide state and federal partisan general election results during the last ten
    years, favor each political party * * * correspond closely to the statewide
    preferences of the voters of Ohio.” (Emphasis added.) The first dissenting
    opinion’s map is an attempt to support the specious arguments that Ohio is
    hopelessly divided into Democratic-leaning urban areas and Republican-leaning
    rural areas and that Ohio is now so “red” (based on one year’s election results) that
    its political geography makes it impossible to draw a constitutionally compliant
    plan.
    {¶ 54} The first dissenting opinion then seems to argue that due to Ohio’s
    political geography, applying Article XI, Section 6(A) would require some sort of
    reverse gerrymandering.      The majority opinion does not endorse any sort of
    gerrymandering. It merely requires that a constitutionally compliant plan be
    “drawn” by the commission. This court has not drawn any district plan or even
    ordered that a particular plan be adopted. See Ohio Constitution, Article XI,
    21
    SUPREME COURT OF OHIO
    Section 9. This court cannot order gerrymandering; it may only order compliance
    with the Ohio Constitution, and that is what it has done.
    {¶ 55} Thus, if we identify districts that are not truly competitive but, rather,
    are “toss-up” districts, we must discount the genuineness of the intent in creating
    them, especially when such districts are compared to districts in which there is a
    clearer majority. Toss-up districts do not go in the column of districts that lean
    toward one party or another. When a plan containing all the districts is analyzed
    and the districts are compared for their partisan leaning, this court is authorized to
    find a lack of proportionality under Article XI, Section 6(A) and order that the plan
    be revised or redrawn. When that occurs, as it has twice before in these cases, it is
    the redistricting commission’s task to find a way to draw a fair and constitutionally
    compliant plan, not to draw districts that ensure seats for incumbent legislators
    whose districts are part of a scheme that was determined by Ohioans to be the result
    of gerrymandering.
    {¶ 56} The first dissenting opinion goes on to offer a flowchart and a
    sentence diagram, presumably to try to explain its application of the plain language
    of Article XI. Again, neither of those representations are evidence in the record,
    and at best, they seem to be offered as illustrative support for arguments that propel
    more vitriol than constructive commentary.
    {¶ 57} The first dissenting opinion’s complete denial of this court’s
    discretion in analyzing a district plan under Article XI, Section 6(A) comes from
    its position that judicial review under the provision falls under the moniker of
    “subjectivity,” though the dissent concedes that judicial review of “objective”
    mechanical requirements is permissible. The dissenting justices would construe the
    Constitution as leaving this court feckless to call out the equivalent of a sleight of
    hand, such as a plan with perfectly proportional districts on the surface but that is
    in reality a shell for what the drafters purport to be compliance with statewide
    partisan voter preferences. This court’s review and determination under Article XI,
    Section 6(A) must be applied through both the lens of proportionality and the lens
    of fair intent.
    22
    January Term, 2022
    {¶ 58} The plain language of Section 6 authorizes this court to use its
    discretion in analyzing a district plan when the evidence calls for it. There is no
    doubt that this is one of those instances. It is to that end that the majority opinion
    leans, and not toward a partisan purgatory that will never provide the fairness for
    which Ohio voters have so long yearned and which prompted them to adopt the
    amendments to Article XI.
    _________________
    KENNEDY and DEWINE, JJ., dissenting.
    {¶ 59} The majority decrees electoral chaos. It issues an order all but
    guaranteed to disrupt an impending election and bring Ohio to the brink of a
    constitutional crisis. It does so through an edict that finds no grounding in the text
    of the Constitution but instead is merely the latest manifestation of the majority’s
    shifting whims.
    {¶ 60} Three times now, the Ohio Redistricting Commission has enacted a
    General Assembly–district plan. And three times now this court has struck down
    the enacted plan. In the last go-round, we pointed out that the majority had shifted
    the goalposts by imposing new requirements found nowhere in the Ohio
    Constitution and not suggested in its first opinion. League of Women Voters of
    Ohio v. Ohio Redistricting Comm., ___ Ohio St.3d ___, 
    2022-Ohio-342
    , ___
    N.E.3d ___, ¶ 115 (Kennedy and DeWine, JJ., dissenting) (“LWV II”). Today, the
    majority tears down those goalposts altogether. It ignores the standards set forth in
    the Constitution. And now that the rationales manufactured in its previous opinions
    counsel in favor of upholding the latest plan (“the second revised plan”), see League
    of Women Voters of Ohio v. Ohio Redistricting Comm., ___ Ohio St.3d ___, 2022-
    Ohio-65, ___ N.E.3d ___ (“LWV I”); LWV II, the majority ignores those too. Its
    latest command to the commission is simply this: What the Constitution says
    doesn’t matter—bring us a map that will achieve the political outcomes we desire.
    We’ll know it when we see it.
    {¶ 61} The majority gives two reasons for invalidating the second revised
    plan, neither grounded in the Constitution. First, it complains that the seven
    commissioners did not cooperate and jointly draft the plan. And second, even
    23
    SUPREME COURT OF OHIO
    though the plan perfectly reflects the statewide distribution of votes between
    Republicans and Democrats, the majority finds it defective because it contains
    some competitive districts that favor the Democratic Party by 2 percent or less. The
    Constitution does not require all seven members to jointly operate the map-drawing
    software.     Instead, it expressly provides that if the members fail to achieve
    bipartisan consensus, then the commission may introduce and adopt a General
    Assembly–district plan by a party-line majority vote, with the consequence being
    that the plan lasts for only four years. Article XI, Section 8(C)(1)(a). And the
    Constitution details a formula to measure proportionality based on the number of
    districts that “favor” a political party. Section 6(B). Nowhere does the Constitution
    ordain that competitive districts that favor a political party by less than 2 percent
    don’t count.
    {¶ 62} No one at this point can fairly call what the majority is doing the act
    of judging. It does not assess the plan against constitutional standards. Rather, it
    has commandeered the redistricting process—only instead of moving the
    redistricting software to the Thomas J. Moyer Ohio Judicial Center, it has forced
    the commission to attempt to draw the map of the majority’s mind’s eye. Alexander
    Hamilton promised that judges would exercise “neither force nor will, but merely
    judgment.”       The Federalist No. 78.         The majority proves Hamilton overly
    optimistic.
    {¶ 63} Through its actions today, the majority undermines the democratic
    process, depriving the voters of the constitutional amendment they enacted and
    leaving in its place only the majority’s policy preferences. In so doing, it threatens
    the very legitimacy of this court.
    {¶ 64} We adhere to our view that this court’s review is not so far reaching
    as the majority believes and would hold that a General Assembly–district plan
    cannot be invalidated absent a violation of the express and objective map-drawing
    requirements of Article XI, Sections 2, 3, 4, 5, and 7. Because the majority goes
    far beyond these guardrails, we dissent.
    24
    January Term, 2022
    I. The majority tears down the goalposts it erected and imposes new
    standards found nowhere in the Constitution
    {¶ 65} At the outset, it is important to reiterate that we should not be here
    at all. Article XI, Section 9(D)(3) of the Ohio Constitution is explicit in providing
    that the Supreme Court may order the commission to adopt a new map only if it
    “determines that a general assembly district plan adopted by the commission does
    not comply with the requirements of Section 2, 3, 4, 5, or 7 of this article.” The
    majority finds violations of only Section 6, so it has no authority to invalidate the
    second revised plan. It’s that simple.
    {¶ 66} In our dissents in LWV I and LWV II, we repeatedly detailed the
    court’s lack of authority to do what the majority keeps doing, so we will save further
    discussion on that point for Part III of this dissent. Instead, we start by explaining
    that even putting aside the court’s lack of authority to order yet another new map,
    what the majority does today is inconsistent with both the text of the Constitution
    and the goalposts set by its previous opinions.
    A. Seven hands on the computer mouse
    {¶ 67} Perhaps the most remarkable thing about the majority’s opinion
    today is its new “seven drafters working together” requirement. One of the
    majority’s principal justifications for finding the second revised plan
    unconstitutional has nothing to do with the plan itself; rather, the majority deems
    the plan unconstitutional because “the commission did not follow the process that
    [Section 1 of] Article XI requires.” Majority opinion, ¶ 25. Although the majority
    represents that it will not address arguments related to Article XI, Section 1, it
    plainly cannot pass up an opportunity to micromanage the commission.
    {¶ 68} In the majority’s view, Article XI, Section 1 requires that all seven
    commissioners gather around a computer with the redistricting software and jointly
    draft a plan. Because this did not happen, the majority finds that the commission
    failed to comply with a sentence in Article XI, Section 1(C) providing that “[t]he
    commission shall draft the proposed plan in the manner prescribed in this article.”
    See majority opinion at ¶ 25; see also 
    id.
     (“The commission has adopted three plans
    so far, but it still has not drafted one”). And with minimal analysis, the majority
    25
    SUPREME COURT OF OHIO
    declares that the commissioners’ failure to collectively “draft” the second revised
    plan dispositively establishes that it was drawn primarily to favor the Republican
    Party.
    {¶ 69} This, of course, is ludicrous. Go back to the sentence the majority
    finds all important: “The commission shall draft the proposed plan in the manner
    prescribed in this article.” Section 1(C). For the majority’s reading to even begin
    to make sense, “commission” would instead need to say “commissioners.” But
    more to the point, the majority ignores the last clause of the sentence it relies on:
    “in the manner prescribed in this article.” 
    Id.
    {¶ 70} Article XI prescribes in Section 1(A) that the “Ohio redistricting
    commission shall be responsible for the redistricting of this state for the general
    assembly.” To discharge that duty, the commission “shall adopt” a General
    Assembly–district plan. Section 1(C); see also Section 9(D)(1) (requiring that all
    plans be “approved by the commission”). Article XI then provides that some
    actions of the commission require a bipartisan vote. There must be bipartisan
    agreement to approve a map that lasts ten years. Section 8(B). There also must be
    bipartisan agreement to adopt rules, hire staff, and expend funds. Section 1(B)(2).
    Pursuant to this delegation, the commission unanimously adopted Commission
    Rule 09: “Any member of the Ohio Redistricting Commission, person, or
    organization may submit for the consideration of the Commission a proposed
    general assembly district plan.” Ohio Redistricting Commission Rules, Rule 09,
    Redistricting        plans,        https://redistricting.ohio.gov/assets/organizations
    /redistricting-commission/events/commission-meeting-august-31-2021-16/ohio-
    redistricting-commission-rules.pdf#page=1         (accessed     March      15,    2022)
    [https://perma.cc/F6DM-D4EW].
    {¶ 71} Nonetheless, the commission is composed of partisan elected
    officials, and therefore Article XI anticipates that bipartisan agreement may not
    always be possible to obtain. It creates a default rule that (save for specific, contrary
    provisions), “a simple majority of the commission members is required for any
    action by the commission.” Article XI, Section 1(B)(1). Although the majority
    faults the commission for not hiring “an independent map drawer * * * who
    26
    January Term, 2022
    answers to all commission members,” majority opinion at ¶ 30, the Constitution left
    that decision to the commission. Where agreement eludes the commissioners, each
    co-chairperson may “expend one-half of the [commission’s] funds.” Section
    1(B)(2)(b).   A co-chairperson hiring a map drawer, as happened here, is a
    permissive expenditure.
    {¶ 72} Nor is the commission required to draft all plans as a body. Instead,
    if the commission reaches an impasse, it “shall introduce a proposed general
    assembly district plan by a simple majority vote of the commission.” Article XI,
    Section 8(A)(1). Section 8(A)(3) permits the commission to “adopt a final general
    assembly district plan * * * by a simple majority vote of the commission.” A plan
    that lacks bipartisan support and that is passed by a simple majority cannot be one
    that has been drafted by all seven commissioners. Doing that does not invalidate
    the plan; rather, the sole consequence is that it lasts four years rather than ten.
    Article XI, Section 8(C)(1)(a).
    {¶ 73} The majority’s rule is patently ridiculous. It never explains how a
    plan that is introduced and adopted by a simple majority can somehow have been
    collectively drafted. The Constitution provides for the impasse procedure exactly
    because such agreement is not always—or even likely—possible when the balance
    of political power is at stake.
    {¶ 74} The second revised plan was introduced and approved by the
    commission. Article XI, Section 1 requires nothing more. The second revised plan
    was adopted “in the manner prescribed in [Article XI].” Section 1(C).
    {¶ 75} If one needs further proof of the folly of the majority’s reasoning,
    consider that pursuant to the commission’s rules, several members of the public
    submitted plans to the commission. Under the majority’s position today, had the
    commission decided to adopt one of the public proposals, that would have violated
    the Constitution because the commission—more precisely, its seven constituent
    members—must “draft” the plan. The same would hold true had the commission
    adopted Senator Sykes’s proposed plan or any of the plans drafted by Dr. Jonathan
    Rodden, one of petitioners’ experts.
    27
    SUPREME COURT OF OHIO
    {¶ 76} Indeed, anyone who has ever served on a committee recognizes that
    the work of a committee is rarely, if ever, done jointly by all the members of the
    committee. Legislative committees are routinely tasked with preparing reports.
    The members do not sit down together and jointly write the report. Instead, a report
    is drafted by legislative staff and voted on by the whole committee. Almost
    invariably, there are those who disagree—leading to majority and minority reports.
    {¶ 77} The same is true for this court. The majority issues a per curiam
    opinion. But one can be sure that the four members in the majority did not sit down
    jointly at a computer and take turns keying in words. And of course, those of us in
    dissent played no part in writing today’s per curiam opinion.
    {¶ 78} We often celebrate the “drafters” of our federal Constitution. But no
    one believes its 39 signatories jointly worked through every word and clause.
    Rather, it is known from James Madison’s Notes and other sources, see 2 Farrand,
    The Records of the Federal Convention of 1787 (Rev.Ed.1966), that the convention
    delegates were assigned to various committees. Only five of our Founding Fathers
    served on the Committee of Style and Arrangement credited with producing the
    final draft, yet we still remember their 34 fellow delegates as “drafters” of the
    charter.
    {¶ 79} What the majority demands belies common sense. One can just
    imagine seven people looking at a computer screen, each with their own ideas about
    which direction to move the cursor. Do the members vote on every toggle of the
    mouse? Solve disputes through games of rock, paper, scissors? Or is it more of a
    scrum, with the strongest prevailing?
    {¶ 80} The majority’s complaint is that the Republicans did not work
    together with the Democrats. But that lament is as old as our two-party system.
    Small wonder that the Constitution incentivizes bipartisanship and imposes a
    consequence for lack of cross-aisle cooperation. See Article XI, Section 8(C)(1)(a).
    If the parties do not work together—if a plan is passed by only a partisan majority
    vote—the plan lasts only four years. 
    Id.
     In invalidating a plan for a lack of
    cooperation, the majority replaces the remedy set forth in the Constitution with one
    purely of its own making.
    28
    January Term, 2022
    {¶ 81} Nothing in the Constitution requires the seven commissioners to sit
    down together to draft the plan—effectively handing each one of them an unbridled
    veto power. Nothing in the majority’s previous opinions established this as a
    requirement to adopt a valid plan. And certainly nothing in the Constitution gives
    this court the authority to invalidate a plan for failure to comply with this made-up
    requirement. Under Section 9(D)(3), the court’s remedial authority is triggered
    only by a violation of Section 2, 3, 4, 5, or 7. This court has no business
    micromanaging the procedures by which the commission discharges its duty to
    “adopt” a plan. This court has no business micromanaging the procedures by which
    the commission discharges its duty to “adopt” a plan. See Youngstown City School
    Dist. Bd. of Edn. v. State, 
    161 Ohio St.3d 24
    , 29, 
    2020-Ohio-2903
    , 
    161 N.E.3d 483
    ,
    ¶ 20 (lead opinion of O’Connor, C.J.) (“It is not our role to police how the amended
    language came into existence”); id. at ¶ 36, quoting Miller v. State, 
    3 Ohio St. 475
    ,
    484 (1854) (Kennedy, J., concurring in part and concurring in judgment only in
    part) (courts are not “authorized to supervise every step of legislative action, and
    inquire into the regularity of all legislative proceedings that result in laws”).
    B. Perfect proportionality is not good enough for the majority
    {¶ 82} Article XI, Section 6(B) provides that the commission “shall
    attempt” to draw a plan under which “[t]he statewide proportion of districts whose
    voters, based on statewide state and federal partisan general election results during
    the last ten years, favor each political party [and] correspond closely to the
    statewide preferences of the voters of Ohio.” The statewide preference of Ohio
    voters is to prefer Republicans to Democrats by a margin of 54 to 46 percent. LWV
    I, ___ Ohio St.3d ___, 
    2022-Ohio-65
    , ___ N.E.3d ___, at ¶ 108. In the second
    revised plan, 54 percent of districts favor the Republican Party and 46 percent favor
    the Democratic Party. A reasonable person would likely conclude that because the
    plan achieves perfect proportionality, it satisfies Section 6(B). But, through a
    dizzying series of changing edicts, the majority concludes that even exact
    proportionality is not good enough.
    29
    SUPREME COURT OF OHIO
    1. Shifting the goalposts on statewide proportionality
    {¶ 83} In LWV I, the majority read the word “attempt” out of Section 6(B)
    and held that the provision actually mandates that the commission draw a plan with
    a partisan makeup that closely corresponds with statewide voter preferences if it is
    possible to do so. LWV I at ¶ 88. In LWV II, the court read the word “closely” out
    of the provision and suggested that a plan needed to exactly correspond to statewide
    voter preferences. LWV II, ___ Ohio St.3d ___, 
    2022-Ohio-342
    , ___ N.E.3d ___,
    at ¶ 63, 64. That measure, it proclaimed, is “a foundational ratio created not by this
    court or by any particular political party but instead etched by the voters of Ohio
    into our Constitution.” Id. at ¶ 64.
    {¶ 84} In response, the commission did exactly what the majority
    demanded. It drew a plan in which “[t]he statewide proportion of districts whose
    voters * * * favor each political party” matched exactly the “statewide preferences
    of the voters of Ohio,” Section 6(B).           The second revised plan is perfectly
    proportional, matching the 54-46 percent partisan makeup of Ohio voters.
    {¶ 85} Unbelievably,       the   majority    now   says   that     even   perfect
    proportionality is not good enough. Given the standardless judging exhibited in
    LWV I and LWV II, it comes as no surprise that the majority introduces a new
    formula. Even though the Constitution says that statewide proportionality is to be
    assessed by comparing the proportion of districts that “favor” each political party,
    Section 6(B), the majority looks at individual districts and determines that those
    that favor a political party by less than 2 percent should be excluded from the
    calculation. It then holds that the plan is unconstitutional because if one replaces
    the formula set forth in the Constitution with the majority’s new formula, the plan
    fails to meet the Constitution’s proportionality requirement. Confused? We
    certainly are.    High marks to the majority for creativity, but nothing in the
    Constitution supports the exclusion of competitive districts—Section 6(B)’s terms
    address statewide proportionality and therefore include all districts.
    2. Shifting the goalposts on competitive districts
    {¶ 86} The majority also shifts the goalposts on what counts as a
    competitive district. In LWV I, the majority held that Section 6(B) simply required
    30
    January Term, 2022
    the commission to draw “a plan in which the statewide proportion of Republican-
    leaning districts to Democratic-leaning districts” complies with 54-46 percent ratio.
    ___ Ohio St.3d ___, 
    2022-Ohio-65
    , ___ N.E.3d ___, at ¶ 108. But in LWV II it
    modified that pronouncement, invalidating the first revised plan because it created
    too many competitive districts that only narrowly favored Democrats. ___ Ohio
    St.3d ___, 
    2022-Ohio-342
    , ___ N.E.3d ___, at ¶ 61 (“Bluntly, the commission’s
    labeling of a district with a Democratic vote share between 50 and 51 percent * * *
    as ‘Democratic-leaning’ is absurd on its face”).
    {¶ 87} Of course, the Constitution does not preclude super-competitive
    districts—in fact, they are laudable in a democracy. See Rucho v. Common
    Cause___ U.S. ___, 
    139 S.Ct. 2484
    , 
    204 L.Ed.2d 931
     (2019). Indeed, the more
    competitive a district, the more an election will be decided by voter preference and
    candidate quality rather than simple partisan voting patterns.                        The Ohio
    Constitution requires an assessment of “districts whose voters * * * favor each
    political party.” Article XI, Section 6(B). Nonetheless, the commission did what
    the majority demanded. Its second revised plan reduced from 12 to five the number
    of seats favoring Democrats by less than 51 percent.
    {¶ 88} But, alas, poor Charlie Brown has had the football yanked away
    again. Now, the majority says that even districts in which Democrats have a 2
    percent advantage do not count as districts that “ ‘favor’ [the Democratic] party.”
    Majority opinion, ¶ 41. If the majority is going to create new requirements not
    found in the Constitution, it would certainly be nice if it would give the commission
    a little advance warning.
    {¶ 89} The majority objects to the outsized number of Democratic-leaning
    competitive districts. But that is simply a function of political geography. Just look
    at a map of Ohio’s Republican vote share by county in the last presidential
    election:9
    9. This map was created using data from the Ohio Secretary of State’s Office. See Ohio Secretary
    of State, 2020 Official Elections Results, available at https://www.ohiosos.gov/elections/election-
    results-and-data/2020/ (accessed Mar. 15, 2022) [https://perma.cc/5S4N-ZPMQ]. It was created
    using        a       template       available         at        https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki
    /File:Ohio_Presidential_Election_Results_2020.svg          (accessed       Mar.     15,      2022)
    [https://perma.cc/3XQ6-NEE7].
    31
    SUPREME COURT OF OHIO
    56.2%               60.9%
    40.8%
    69.1%                               60.9%
    72.1%                                                                                             32.4%       61.0%
    54.7%
    54.9%
    62.8%                                50.5%
    67.3%       71.0%       52.9%                                                                              55.5%
    69.7%                   61.1%       44.5%
    74.9%                                       66.2%                                                                             50.4%
    82.4%
    67.9%
    73.5%
    58.5%
    77.9%                                   74.3%                                             67.7%                               71.7%
    74.6%
    69.0%
    69.2%
    75.1%                                                                                     75.6%
    68.4%                                         83.4%
    80.7%                                         76.3%                                            69.2%                       68.5%
    81.9%
    71.2%
    76.9%                                                                                         75.7%
    73.6%
    80.9%                                   52.7%
    64.8%
    81.1%                    73.1%                                           63.2%
    71.4%                                                                                         73.6%         71.2%
    68.9%
    33.5%
    60.8%
    76.4%
    69.7%                          61.0%                                  81.0%
    78.1%       48.1%                                                                  74.1%
    58.8%                     72.9%                                           73.6%
    75.1%
    70.5%                               69.6%
    61.3%       64.7%      75.5%                                                           41.7%
    66.9%
    76.9%
    41.3%                          79.7%
    75.9%
    73.8%           76.4%
    67.5%                    81.3%                                       77.1%
    70.6%
    78.1%
    72.2%
    {¶ 90} Every expert who has opined on the matter in these cases agrees that
    because Democratic voters are concentrated in a few urban areas and Republican
    voters predominate in large rural swaths of the state, there are limited geographic
    areas in which Democratic-leaning districts can be created. LWV I, ___ Ohio St.3d
    ___, 
    2022-Ohio-65
    , ___ N.E.3d ___, at ¶ 128. A natural function of this political
    32
    January Term, 2022
    reality is that the only way to meet the proportionality standard is to maximize the
    number of Democratic-leaning districts in urban areas. And maximizing the
    number of Democratic-leaning districts means that many of these districts will
    favor the Democratic Party by narrow margins. In contrast, in most of the rural,
    red areas of the state, it is impossible to draw districts that narrowly favor the
    Republican Party—there simply are not enough Democrats in those areas. See LWV
    II, ___ Ohio St.3d ___, 
    2022-Ohio-342
    , ___ N.E.3d ___, at ¶ 82-86 (Kennedy and
    DeWine, JJ., dissenting) (providing a more detailed discussion of Ohio’s political
    geography).
    {¶ 91} Indeed, at the time of the amendment’s enactment the former
    chairman of the Ohio Democratic Party explained that
    computer modeling showed the process [under the amended
    version of Article XI] likely would not give Democrats a majority.
    “When you get modeling back that says you’re confining
    yourselves to a permanent minority and Democrats will never get to
    50, that gave many people pause,” said state Democratic chairman
    David Pepper * * *. “We weren’t looking for, and we didn’t find,
    any models that showed we could guarantee ourselves a majority.
    Frankly, that would be gerrymandering just like in the past * * * the
    most important change is there would be many more competitive
    races.”
    (Emphasis added and second ellipsis in original.) Vote yes on Issue 1, Columbus
    Dispatch (Sept. 27, 2015) 5J.
    {¶ 92} The majority, though, never acknowledges the undisputed evidence
    about the challenges inherent in creating sufficient Democratic-leaning districts to
    satisfy the proportionality requirement. Instead, it makes much of the fact that 19
    Democratic-leaning districts are competitive and cites expert testimony stating that
    a 2 percent change in the voting preferences of Ohioans would cause Democrats to
    lose these districts. In doing so, the majority relies on predictions of future
    33
    SUPREME COURT OF OHIO
    performance instead of applying the plain language of Section 6(B), which requires
    the commission to consider “statewide state and federal partisan general election
    results during the last ten years.” (Emphasis added.) Section 6(B) does not
    authorize the commission to base proportionality on any other metric, including
    predictions of future results.
    {¶ 93} In demanding that the commission adopt a plan designed to
    guarantee Democratic wins, even in the face of changing voter preferences, the
    majority compels what the Constitution forbids: gerrymandering. This is the same
    majority that decried gerrymandering in Adams v. DeWine as “the antithetical
    perversion of representative democracy.” ___ Ohio St.3d ___, 
    2022-Ohio-89
    , ___
    N.E.3d ___, ¶ 2.     Gerrymandering, it said, “is an abuse of power * * * that
    strategically exaggerates the power of voters who tend to support the favored party
    while diminishing the power of voters who tend to support the disfavored party.”
    
    Id.
     Abandoning its pretense of upholding democratic principles, the majority
    makes clear today that notwithstanding the quality of candidates, the performance
    of incumbents, or the issues that matter to voters and drive turnout, winners and
    losers in statehouse elections must not be chosen on election night but instead must
    be preordained by the commission’s plan.
    3. Shifting the goalposts on alternative “more proportional” plans
    {¶ 94} In concluding in LWV I that the enacted plan unduly favored the
    Republican Party, the majority pointed to a plan prepared by Dr. Rodden, one of
    petitioners’ expert witnesses, as evidence that it was possible to draw a more
    proportional plan that complied with constitutional requirements. ___ Ohio St.3d
    ___, 
    2022-Ohio-65
    , ___ N.E.3d ___, at ¶ 126. The Rodden plan contained 57
    Republican leaning House districts and 18 Republican leaning Senate districts. (It
    turned out that Dr. Rodden’s plan did not comply with constitutional
    requirements—a fact petitioners were forced to admit in a filing to the court after
    LWV I was decided.) In LWV II, the majority pointed to a plan prepared by
    Democratic Party operative Chris Glassburn—apparently finalized only after the
    commission had adopted the first revised plan—as evidence that it was possible to
    draw a more proportional plan. ___Ohio St.3d ___, 
    2022-Ohio-342
    , ___ N.E.3d
    34
    January Term, 2022
    ___, at ¶ 46. The Glassburn plan contained 54 Republican House seats and 18
    Republican Senate seats.
    {¶ 95} On this go-round, though, the majority throws out its previous
    benchmarks. The second enacted plan contains more Democratic-leaning districts
    than the Rodden plan, which the majority held up as a model in LWV I, and it
    contains exactly the same number as the Glassburn plan. But now that those
    benchmarks counsel upholding the plan, they apparently no longer matter.
    {¶ 96} Notably absent from the majority opinion is any reference to a map
    that is more proportional than the second enacted plan. And for good reason. One
    does not exist. It is telling in this regard that the plan that petitioners would have
    this court order the commission to adopt actually creates fewer districts that favor
    the Democratic Party than the second revised plan.
    4. Shifting the goalposts on statistical measures
    {¶ 97} A revealing feature of these three cases is the shifting use of
    statistical measures by petitioners’ experts and the majority. Instead of applying a
    consistent set of measures to fairly assess each of the three plans, the petitioners
    and the majority have simply cherry-picked statistics to support their favored
    outcomes.
    {¶ 98} For example, in LWV I, the majority relied heavily on Dr. Kosuke
    Imai’s 5,000 simulated plans to show that the commission could have drawn a more
    proportional plan and that it could have done so without disfavoring Democrats.
    ___ Ohio St.3d ___, 
    2022-Ohio-65
    , ___ N.E.3d ___, at ¶ 112. In LWV II, the
    majority relied on Dr. Imai’s 5,000 simulated plans to contend, incorrectly, that the
    first revised plan was an outlier. ___ Ohio St.3d ___, 
    2022-Ohio-342
    , ___ N.E.3d
    ___, at ¶ 43. In fact, the first revised plan was more proportional than most of Dr.
    Imai’s 5,000 plans: “the average of the 5,000 plans he generated contained 79 total
    Republican-leaning districts (60 percent) and 53 total Democratic-leaning districts
    (40 percent).” Id. at ¶ 110 (Kennedy and DeWine, JJ., dissenting).
    {¶ 99} So what does Dr. Imai have to say about the second revised plan?
    Crickets. Petitioners this time have offered no analysis from Dr. Imai. Sometimes
    what is not said tells more than what is.
    35
    SUPREME COURT OF OHIO
    {¶ 100} Dr. Imai had also opined that the first revised plan was an outlier
    when analyzed under four political-science measures of partisan bias—efficiency
    gap, mean-median gap, partisan symmetry, and declination. Other than partisan
    symmetry, there is no evidence presented regarding the three other metrics. For
    example, Dr. Christopher Warshaw’s affidavits in support of the first and second
    sets of objections analyzed the efficiency gap, mean-median gap, and declination
    of the various plans, but he did not address those metrics at all in his affidavit
    supporting the third set of objections. It does not require a tremendous leap of logic
    to infer why this type of evidence is missing today.
    {¶ 101} Petitioners point to the plan’s partisan asymmetry, contending that
    some, if not all, of the competitive districts that lean Democratic based on prior
    election results should be counted as Republican districts. Respondents, on the
    other hand, point to Dr. Michael Barber’s explanation that the commission’s second
    revised plan creates an efficiency gap—the number of “wasted” votes above 50
    percent plus 1 that a party receives—that favors Democrats in both chambers of the
    General Assembly. But nary is there a mention of any of this in the majority
    opinion. Once again, the majority selectively incorporates only the evidence that
    can support its chosen outcome.
    {¶ 102} Further, in LWV II, the majority indicated that the Democratic-
    leaning districts were too competitive because “a 1 percent swell in Republican
    vote share would sweep [those] 12 additional districts into the Republican column.”
    ___ Ohio St.3d ___, 
    2022-Ohio-342
    , ___ N.E.3d ___, at ¶ 40. That no longer
    applies under the second revised plan, so the majority now asserts that a 5 percent
    swing of votes in favor of the Republican Party would result in 23 more Republican
    seats while an inverse swing would net the Democrats at most two seats. See
    majority opinion at ¶ 33. The majority is simply rewriting the rules as it goes along
    to create the appearance that its holding stands on law and principle rather than the
    need to reach a chosen outcome.
    C. The majority’s curious treatment of double bunking
    {¶ 103} There is another aspect of the majority opinion that bears mention.
    The majority criticizes Senate President Huffman for expressing concern that the
    36
    January Term, 2022
    Sykes-Russo plan placed a large number of incumbent Republicans in the same
    districts as other Republicans but did not do the same for Democratic members.
    {¶ 104} The majority is correct that Article XI does not explicitly prohibit
    double-bunking incumbents in the same district. Yet, contrary to the majority’s
    assumption, courts have recognized that maintaining incumbents in their home
    districts is a legitimate goal in adopting a district plan. See, e.g., Karcher v.
    Daggett, 
    462 U.S. 725
    , 740, 
    103 S.Ct. 2653
    , 
    77 L.Ed.2d 133
     (1983); Harper v.
    Hall, 2022-NCSC-17, ¶ 170. The practice of protecting incumbents is “neutral”
    and “time-honored.” See Vieth v. Jubelirer, 
    541 U.S. 267
    , 300, 
    124 S.Ct. 1769
    , 
    158 L.Ed.2d 546
     (2004) (lead opinion of Scalia, J.); see also Rucho, ___ U.S. at ___,
    
    139 S.Ct. at 2500
    , 
    204 L.Ed.2d 931
     (protecting incumbents is a “traditional”
    districting criteria). Incumbency considerations do not evince an intent to favor or
    disfavor a political party, particularly here because the commission avoided double-
    bunking incumbents of both parties.
    II. The second revised plan is constitutional
    {¶ 105} The majority’s conclusion that the second revised plan violates
    sections 6(A) and 6(B) rests on two faulty premises: (1) that only a plan that is
    collectively drafted by all seven members of the commission is valid; and (2) that
    competitive districts with a margin of less than 2 percent should not be counted in
    Article 6(B)’s proportionality analysis.     Both are refuted by the text of the
    Constitution.
    A. The plan complies with Article XI, Section 6(A)
    {¶ 106} The majority concludes that because all seven commissioners did
    not jointly draft the second revised plan, there is a violation of Section 6(A)’s
    requirement that the commission attempt to draw a plan that is not drawn primarily
    to favor a political party. But the Constitution specifically authorizes a simple
    majority of the commission to enact a plan. Sections 8(A) and (C). The second
    revised plan was enacted by the commission in accordance with all commission
    rules and all constitutional requirements. Just because the majority does not like
    the process created by Article XI does not mean that the second revised plan unduly
    favors the Republican Party.
    37
    SUPREME COURT OF OHIO
    {¶ 107} Furthermore, it is manifest that the commission drafted the plan to
    comply with the neutral map-drawing requirements of Sections 2, 3, 4, 5, and 7 as
    well as its directory duty to achieve partisan proportionality. The evidence simply
    does not establish that the commission attempted to draw the second revised plan
    with the primary purpose to favor or disfavor a political party.
    {¶ 108} The majority contends that the commission acted primarily to favor
    Republicans and to disfavor Democrats by drawing a number of “competitive”
    Democratic-leaning districts without also drawing a proportionate number of
    “competitive” Republican-leaning districts. But the evidence does not support the
    majority’s implicit assumption that it was possible to comply with the objective
    map-drawing requirements of Sections 2, 3, 4, 5, and 7 and this court’s judge-made
    rule that the plan must provide proportional representation while also ensuring that
    all Democratic-leaning districts are essentially safe enough to result in a
    proportional number of Democratic victories over the life of the plan. No map
    presented to the commission or to this court has achieved that. And the fact that
    the commission failed to do the impossible does not prove that it drew the second
    revised plan primarily to favor or disfavor a political party.
    {¶ 109} In fact, it is petitioners who seek a partisan plan. They ask for less
    proportionality and fewer Democratic-leaning districts in order to receive safer,
    more solidly Democrat districts. They therefore recognize that proportionality and
    safe Democratic districts are incompatible with Ohio’s political geography. But
    nowhere does Article XI ensure safe seats. With the second revised plan, the
    commission has gone from Republicans being favored to win 85 House and Senate
    seats to the Democrats’ 47, see LWV I, ___ Ohio St.3d ___, 
    2022-Ohio-65
    , ___
    N.E.3d ___, at ¶ 24, to what is currently a perfectly proportional division of districts
    in a 72-60 split. How is an attempt to create 13 more districts that favor the
    Democratic Party primarily an attempt to disfavor the Democratic Party?
    B. The plan complies with Article XI, Section 6(B)
    {¶ 110} Article XI, Section 6(B) directs the commission to draw the plan so
    that “[t]he statewide proportion of districts whose voters * * * favor each political
    party * * * correspond[s] closely to the statewide preferences of the voters of
    38
    January Term, 2022
    Ohio.” The second revised plan contains 54 percent of districts whose voters favor
    the Republican Party and 46 percent of districts whose voters favor the Democrat
    Party. Thus, it corresponds exactly to the statewide preferences of the voters of
    Ohio.
    {¶ 111} Nowhere does Article XI guarantee symmetry such that both
    political parties have the same number of “safe” seats and the same number of
    “competitive” seats. Instead, Article XI, Section 6(B) directs the commission to
    attempt to draw a map that includes districts that “favor” a party in close
    correspondence to the preferences of Ohio voters.         This is exactly what the
    commission did here.
    {¶ 112} Once the majority’s faulty premises are stripped away, there is no
    basis on which to sustain petitioners’ objections. We would overrule the objections
    and sustain the constitutionality of the second revised plan.
    III. It did not have to be this way
    {¶ 113} Fair to say, the majority’s decision creates chaos. With the primary
    election set to occur in less than two months, voters, candidates, and election
    officials remain in the dark about Ohio’s legislative-district lines. The majority
    attempts to shift the blame for that to the commission, but had the majority simply
    followed the text of the Constitution and respected the limits to this court’s power,
    none of this would be happening. To explain why, we need to take a step away
    from the process that has been followed by the majority and outline the process that
    is actually laid out in the Constitution.
    A. Background: Article XI
    {¶ 114} Article XI of the Ohio Constitution controls who draws a General
    Assembly–district plan, establishes subjective and objective map-drawing
    requirements, prescribes the length of time a district plan may last, and authorizes
    but limits judicial review. For a more detailed analysis of these provisions, see
    LWV I, ___ Ohio St.3d ___, 
    2022-Ohio-65
    , ___ N.E.3d ___, at ¶ 193-200
    (Kennedy, J., dissenting).
    {¶ 115} The subjective map-drawing requirements include the standards
    that the members of the commission keep in mind when drawing a plan. The
    39
    SUPREME COURT OF OHIO
    requirements of Section 6 relating to an attempt to create proportional districts and
    districts that do not primarily favor a political party are examples of these subjective
    requirements. On the other hand, compliance with the objective map-drawing
    requirements presents essentially a factual question for this court—it can be
    determined on the face of the plan.
    {¶ 116} Section 1 establishes the redistricting commission and provides the
    procedures it must follow. Sections 2, 3, 4, 5, and 7 are the objective map-drawing
    requirements, which the commission shall apply. Section 2 establishes the number
    of legislators per district. Section 3 sets forth the population and line-drawing rules
    for all districts and the composition and numbering of House districts, and Section
    4 prescribes the composition and numbering of Senate districts. Section 5 regulates
    district boundaries for senators who have unexpired terms, and Section 7
    establishes the governmental-unit boundaries to be used.
    {¶ 117} When a plan is adopted by a bipartisan vote including at least two
    members from each of the two largest political parties, the plan lasts for ten years,
    unless it is invalidated by this court or a federal court. Article XI, Sections 1(B)(3),
    3(A), and 8(B). When commissioners fail to adopt a plan by a bipartisan vote,
    Section 8 provides an impasse procedure under which the commission may adopt
    a plan by a simple majority vote that lasts only four years.
    {¶ 118} When a plan is challenged in this court, our authority to review the
    plan is limited. Section 9(D)(3) requires a predicate violation of the objective map-
    drawing requirements of Section 2, 3, 4, 5, or 7 before this court may invalidate a
    plan. The determination whether a plan is invalid or may be amended by the
    commission depends on whether the violation or violations of Section 2, 3, 4, 5, or
    7 are isolated, Section 9(D)(3)(a), or more widespread, Section 9(D)(3)(b), or
    significant and material, Section 9(D)(3)(c).
    {¶ 119} Theis entire General Assembly–redistricting process is displayed in
    the following flowchart:
    40
    January Term, 2022
    41
    SUPREME COURT OF OHIO
    B. The majority mischaracterizes Article XI
    {¶ 120} The second revised plan was adopted along party lines. Such a plan
    takes effect upon its filing with the secretary of state.        Article XI, Section
    8(C)(1)(a). Section 9(A) vests this court with “exclusive, original jurisdiction in all
    cases arising under this [Article XI],” but that grant of power is limited.
    {¶ 121} Although Section 9(A) is a general statement that this court is the
    proper forum to hear a challenge to a General Assembly–district plan, Section 9(D)
    is a more specific provision that sets out the limits of our review. Section 9(D)(1)
    prohibits this court from ordering “the implementation or enforcement of any
    general assembly district plan that has not been approved by the commission in the
    manner prescribed by [Article XI].” Section 9(D)(2) forbids this court from
    “order[ing] the commission to adopt a particular general assembly district plan or
    to draw a particular district.” And Section 9(D)(3) provides that certain remedies
    are available if a plan is both adopted by the commission and “does not comply with
    the requirements of [Article XI,] Section 2, 3, 4, 5, or 7.” (Emphasis added.)
    {¶ 122} For “isolated violations of those requirements,” Section 9(D)(3)(a)
    requires this court to order the commission to amend the plan to remedy the
    violations. When the violations require the commission to amend at least six House
    districts or at least two Senate districts, Section 9(D)(3)(b) directs this court to
    wholly invalidate the plan.     Finally, Section 9(D)(3)(c) permits this court to
    invalidate a plan adopted under Section 8(C) if the plan significantly violates
    Section 2, 3, 4, 5, or 7 in a manner that materially affects the ability of the plan to
    provide proportional representation and the statewide proportion of districts does
    not correspond closely to the statewide preferences of Ohio voters.
    {¶ 123} Therefore, this court’s power to invalidate a plan, in whole or in
    part, expressly depends on the existence of a predicate violation of Section 2, 3, 4,
    5, or 7. The majority, however, has never held that any of the plans adopted by the
    commission in these cases violated those provisions. See generally LWV II, ___
    Ohio St.3d ___, 
    2022-Ohio-342
    , ___ N.E.3d ___; LWV I, ___ Ohio St.3d ___,
    
    2022-Ohio-65
    , ___N.E.3d ___.
    42
    January Term, 2022
    {¶ 124} Tellingly, the majority makes no attempt to ground its exercise of
    judicial review in any provision of the Constitution.            Although the majority
    previously asserted that Article XI, Section 9(B) grants the court the power to
    invalidate a plan based on a stand-alone violation of Section 6 or for any reason,
    see LWV I at ¶ 98, it makes no mention of Section 9(B) today. But if that means
    the majority has had the epiphany that Section 9(B) does not provide the far-ranging
    authority it previously claimed, it does not say so.
    {¶ 125} In any event, because Section 9(B) does not address the authority
    of this court to do anything, it cannot be a source of judicial power. Section 9(B)
    states:
    In the event that any section of this constitution relating to
    redistricting, any general assembly district plan made by the Ohio
    redistricting commission, or any district is determined to be invalid
    by an unappealed final order of a court of competent jurisdiction
    then, notwithstanding any other provisions of this constitution, the
    commission shall be reconstituted as provided in Section 1 of this
    article, convene, and ascertain and determine a general assembly
    district plan in conformity with such provisions of this constitution
    as are then valid, including establishing terms of office and election
    of members of the general assembly from districts designated in the
    plan, to be used until the next time for redistricting under this article
    in conformity with such provisions of this constitution as are then
    valid.
    {¶ 126} Reduced to its essentials, Section 9(B) says: “In the event that * * *
    any general assembly district plan * * * is determined to be invalid by * * * a court
    of competent jurisdiction[,] then * * * the commission shall be reconstituted * * *
    and determine a general assembly district plan * * * to be used until the next time
    for redistricting.” Or put more simply, the commission shall be reconstituted and
    must adopt a new plan if its old plan is invalidated by a court.
    43
    SUPREME COURT OF OHIO
    {¶ 127} Elementary rules of grammar demonstrate that the commission, not
    this court, is the subject of Section 9(B). A simple sentence diagram shows this:
    {¶ 128} Because the commission is the subject of Section 9(B), that
    provision grants the commission the enumerated power to be reconstituted should
    a plan be invalidated. Section 9(B) does not provide this court with any enumerated
    power at all, because this court is not a subject of the provision.
    {¶ 129} If the opening clause of Section 9(B) is not an enumerated power
    giving this court authority to act, then what does the opening clause do? As is
    common with legal instruments, the opening clause serves as a condition precedent
    as to when the commission is reconstituted. In the law, a condition precedent is
    something that must occur before something else can happen.             Black’s Law
    Dictionary 366-367 (11th Ed.2019) (defining “condition precedent” as “[a]n act or
    event, other than a lapse of time, that must exist or occur before a duty to perform
    something promised arises”). The phrase “in the event that” is a “linguistic
    convention[]” used “to create conditions precedent.” Israel v. Chabra, 
    537 F.3d 86
    , 93 (2d Cir.2008); see also United States v. Gen. Dynamics Corp., 
    481 U.S. 239
    ,
    244, 
    107 S.Ct. 1732
    , 
    95 L.Ed.2d 226
     (1987), fn. 5.
    {¶ 130} Again, Section 9(B) states, “In the event that any section of this
    constitution relating to redistricting, any general assembly district plan made by the
    Ohio redistricting commission, or any district is determined to be invalid by an
    unappealed final order of a court of competent jurisdiction then, notwithstanding
    any other provisions of this constitution, the commission shall be reconstituted
    * * *.” Therefore, the power enumerated is for the commission to reconstitute, but
    44
    January Term, 2022
    only if a court of competent jurisdiction has first invalidated any section of Article
    XI or any district plan or any district.
    {¶ 131} Because Section 9(B) does not speak to what this court may or may
    not do, it does not grant this court any power to declare a district plan invalid based
    on a stand-alone violation of Section 6. Rather,
    the negative implication of Article XI, Section 9 is obvious. Section
    9(D) is a provision that limits the authority of this court in reviewing
    a General Assembly–district plan.        It prohibits this court from
    ordering the commission to adopt a specific plan and from drawing
    the districts ourselves. And that same provision provides that this
    court may invalidate a General Assembly–district plan in whole or
    in part only if we first find a violation of Article XI, Section 2, 3, 4,
    5, or 7.
    LWV I, ___ Ohio St.3d ___, 
    2022-Ohio-65
    , ___N.E.3d ___, at ¶ 227 (Kennedy, J.,
    dissenting).
    {¶ 132} Indeed, “[i]f violations of Section 6 were intended to be actionable,
    one would naturally expect Section 9(D) to say so.              But that language is
    conspicuously absent.” Id. at ¶ 217 (Kennedy, J., dissenting). The exclusion of
    Section 6 from the remedies expressly provided by Section 9(D)(3) demonstrates
    that any remedy for such violations is not judicially enforceable—the inclusion of
    Sections 2, 3, 4, 5, and 7 within the provision shows that Section 6 was intentionally
    excluded from it. See Scalia & Garner, Reading Law: The Interpretation of Legal
    Texts 107 (2012). For this reason, “the standards established by Article XI, Section
    6 are directory and therefore not judicially enforceable.” LWV I at ¶ 245 (Kennedy,
    J., dissenting).
    {¶ 133} But this raises the question why.          Why would Section 9(D)
    enumerate the power of judicial review for violations of Section 2, 3, 4, 5, or 7 but
    not for Section 1 or 6? The answer to this question is obvious. The Ohio
    Constitution limits this court’s review of a district plan to alleged violations of the
    45
    SUPREME COURT OF OHIO
    objective map-drawing requirements. Because the subjective standards turn on the
    perception of each member of this court, few principles can be identified to guide
    and confine the court’s review of them. Compliance with the standards set forth in
    Section 6 is solely a matter of degree: Has a sufficient attempt been made? Does
    the proportionality of representation correspond closely enough to voter
    preferences? Is a district compact enough? Such questions require this court to
    determine what the commission was thinking when it was adopting a plan. But
    how can a court know this? Is the court supposed to examine evidence as to the
    collective thinking of the whole commission, a majority of the members of the
    commission, or each member of the commission? Indeed, one need look no further
    than the concurring opinion’s endorsement of Section 6 as a standardless
    opportunity for judicial “discretion in analyzing a district plan,” concurring
    opinion, ¶ 58, to understand the dangers the amendment’s architects sought to avoid
    in making only violations of the objective requirements reviewable. Removing
    subjectivity from the equation and relying on purely objective measures affords the
    voters of Ohio the promise of Article XI: an end to gerrymandering.
    {¶ 134} In contrast to the wholly subjective standards of Section 6—which
    prohibit the plan from having a primary purpose of partisan favoritism and requires
    compact districts and close correspondence with the preferences of Ohio voters—
    the judicially enforceable requirements of Sections 2, 3, 4, 5, and 7 are objective in
    nature. Violations of Sections 2, 3, 4, 5, and 7 are readily observable—with the
    right software, anyone can see those violations. The population requirements either
    are met or they are not. The same is true regarding the order in which the districts
    are drawn and the number of divisions of governmental units. Compliance with
    these objective map-drawing requirements can be proved by evidence and decided
    by a court.
    {¶ 135} So, with precision, the amendments to Article XI denied this court
    the power to invalidate a plan based solely on the court’s subjective view of a
    violation of Section 1 or 6. As Justice Felix Frankfurter once observed, “when the
    Constitution * * * gives strict definition of power or specific limitations upon it we
    cannot extend the definition or remove the translation. Precisely because ‘it is a
    46
    January Term, 2022
    constitution we are expounding,’; we ought not to take liberties with it.” Natl. Mut.
    Ins. Co. of Dist. of Columbia v. Tidewater Transfer Co., 
    337 U.S. 582
    , 646-647, 
    69 S.Ct. 1173
    , 
    93 L.Ed. 1556
     (1949) (Frankfurter, J., dissenting), quoting McCulloch
    v. Maryland, 
    17 U.S. 316
    , 407, 
    4 L.Ed. 579
     (1819).
    {¶ 136} The careful calculus embodied within Article XI imposes
    mandatory requirements on the commission in Sections 2, 3, 4, 5, and 7 that justify
    this court’s invalidating a plan if the objective measures are not met. It also directs
    the commission in Sections 1 and 6 to follow certain procedures and standards in
    adopting a plan while also appealing to each commissioner’s oath to uphold the
    Ohio Constitution, to discourage partisan favoritism and encourage proportional
    representation in the plan. But Article XI’s plain terms do not make these directory
    requirements, which involve considerations best left to the political branches of our
    government, enforceable by this court, a forum in which politics may not intrude.
    Article XI does this by expressly enumerating this court’s power to invalidate a
    plan only when Section 2, 3, 4, 5, or 7 has been violated; by failing to enumerate
    such a power for this court to enforce compliance with Section 1 or 6, the architects
    of Article XI necessarily imposed a limit beyond which this court may not cross.
    The majority today, as in its previous decisions in these cases, has utterly failed to
    justify its exercise of power expressly withheld.
    C. The unfulfilled promise of Article XI
    {¶ 137} Rather than follow the process established by the Ohio Constitution
    (as depicted in the simple flowchart above), the majority creates a new remedy to
    invalidate a plan for failing to comply with Article XI, Section 6 or for any other
    reason. Unmoored from the plain language of the Ohio Constitution or any basic
    notions of judicial restraint, the majority has injected needless uncertainty and
    confusion into the 2022 election cycle. By distorting and misrepresenting the plain
    language of Article XI, Section 9(B), the majority has empowered itself to use a
    judicially unenforceable provision to strike down any district plan that the
    commission adopts. The result of this standardless judging is the application of ad
    hoc rules to usurp the authority of an independent constitutional body, with the
    47
    SUPREME COURT OF OHIO
    ultimate goal of forcing the commission to eventually adopt the plan that the
    majority has in mind.
    {¶ 138} It did not have to be this way. The official ballot language for Issue
    1, the 2015 proposed constitutional amendment to Article XI, reflected that the
    threat of a four-year plan was meant to foster bipartisanship; the ballot language
    stated that Article XI would “prevent deadlock by limiting the length of time any
    plan adopted without bipartisan support is effective.” Ballot Board: 2015, Ballot
    Issues for the 2015 November Election, Issue 1, Ballot Language, available at
    https://www.ohiosos.gov/legislation-and-ballot-issues/ballot-board/ballot-board-
    2015/ (accessed Jan. 10, 2022) [https://perma.cc/ZP9U-VN86]. “The apparent
    hope was that the uncertainties and electoral vagaries that come with a four-year
    plan would motivate political actors to reach a consensus.” LWV I, ___ Ohio St.3d
    ___, 
    2022-Ohio-65
    , ___ N.E.3d ___, at ¶ 235 (Kennedy, J., dissenting).
    {¶ 139} The people were led to believe that Issue 1 would create a bipartisan
    process that would yield more competitive elections within more compact House
    and Senate districts, that the process would be public, and that any deadlock over a
    district plan would be prevented by limiting the life of a plan adopted along party
    lines to four years.
    {¶ 140} Contemporary media accounts heralded the four-year-plan impasse
    procedure as a key element of the proposed amendment, in that the consequence of
    the failure to attain bipartisan agreement on a ten-year plan would be a partisan plan
    limited to four years.
    Issue 1’s key reform is that for an ‘apportionment’
    (legislative map) to apply, as now, for 10 years, at least two minority
    party Redistricting commissioners would have to support it.
    Otherwise, the map would only apply for four years.
    No coincidence, Ohio elects governors, auditors and
    secretaries of state every four years.          So: A Redistricting
    Commission majority that refused to bargain with a Redistricting
    Commission minority to approve a 10-year map might find itself the
    48
    January Term, 2022
    commission’s new minority in four years—when new General
    Assembly districts would have to be drawn. That is, Issue 1 would
    tie carrots to sticks to encourage bipartisan district-drawing.
    Suddes, State Issue 1 an opportunity for Democrats, Dayton Daily News (July 19,
    2015). Senate President Huffman, a state representative at the time, said: “ ‘This
    system basically says we are going to have a system that you now have an incentive
    to take in account what the minority party wants. * * * If there’s a chance your
    district may change four years from now, that is bad. There’s value in a 10-year
    map as proposed to a four-year map. * * * All the people sitting at the table now
    have an incentive to compromise.’ ” Sowinski, Huffman gives sales pitch for
    redistricting in Ohio, Lima News (Aug. 29, 2015).
    {¶ 141} The voters understood that the proposed amendment included a
    process geared toward bipartisan agreement and that it contained an alternative with
    a real political cost—a plan passed on a partisan basis would last only four years
    and be subject to revision by a reconstituted redistricting commission with new
    members, possibly of a different political party. The hedge against partisanship,
    then, was the limitation of a partisan plan to four years. But because of the
    majority’s activist decision to substitute itself for the commission in Article XI’s
    redistricting process, one has to ask: Will the people ever realize the promise of
    what they adopted?
    {¶ 142} What was not contemplated when Article XI was adopted was that
    this court would ignore the plain text of the Constitution and seize control of the
    map-drawing process. Yet that is what the majority has done, tearing down the
    goalposts it erected in LWV I and LWV II.
    {¶ 143} The majority hoists the blame for the looming constitutional crisis
    on the commission, but that is simply a diversion. The blame falls solely with the
    four justices in the majority today. The majority has thrust the court into this
    political process and wreaked havoc. It has usurped the sovereignty the people
    exercised in adopting Article XI and has seized the commission’s powers as its
    own.
    49
    SUPREME COURT OF OHIO
    IV. Conclusion
    {¶ 144} The majority’s decree today is an exercise of raw political power.
    Nothing less. Nothing more.
    {¶ 145} The Constitution limits this court’s authority to order the
    commission to adopt a new plan, but the majority ignores this limitation. The
    majority invalidates a plan that complies with all constitutional requirements. And
    now that the commission has met the extraconstitutional guidelines announced by
    the majority in this court’s previous decisions, the majority finds those efforts
    insufficient. The goalposts that the majority erected in League I, and moved in
    League II, have now been torn down entirely.
    {¶ 146} The majority demands a new plan but provides precious little
    guidance on how that is to be achieved. An imminent election is thrown into
    disarray and Ohio nears a constitutional crisis, but the majority offers the
    commission only standardless judging and a vague admonition to try again.
    {¶ 147} In so doing, the majority proves prescient Thomas Jefferson’s fear
    that the Constitution would be “a mere thing of wax in the hands of the judiciary,
    which they may twist, and shape into any form they please.” 12 The Works of
    Thomas Jefferson 137 (P. Ford Ed.1905). We disagree that fundamental law is so
    malleable.
    {¶ 148} Because the majority does not exercise authority granted to it by
    the Ohio Constitution but instead nakedly wields the judicial power, we dissent.
    FISCHER, J., concurs in paragraphs 138-143 of the foregoing opinion.
    _________________
    FISCHER, J., dissenting.
    {¶ 149} I must respectfully dissent.
    {¶ 150} As stated in my previous dissents in these cases, I would not reach
    the merits of petitioners’ objections. See League of Women Voters of Ohio v. Ohio
    Redistricting Comm., ___ Ohio St.3d ___, 
    2022-Ohio-65
    , ___ N.E.3d ___, ¶ 279
    (“League I”) (Fischer, J., dissenting); League of Women Voters of Ohio v. Ohio
    Redistricting Comm., ___ Ohio St.3d ___, 
    2022-Ohio-342
    , ___ N.E.3d ___, ¶ 149
    50
    January Term, 2022
    (“League II”) (Fischer, J., dissenting). The majority opinion here represents a third
    attempt at exercising authority not granted to this court by the Ohio Constitution.
    {¶ 151} Ohio now finds itself stuck in the hole dug by the majority opinions
    in League I and League II. As I have explained before, if this court had followed
    the clear language of the Ohio Constitution, the original plan adopted by respondent
    Ohio Redistricting Commission would already be in effect for four years under
    Article XI, Section 8(C)(1)(a) of the Ohio Constitution. See League I at ¶ 314
    (Fischer, J., dissenting). Ohioans would have constitutionally mandated certainty
    regarding which districts they live in and when their elections would take place.
    And both Ohioans and the members of the redistricting commission would have
    had four years within which to learn from the impasse reached by the commission
    in 2021 and work toward a better outcome when the commission reconvened in
    2025 under Article XI, Section 8(D). If this court had correctly applied Section
    8(C)(1)(a) from the beginning, we would not find ourselves in the situation we are
    in now.
    {¶ 152} I still believe that it is improper for this court to consider the merits
    of petitioners’ objections in these cases. But because the majority opinion considers
    the merits of the objections, I am forced to do so as well.
    I. Article XI, Sections 6(A) and 6(B)
    {¶ 153} In addressing the merits of petitioners’ arguments, I would
    conclude that petitioners have not shown beyond a reasonable doubt that the second
    revised General Assembly–district plan violates Article XI, Section 6(A) or 6(B).
    In fact, petitioners’ proof does not even meet the lower standard of clear and
    convincing evidence. I would accordingly overrule the objections.
    {¶ 154} Petitioners must prove that the second revised plan is
    unconstitutional beyond a reasonable doubt. League I, ___ Ohio St.3d ___, 2022-
    Ohio-65, ___ N.E.3d ___, at ¶ 339-340 (Fischer, J., dissenting), citing Wilson v.
    Kasich, 
    134 Ohio St.3d 221
    , 
    2012-Ohio-5367
    , 
    981 N.E.2d 814
    , ¶ 20. In this
    situation, the presumption of constitutional validity applies. Id. at ¶ 340, citing
    Wilson at ¶ 21. While the majority opinion cites this standard, it does not actually
    apply it.
    51
    SUPREME COURT OF OHIO
    {¶ 155} As noted in League II, Article XI, Section 6 does not require parity
    in terms of each political party’s vote share in each district or prohibit the creation
    of competitive districts. League II, ___ Ohio St.3d ___, 
    2022-Ohio-342
    , ___
    N.E.3d ___, at ¶ 40, 62. The main constitutional flaw identified by the League II
    majority opinion regarding the first revised plan was the large number of districts
    “favoring” the Democratic Party by less than one percentage point. Id. at ¶ 40, 62-
    63. The majority opinion determined that the high number of virtual-tie districts
    that had been designated Democratic-leaning was “demonstrative of an intent to
    favor the Republican Party.” Id. at ¶ 40.
    {¶ 156} Petitioners want this court to apply that reasoning from League II
    but to shift the threshold for what amounts to a “toss-up” district from 51 percent
    to 52 percent. In other words, they want more Democratic-leaning districts that
    have a vote share of more than 52 percent, even if strict proportionality is thereby
    sacrificed.
    {¶ 157} As noted in the majority opinion, counsel for some of the
    petitioners in these cases submitted to the commission an updated version of a
    proposed General Assembly–district plan created by Dr. Jonathan Rodden (the
    “Rodden III plan”). Tellingly, even if this court were to assume that the Rodden
    III plan otherwise complies with Article XI, its composition of additional “safe”
    Democratic districts is not evidence that the second revised plan violates Article
    XI, Section 6(A).       The fact that the commission tried to attain strict
    proportionality—instead of a less proportional plan that includes more “safe”
    Democratic-leaning districts—does not, nor could it, show a primary intent to favor
    Republicans or disfavor Democrats. Rather, it appears that the commission’s
    primary intent was to comply with League I and League II.
    {¶ 158} Moreover, the evidence before this court points to the realities of
    Ohio’s political geography as being a factor in the commission’s allocation of so-
    called “safe” and “competitive” seats under the second revised plan. All the parties
    have agreed that Ohio’s political geography makes it difficult to create Democratic-
    leaning districts in many areas of the state. See League I, ___ Ohio St.3d ___, 2022-
    Ohio-65, ___ N.E.3d ___, at ¶ 127-128. Indeed, in none of the plans discussed by
    52
    January Term, 2022
    the parties—i.e., the second revised plan, the Rodden III plan, or the plan submitted
    by respondent Senator Vernon Sykes and respondent House Minority Leader
    Allison Russo (the “Sykes-Russo plan”)—is the distribution of the margins for
    winning a seat “symmetrical.” All the plans have considerably more Republican-
    leaning than Democratic-leaning districts in which the majority political party’s
    vote share is 55 percent or more.
    {¶ 159} Even in the Rodden III plan, which contains the most total House
    and Senate districts with Democratic vote shares of 55 percent or higher, there are
    only 40 such Democratic-leaning districts—as opposed to the 66 such Republican-
    leaning districts (i.e., 50 percent of the General Assembly) in that plan. As noted
    by Dr. Michael Barber, a Brigham Young University political-science professor
    (with expertise in advanced statistical methods for analyzing election data) whose
    expert testimony was submitted by respondents President of the Senate Matthew
    Huffman and Speaker of the House Robert Cupp, “[t]his is a function of Democratic
    voters in the state being densely clustered in homogenous precincts in the largest
    cities of the state while Republican voters are more scattered throughout the state
    in more heterogeneous districts.”
    {¶ 160} Further cutting against petitioners’ objections is the fact that their
    proposed 52-percent-vote-share benchmark is not grounded anywhere in the Ohio
    Constitution. In League II, the majority opinion improperly called it “absurd” to
    label districts with a Democratic vote share between 50 and 51 percent as
    “Democratic-leaning,” particularly because the first revised plan contained no
    districts with a similarly slim Republican leaning. League II, ___ Ohio St.3d ___,
    
    2022-Ohio-342
    , ___ N.E.3d ___, at ¶ 61. But the majority opinion in League II did
    not identify a threshold for labeling a district as a “toss-up.” It stated only that
    when a redistricting plan contains a large number of districts whose voters “favor”
    Democrats at a vote share between 50 and 51 percent and contains no districts that
    favor Republicans at such a razor-thin margin, the plan shows evidence of having
    been intentionally drawn with partisan bias. Id. at ¶ 40. The mere existence of
    numerous closely competitive Democratic-leaning districts in the second revised
    53
    SUPREME COURT OF OHIO
    plan, however, does not necessarily show that the second revised plan was drawn
    primarily to favor or disfavor a particular political party.
    {¶ 161} In addition, other factors that led to the invalidation of the previous
    plans in League I and League II are not present here. In both League I and League
    II, the majority opinions relied on statistical evidence submitted by Dr. Kosuke Imai
    (a professor in Harvard University’s departments of government and of statistics
    who has expertise in developing simulation algorithms for evaluating legislative
    redistricting) showing that the plans were statistical outliers that favored the
    Republican party more than in any of the 5,000 simulated plans that he had
    generated. League I, ___ Ohio St.3d ___, 
    2022-Ohio-65
    , ___ N.E.3d ___, at
    ¶ 122-126; League II at ¶ 43-44. .
    {¶ 162} This time, petitioners have offered no such analysis from Dr. Imai
    or any other similar expert. Dr. Imai had also opined that the first revised plan was
    an outlier when analyzed under four so-called political-science metrics for
    measuring partisan bias—efficiency gap, mean-median gap, partisan symmetry,
    and declination. Conspicuously absent this time is any evidence relating to these
    metrics, other than that of partisan symmetry, which is discussed below. This is
    significant because respondents have submitted evidence showing that one of the
    partisan-bias measures—the efficiency-gap analysis—shows that the second
    revised plan’s bias toward the Republican Party is actually slight or nonexistent.
    Dr. Barber noted:
    Using the 9 statewide elections [from 2016-2020, as used by
    the commission], the third Commission map has an efficiency gap
    value of 2.43%, which indicates a slight bias in the direction of the
    Democratic Party. The Rodden III plan has an efficiency gap value
    of -1.13%, which indicates a slight bias in the direction of the
    Republican Party. The Sykes Russo plan has an efficiency gap value
    of 0.38%, which indicates a very small bias in the direction of the
    [Democratic] Party. Overall, all of these numbers are small and
    indicate relative balance between the parties.
    54
    January Term, 2022
    Dr. Barber also noted that regarding the Senate map in the second revised plan, the
    efficiency-gap value is similar to that for the Rodden III and Sykes-Russo plans, with
    all three plans indicating “relative balance between the parties.”
    {¶ 163} The evidence of partisan asymmetry in the second revised plan is
    weaker than it was for the plans at issue in League I and League II. Dr. Michael
    Latner, a professor of political science at California Polytechnic State University
    with expertise in electoral-system design and statistical methods in elections and in
    designing electoral districts, concludes that Democrats could expect to win
    approximately 44 percent of the House seats (approximately 44 seats) under the
    second revised plan if they won 50 percent of the statewide vote whereas
    Republicans could expect to win approximately 53 percent of the seats
    (approximately 52 seats) if they won 50 percent of the statewide vote. Similarly,
    Dr. Latner opines that Democrats could expect to win 45 percent of the Senate seats
    (approximately 15 seats) if they won 50 percent of the statewide vote whereas
    Republicans could expect to win 52 percent of the seats (approximately 17 seats) if
    they won 50 percent of the statewide vote. This is evidence of possible partisan
    asymmetry, to be sure. But Dr. Latner’s analysis also shows that the second revised
    plan significantly improved on the first two plans. Indeed, Dr. Latner concludes
    that the partisan-symmetry indexes for the second revised plan are closer to those
    of the Rodden III plan than the commission’s first two plans.
    {¶ 164} Another factor that guided the majority opinions in League I and
    League II in their evaluations (and invalidations) of the previous plans was that “an
    alternative, more proportional plan” was possible. League II, ___ Ohio St.3d ___,
    
    2022-Ohio-342
    , ___ N.E.3d ___, at ¶ 45-47; see also League I, ___ Ohio St.3d ___,
    
    2022-Ohio-65
    , ___ N.E.3d ___, at ¶ 126. That factor does not support petitioners’
    objections here. The second revised plan, at least on its face, is strictly proportional
    to the statewide preferences of Ohio voters.         Instead of pushing for a more
    proportional plan, petitioners now ask this court to invalidate the second revised
    plan because there are alternative plans that do not contain as many competitive
    Democratic-leaning districts (i.e., districts with a Democratic vote share of less than
    55
    SUPREME COURT OF OHIO
    52 percent). I do not find this argument persuasive, because it has no grounding in
    either the Ohio Constitution or the previous majority opinions in League I and
    League II, which were concerned that there existed alternative plans that were
    closer to strict proportionality. Now that the commission has come close to
    achieving strict proportionality—while minimizing Democratic-leaning districts
    with vote shares of less than 51 percent—the evidence regarding alternative plans
    is much less probative of any partisan bias.
    {¶ 165} As the commission argues, petitioners’ objections to the second
    revised plan essentially ask this court to compel the commission to adopt a plan in
    which there are “fewer Democratic-leaning seats, [with] the remaining Democratic-
    leaning seats be[ing] less competitive.” But the Ohio Constitution does not compel
    the commission to eliminate competitive districts, and it “does not require exact
    parity in terms of the vote share of each district.” League II at ¶ 40. Article XI,
    Section 6(A) requires that the commission not draw a plan primarily to favor or
    disfavor a political party. For the reasons stated above, I would find that petitioners
    have not proved beyond a reasonable doubt, which is unquestionably the standard
    of review in these cases, see majority opinion at ¶ 23, that the commission adopted
    the second revised plan primarily to favor Republicans or to disfavor Democrats.
    {¶ 166} The Article XI, Section 8(C)(2) statement for the second revised plan
    indicates that the plan contains 54 Republican-leaning House districts, 45
    Democratic-leaning House districts, 18 Republican-leaning Senate districts, and 15
    Democratic-leaning Senate districts—for a total of 72 Republican-leaning districts
    and 60 Democratic-leaning districts. This equals a 54.5 percent Republican seat
    share and a 45.5 percent Democratic seat share across the entire plan. Those
    numbers, if credited, surely correspond closely to the statewide preferences of Ohio’s
    voters, which the majority opinion in League I identified as about 54 percent favoring
    Republicans and about 46 percent favoring Democrats. League I at ¶ 108.
    {¶ 167} One of the main issues as to the first revised plan’s constitutionality
    identified in the majority opinion in League II was the disparity between the number
    of barely-Democratic-leaning House districts (12) and the number of barely-
    Republican-leaning House districts (zero). See League II, ___ Ohio St.3d ___,
    56
    January Term, 2022
    
    2022-Ohio-342
    , ___ N.E.3d ___, at ¶ 61 (referring to “very close ‘toss-up
    districts’ ”). But what that majority opinion failed to define, and what this court
    should not and may not define under Article XI, is the outside limit of what makes
    a district a “toss-up” or “competitive.” It did not need to do so in League II, as it
    found the 12 districts at issue to be “surely” competitive “under any measure.” Id.
    at ¶ 62. The “competitive” districts under the plan at issue in League II had
    Democratic vote shares between 50 and 51 percent—in fact, nine had vote shares
    between 50 and 50.5 percent. Id. at ¶ 57. By contrast, the majority opinion
    specifically identified a Republican-leaning district with a vote share of 52.6
    percent, yet it did not count that district as “competitive.” Id.
    {¶ 168} The majority opinion in League II made clear that Article XI does
    not prohibit competitive districts, id. at ¶ 62, and “does not require exact parity in
    terms of the vote share of each district,” id. at ¶ 47. So neither the bare existence
    of “competitive” districts—however that term is defined—nor the mere existence
    of minimal asymmetry in the partisan vote shares between the political parties’
    districts indicates that the second revised plan violates Article XI, Section 6(B).
    {¶ 169} If this court is to be consistent with League II, it must exclude the
    districts with vote shares of under 51 percent from the proportionality assessment.
    The question is whether the districts with vote shares between 51 and 52 percent
    must be excluded as well.
    {¶ 170} Obviously, at a certain level of partisan support, any concern over
    the commission’s designating “competitive” districts as ones that “favor” a party
    falls away, even if there remains a large disparity in the vote shares of each party’s
    districts. For example, if all the Republican districts in a plan favored Republicans
    by 90 percent but all the Democratic districts in the plan favored Democrats by
    “only” 65 percent, the vote share would still be quite disparate, but it would be
    absurd to say that the Democratic districts did not truly “favor” Democrats.
    Whether a vote share between 51 and 52 percent is sufficient to eliminate the
    League II majority opinion’s concerns about any disparate application of the
    “favor” provision is an issue for which the Constitution provides no guidance.
    57
    SUPREME COURT OF OHIO
    {¶ 171} This lack of constitutional guidance about what makes a district
    “competitive” militates strongly in favor of judicial restraint: this court should
    conclude that the commission deserves the leeway that we give to the promulgator
    of any legislative act. See State ex rel. Ohio Congress of Parents & Teachers v.
    State Bd. of Edn., 
    111 Ohio St.3d 568
    , 
    2006-Ohio-5512
    , 
    857 N.E.2d 1148
    , ¶ 73;
    Wilson, 
    134 Ohio St.3d 221
    , 
    2012-Ohio-5367
    , 
    981 N.E.2d 814
    , at ¶ 48. Here, the
    majority opinion leaves unclear when a district ceases to be “competitive” and thus
    counts toward the proportionality determination. In my view, we have passed that
    point and must now exercise proper judicial restraint. Accordingly, I would
    conclude that the districts with vote shares between 51 and 52 percent must not be
    excluded from this court’s proportionality analysis.
    {¶ 172} Moreover, respondents have identified various reasons that explain
    why the second revised plan includes so many districts with Democratic vote shares
    between 51 and 52 percent. For instance, as a matter of simple logic, moving
    Republican voters out of one district in the plan to make the district more favorable
    to Democrats naturally makes the surrounding districts more favorable to
    Republicans.
    {¶ 173} Also militating in favor of judicial restraint is the fact that the
    alternative plans favored by petitioners and Senator Sykes and House Minority
    Leader Russo contain a disparate allocation of districts with less than a 53 percent
    vote share (although the alternative plans do contain fewer Democratic districts
    with less than a 53 percent vote share than the second revised plan contains).
    Specifically, the second revised plan has 29 total House and Senate districts with
    Democratic vote shares between 50 and 53 percent but only one Republican district
    within that range; the Rodden III plan has 14 total House and Senate districts with
    Democratic vote shares between 50 and 53 percent but only 4 Republican districts
    within that range; and the Sykes-Russo plan has 14 total House and Senate districts
    with Democratic vote shares between 50 and 53 percent but only 2 Republican
    districts within that range. Maybe the commission could have done a better job
    under this particular metric. (Senate President Huffman and House Speaker Cupp
    have argued, without citing any evidence, that doing better on this metric would
    58
    January Term, 2022
    negatively impact district compactness, another goal the commission is required to
    attempt to achieve under Article XI, Section 6(C).) But it also is clear that the
    problem of disparate allocation of competitive districts is unlikely to go away
    entirely.
    {¶ 174} In sum, the key to the majority opinion’s Article XI, Section 6(B)
    analysis in League II was the commission’s counting a significant number of
    districts as favoring Democrats that did not actually “favor” them because the
    districts were “toss-ups”—and there were no comparable districts in the Republican
    column. With respect to the districts with vote shares between 50 and 52 percent
    in the second revised plan, the disparity in distribution remains—there are no
    comparable Republican districts. But by expanding the meaning of “very close
    ‘toss-up districts’ ” as that term was used in League II, ___ Ohio St.3d ___, 2022-
    Ohio-342, ___ N.E.3d ___, at ¶ 61 (vote share between 50 and 51 percent) to
    include districts with vote shares between 51 and 52 percent, the majority opinion
    moves into uncharted constitutional waters. I heartily disagree with that type of
    approach because it takes this court out of its judicial role and puts it in a legislative
    one.
    {¶ 175} If we exclude from consideration only the House and Senate
    districts with between 50 and 51 percent vote shares in the second revised plan, the
    plan would have a total of 57.6 percent Republican districts and 42.4 percent
    Democratic districts. Given this breakdown, I would conclude that petitioners have
    not shown beyond a reasonable doubt that the commission did not attempt to draft
    a plan that closely corresponds to the statewide preferences of Ohio’s voters. Given
    the fact that the alternative plans are less proportional than the second revised plan,
    this is a hard showing for petitioners to make. I would conclude that they have
    failed to meet their burden, as a breakdown of 57.6 percent Republican districts and
    42.4 percent Democratic districts corresponds closely to the statewide preferences
    of Ohio’s voters based on the record before this court.
    {¶ 176} I also disagree with the majority opinion’s criticism of Senate
    President Huffman’s concern for protecting incumbents. See majority opinion at
    ¶ 36. The Supreme Court of the United States established long ago that “avoiding
    59
    SUPREME COURT OF OHIO
    contests between incumbent[s]” is a “legitimate objective[]” in redistricting.
    Karcher v. Daggett, 462, U.S. 725, 740, 
    103 S.Ct. 2653
    , 
    77 L.Ed.2d 133
     (1983).
    With this principle in mind, it is improper to criticize Senate President Huffman for
    voicing a concern that a plan might prevent the commission from attaining a
    constitutionally legitimate objective.
    {¶ 177} I would conclude that petitioners have failed to prove beyond a
    reasonable doubt that the commission violated Article XI, Section 6. In concluding
    otherwise, the majority opinion eschews the principle of judicial restraint and opts
    instead to take an active role in the redistricting process. Such an approach has no
    basis in the Ohio Constitution and encroaches on the discretion of the commission,
    which has the sole constitutional authority to draft district plans. I would overrule
    petitioners’ objections because they do not have a firm basis under the Ohio
    Constitution or League II.
    II. Article XI, Section 1(C)
    {¶ 178} The petitioners in Bennett v. Ohio Redistricting Comm. argue that
    the commission also violated Article XI, Section 1(C), which provides:
    At the first meeting of the commission, which the governor
    shall convene only in a year ending in the numeral one, except as
    provided in Sections 8 and 9 of this article and in Sections 1 and 3
    of Article XIX of this constitution, the commission shall set a
    schedule for the adoption of procedural rules for the operation of the
    commission.
    The commission shall release to the public a proposed
    general assembly district plan for the boundaries for each of the
    ninety-nine house of representatives districts and the thirty-three
    senate districts. The commission shall draft the proposed plan in the
    manner prescribed in this article.       Before adopting, but after
    introducing, a proposed plan, the commission shall conduct a
    minimum of three public hearings across the state to present the
    proposed plan and shall seek public input regarding the proposed
    60
    January Term, 2022
    plan. All meetings of the commission shall be open to the public.
    Meetings shall be broadcast by electronic means of transmission
    using a medium readily accessible by the general public.
    The commission shall adopt a final general assembly district
    plan not later than the first day of September of a year ending in the
    numeral one.      After the commission adopts a final plan, the
    commission shall promptly file the plan with the secretary of state.
    Upon filing with the secretary of state, the plan shall become
    effective.
    Four weeks after the adoption of a general assembly district
    plan or a congressional district plan, whichever is later, the
    commission shall be automatically dissolved.
    {¶ 179} The majority opinion purports to avoid reaching the argument that
    the commission violated Article XI, Section 1(C).            However, in analyzing
    petitioners’ claims under Article XI, Section 6, the majority opinion faults the
    commission for failing to comply with Article XI, Section 1(C). Given the majority
    opinion’s determination in that regard and the fact that the Bennett petitioners assert
    Article XI, Section 1 claims, I find it necessary to address those claims now.
    {¶ 180} The Bennett petitioners focus on the notice and public-hearing
    requirements in the second paragraph of Section 1(C), which, they argue, required
    the commission to release a proposed plan and hold three public hearings before
    adopting the second revised plan. But the second paragraph of Section 1(C) may
    not be read in isolation. See State v. Porterfield, 
    106 Ohio St.3d 5
    , 2005-Ohio-
    3095, 
    829 N.E.2d 690
    , ¶ 12. And Article XI, Section 1(C)’s third paragraph
    suggests a much narrower meaning of the second paragraph—i.e., that a proposal
    must be released and three public hearings must be held before September 1 of a
    year ending in the numeral one. When Section 1(C) is read as a whole, it is clear
    that the procedural requirements in its second paragraph do not apply once the
    commission has missed the September 1 deadline.
    61
    SUPREME COURT OF OHIO
    {¶ 181} Article XI, Section 8(A) confirms that reading.         Section 8(A)
    provides:
    (1) If the Ohio redistricting commission fails to adopt a final
    general assembly district plan not later than the first day of
    September of a year ending in the numeral one, in accordance with
    Section 1 of this article, the commission shall introduce a proposed
    general assembly district plan by a simple majority vote of the
    commission.
    (2) After introducing a proposed general assembly district
    plan under division (A)(1) of this section, the commission shall hold
    a public hearing concerning the proposed plan, at which the public
    may offer testimony and at which the commission may adopt
    amendments to the proposed plan. Members of the commission
    should attend the hearing; however, only a quorum of the members
    of the commission is required to conduct the hearing.
    (3) After the hearing described in division (A)(2) of this
    section is held, and not later than the fifteenth day of September of
    a year ending in the numeral one, the commission shall adopt a final
    general assembly district plan, either by the vote required to adopt a
    plan under division (B)(3) of Section 1 of this article or by a simple
    majority vote of the commission.
    {¶ 182} Article XI, Section 8(A) establishes a new set of rules when the
    commission fails to meet the September 1 deadline: the commission must introduce
    a proposed plan by a simple majority vote, Section 8(A)(1), and must hold “a public
    hearing,” Section 8(A)(2).      The commission’s deadline for meeting those
    requirements is September 15 of a year ending in the numeral one.                Ohio
    Constitution, Article XI, Section 8(A)(3).
    {¶ 183} Without, in my view, any constitutional authority to do so, the
    majority opinion in League II ordered the commission, under Article XI, Section
    62
    January Term, 2022
    9(B), “to be reconstituted, to convene, and to draft and adopt an entirely new
    General Assembly–district plan that conforms with the Ohio Constitution,” League
    II, ___ Ohio St.3d ___, 
    2022-Ohio-342
    , ___ N.E.3d ___, at ¶ 67. Neither that order
    nor the language of Article XI, Section 1 required the commission to comply with
    the second paragraph of Section 1(C). The commission therefore did not need to
    “release” its proposal or hold three public hearings before adopting the second
    revised plan.
    {¶ 184} I would overrule the Bennett petitioners’ objection arguing that the
    second revised plan violates Article XI, Section 1(C), and I disagree with the
    majority opinion’s using Section 1(C) as the basis for any support of its conclusions
    on the Article XI, Section 6 claims presented here.
    III. Remedies
    A. The Majority Opinion’s Instructions
    {¶ 185} In invalidating the second revised plan, the majority opinion
    imposes new requirements for the commission to follow in adopting a fourth plan.
    First, the majority opinion requires that the commission retain an independent map
    drawer before drafting a new plan. Majority opinion at ¶ 30. Second, the majority
    opinion orders the commission, presumably along with this independent map
    drawer, to draft the plan in public and convene “frequent” meetings. Id. at ¶ 44.
    {¶ 186} These requirements are unprecedented in Ohio. They cannot be
    found anywhere in the Constitution, nor were they demanded of the commission
    when its other plans were invalidated the first two times the parties appeared before
    this court. The imposition of these judicially created requirements is troubling. The
    majority opinion quotes no constitutional text to support this order. And if these
    requirements are so critical to the redistricting process, then why are they being
    imposed only now, more than two months after the decision in League I, ___ Ohio
    St.3d ___, 
    2022-Ohio-65
    , ___ N.E.3d ___, and after the commission has twice
    reconvened to adopt revised plans?
    {¶ 187} Equally troubling are the timing requirements imposed in the
    majority opinion. This court previously directed the commission to adopt a new
    plan within ten days. League I at ¶ 137; League II, ___ Ohio St.3d ___, 2022-Ohio-
    63
    SUPREME COURT OF OHIO
    342, ___ N.E.3d ___, at ¶ 68. In light of the new requirements imposed by the
    majority opinion, it seems logical that the commission should have more time to
    complete its task. Yet it does not. The approach set forth in the majority opinion
    seems to ignore the practical realities facing not only the commission but also
    Ohioans, who are now confronted with great uncertainty regarding their upcoming
    elections.
    {¶ 188} These unfortunate realities are a direct result of the approach taken
    by the majority opinion today and by the majority opinions in League I and League
    II. All of this could have been avoided had this court applied the language of Article
    XI, Section 8(C)(1)(a) of the Ohio Constitution as written, as I advocated in League
    I. See League I at ¶ 314 (Fischer, J., dissenting).
    B. Injunctive Relief
    {¶ 189} The majority opinion does not address the other remedies requested
    by the parties. In a sense, the approach set forth in the majority opinions in League
    I, ___ Ohio St.3d ___, 
    2022-Ohio-65
    , ___ N.E.3d ___, and League II has encouraged
    the parties to seek these additional and baseless forms of relief. Because the
    majority opinion’s approach to these cases has not been properly grounded in the
    Ohio Constitution, one cannot necessarily fault the parties for asking this court to
    grant other remedies not grounded in the Constitution. Because these additional
    remedies must be addressed in some fashion to prevent further unconstitutional
    requests, I will proceed to explain why those remedies should not, and cannot, be
    granted.
    {¶ 190} On February 26, 2022, respondent Secretary of State Frank LaRose
    issued a directive to all county boards of elections, instructing them on how to
    prepare for the May 3, 2022 primary election using the second revised plan. The
    directive states:
    [D]ecisions in ongoing litigation may render some or all of
    this Directive moot. In that event, my Office will issue additional
    instruction. As you know, the redistricting process has been the
    subject of much litigation. This Directive is not contrary to any
    64
    January Term, 2022
    order of the Ohio Supreme Court, nor should it be construed as such.
    This new General Assembly district plan adopted by the Ohio
    Redistricting Commission was filed with my office and is presumed
    valid. If there is additional litigation over this new district plan, the
    outcome of that litigation will be that the new plan is either valid or
    invalid. Because of the severe time constraints under which we are
    operating to hold Ohio House and Ohio Senate primary races with
    the May 3, 2022 Primary Election, we must begin preparations for
    those elections immediately in the anticipation that the Court will
    uphold the new plan. Obviously, if a few weeks from now the Court
    rules that the new plan is invalid, it will not be possible to conduct
    Ohio House and Ohio Senate primary elections with the May 3,
    2022 Primary Election.
    ***
    [G]iven the incredibly unfortunate impact that redistricting
    litigation has had on the election calendar and our ability to
    administer an election in a manner that will inevitably lead to the
    best chances of success, all boards must immediately begin the
    process of reprogramming their voter registration systems with the
    February 24, 2022 General Assembly district maps.
    (Footnote omitted.) Directive 2022-26, https://www.sos.state.oh.us/globalassets
    /elections/directives/2022/directive-2022-26.pdf, at 2-3 [https://perma.cc/439R-
    CLEG].
    {¶ 191} Petitioners, along with Senator Sykes and House Minority Leader
    Russo, argue that this court should enjoin Secretary LaRose from making this
    directive, thereby preventing him from implementing the second revised plan.
    They further argue that this court should enjoin the implementation of any plan that
    remains subject to judicial review.
    {¶ 192} Requests for injunctive relief are generally not within this court’s
    original jurisdiction. See State ex rel. Grendell v. Davidson, 
    86 Ohio St.3d 629
    ,
    65
    SUPREME COURT OF OHIO
    634-635, 
    716 N.E.2d 704
     (1999). And petitioners have not shown that they are
    entitled to the injunctive relief they seek here.
    {¶ 193} Significantly, there is nothing unlawful about Secretary LaRose’s
    directive. It is true, as Secretary LaRose stated in his February 26, 2022 directive,
    that the second revised plan is presumptively valid. See League I, ___ Ohio St.3d
    ___, 
    2022-Ohio-65
    , ___ N.E.3d ___, at ¶ 76-80. And as the state’s chief elections
    officer, Secretary LaRose has a duty to instruct elections officials how to prepare
    for the May 3 primary election, which at this point will include General Assembly
    races. See R.C. 3501.05(B) (“The secretary of state shall * * * [i]ssue instructions
    by directives * * * to members of the boards [of elections] as to the proper methods
    of conducting elections”). Secretary LaRose acknowledged the extraordinary
    circumstances surrounding the upcoming primary, and he signaled that his
    instructions could change depending on this court’s decision regarding petitioners’
    objections.   Therefore, this court should not issue an injunction concerning
    Secretary LaRose’s directive.
    {¶ 194} Moreover, Secretary LaRose’s directive might still be proper even
    though this court is invalidating the second revised plan. The second revised plan
    was adopted by a simple majority vote and is governed by Article XI, Section
    8(C)(1)(a) of the Ohio Constitution, which provides:
    Except as otherwise provided in division (C)(1)(b) of this section, if
    the commission adopts a final general assembly district plan in
    accordance with division (A)(3) of this section by a simple majority
    vote of the commission, and not by the vote required to adopt a plan
    under division (B)(3) of Section 1 of this article, the plan shall take
    effect upon filing with the secretary of state and shall remain
    effective until two general elections for the house of representatives
    have occurred under the plan.
    (Emphasis added.)
    66
    January Term, 2022
    {¶ 195} The statement that the plan “shall remain effective until two general
    elections for the house of representatives have occurred” is unqualified—it does
    not state that the plan shall cease to be in effect if this court declares it to be invalid
    under Article XI, Section 9. The absence of such a qualification in Section
    8(C)(1)(a) is significant because that qualification does appear elsewhere in Section
    8. See Article XI, Sections 8(B) and 8(C)(1)(b) (providing that under different
    circumstances than are presented here, plans shall remain effective until the next
    year ending in the numeral one “except as provided in Section 9 of this article”).
    Thus, the holding that the second revised plan is invalid does not render that plan
    ineffective. Accordingly, this court lacks any authority to enjoin Secretary LaRose
    from implementing the second revised plan (or any other plan adopted under
    Section 8(C)(1)(a)). See League I at ¶ 314 (Fischer, J., dissenting); League II, ___
    Ohio St.3d ___, 
    2022-Ohio-342
    , ___ N.E.3d ___, at ¶ 152 (Fischer, J., dissenting).
    {¶ 196} Petitioners also argue that “this Court should not hesitate to use its
    authority to suspend or modify election-related deadlines until Ohioans are able to
    vote under constitutional maps.” And they argue that this court should “direct the
    Secretary of State and General Assembly to make the required adjustments” to the
    primary-election deadlines.       The only authority offered in support of these
    arguments is Carter v. Chapman, Pa. No. MM 2022, 
    2022 WL 549106
     (Feb. 23,
    2022), in which the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania modified deadlines for
    Pennsylvania’s 2022 congressional primary election. But Carter does not point to
    any authority allowing this Ohio court to modify Ohio’s primary-election date or
    schedule, especially considering that Ohio has a specific constitutional amendment
    that spells out this court’s role in the General Assembly–redistricting process.
    Indeed, as this court specifically recognized in League II at ¶ 65-66, it is the
    province of the General Assembly to set the election date and election-related
    deadlines. See R.C. 3501.01(E)(1) and 3513.05. I would reject the requests for
    injunctive relief because petitioners fail to support their assertion that this court has
    any authority to change the election schedule or to direct Secretary LaRose or the
    General Assembly to do so.
    67
    SUPREME COURT OF OHIO
    C. Validation of Alternative Plans
    {¶ 197} Senator Sykes and House Minority Leader Russo ask this court to
    violate Article XI of the Ohio Constitution and declare the Sykes-Russo plan
    constitutional. Similarly, petitioners seek a declaration that the Rodden III plan is
    constitutional. In fact, the petitioners in Ohio Organizing Collaborative v. Ohio
    Redistricting Comm. (“the OOC petitioners”) ask this court to order the commission
    to “state whether it will adopt the Rodden [III] Plan, and if not, why it contends that
    the Rodden [III] Plan does not comply with the Ohio Constitution.” The Bennett
    petitioners go further still, asking this court to adopt the Rodden III plan. All these
    requests, if granted, would be “extraconstitutional” and therefore would violate the
    Ohio Constitution.
    {¶ 198} In its earlier decisions in these cases, the majority opinions cited
    previous plans prepared by Dr. Rodden as evidence that the commission, had it
    attempted to do so, could have adopted a district plan that allegedly came closer to
    complying with Article XI, Sections 6(A) and 6(B). See League I, ___ Ohio St.3d
    ___, 
    2022-Ohio-65
    , ___ N.E.3d ___, at ¶ 112-113, 126, 130; League II, ___ Ohio
    St.3d ___, 
    2022-Ohio-342
    , ___ N.E.3d ___, at ¶ 23, fn. 6 and ¶ 32, 45, 47, 54. The
    majority opinions in League I and League II referred favorably to Dr. Rodden’s
    previous plans, but those opinions never fully analyzed the constitutionality of his
    plans. At most, the previous majority opinions referred to Dr. Rodden’s plans as
    evidence that the commission could have adopted a more proportional plan,
    supporting the inference that the commission either did not attempt to achieve
    proportionality to Ohio voters’ statewide preferences or adopted plans with the
    primary intent of favoring the Republican Party. See League I at ¶ 113, 126; League
    II at ¶ 45.
    {¶ 199} Article XI, Section 9(A) grants this court subject-matter
    jurisdiction in cases arising under Article XI. Section 9(B), in turn, contemplates
    that this court may determine the constitutional validity of a “general assembly
    district plan made by the Ohio redistricting commission.” (Emphasis added.) Ohio
    Constitution, Article XI, Section 9(B). Nothing, absolutely nothing, in Article XI
    authorizes this court to address the validity of a district plan that the commission
    68
    January Term, 2022
    has not adopted. This means that there is no actual controversy concerning any
    plan other than the second revised plan. Petitioners, along with Senator Sykes and
    House Minority Leader Russo, seek purely advisory opinions about the
    constitutionality of other plans. It is well settled that this court “will not indulge in
    advisory opinions.” State ex rel. White v. Kilbane Koch, 
    96 Ohio St.3d 395
    , 2002-
    Ohio-4848, 
    775 N.E.2d 508
    , ¶ 18.
    {¶ 200} The Bennett petitioners nevertheless ask that this court itself adopt
    a plan, asserting that “[c]ountless courts have done the same * * * even without
    express authority to do so under those courts’ own state constitutions.” To be sure,
    other state courts have adopted reapportionment plans, and the Supreme Court of
    the United States has recognized that state courts generally have the authority to do
    so in certain circumstances. See Scott v. Germano, 
    381 U.S. 407
    , 409, 
    85 S.Ct. 1525
    , 
    14 L.Ed.2d 477
     (1965). But the Ohio Constitution clearly, expressly, and
    directly forbids this court from “order[ing], in any circumstance, the
    implementation or enforcement of any general assembly district plan that has not
    been approved by the commission in the manner prescribed by this article.”
    (Emphasis added.) Article XI, Section 9(D)(1); see also Article XI, Section 9(D)(2)
    (“No court shall order the commission to adopt a particular general assembly
    district plan or to draw a particular district”). Contrary to the Bennett petitioners’
    argument, this court clearly lacks any authority to adopt a district plan or to require
    the commission to justify why it will not adopt a particular plan.
    {¶ 201} The Bennett petitioners acknowledge that Article XI, Section 9(D)
    prohibits the relief they are seeking, but they argue that that provision “must bend
    in this moment.” In fact, they suggest that this court should “sever” Section 9(D)
    under the authority of Article XI, Section 10, which provides that the “various
    provisions of [Article XI] are intended to be severable, and the invalidity of one or
    more of such provisions shall not affect the validity of the remaining provisions.”
    But Section 10 does not authorize this court to simply disregard Section 9(D),
    particularly when no party has even alleged that Section 9(D) is unconstitutional.
    Moreover, the constitutional values set forth are there to make absolutely sure that
    Ohio’s constitutional principles do not “bend.”
    69
    SUPREME COURT OF OHIO
    {¶ 202} As a final matter, the Bennett petitioners argue that the separation-
    of-powers doctrine requires this court to disregard Article XI, Section 9(D) and to
    adopt an alternative plan. They attempt to invoke Article IV, Section 1 of the Ohio
    Constitution, which vests the “judicial power of the state” in Ohio’s courts. But the
    separation-of-powers doctrine actually, and significantly, cuts the other way.
    Apportionment is a legislative task and is delegated to the commission. See League
    I, ___ Ohio St.3d ___, 
    2022-Ohio-65
    , ___ N.E.3d ___, at ¶ 76, 79. The people of
    Ohio have given the judicial branch a very limited role when it comes to
    apportionment: This court’s jurisdiction is limited to determining only whether
    commission-adopted plans are valid, Article XI, Sections 9(B) and 9(D), and only
    under certain circumstances not present here. League I at ¶ 300-301 (Fischer, J.,
    dissenting); League II, ___ Ohio St.3d ___, 
    2022-Ohio-342
    , ___ N.E.3d ___, at
    ¶ 152 (Fischer, J., dissenting). I would not adopt an alternative plan, because by
    doing so this court would unconstitutionally be exercising legislative—not
    judicial—power.
    D. Appointment of a Special Master
    {¶ 203} Petitioners argue that this court should appoint a special master to
    “provid[e] guidance and assistance to the Commission to aid it in drawing a
    constitutional plan.” They suggest that a special master could draft a plan as a starting
    point and that the commission could be required to justify any changes to that plan.
    And they suggest that a special master could “provide minute-by-minute feedback
    on a plan drawn collectively by the Commission in public view, instead of evaluating
    maps after their passage.” Senator Sykes and House Minority Leader Russo also ask
    this court to appoint a special master, arguing that we could authorize a special master
    “to employ one or more experts” and “prepare a constitutional plan.”
    {¶ 204} Ohio’s Constitution does not permit such a thing. Petitioners and
    the minority-party commission members have not shown that this court could
    lawfully appoint a special master to carry out these duties. Any special master
    would be an officer of this court, acting on our behalf. See Black’s Law Dictionary
    1168 (11th Ed.2019) (defining “special master” as a “parajudicial officer” who is
    “appointed to assist the court with a particular matter or case”). Because this court
    70
    January Term, 2022
    itself lacks constitutional authority to actively participate in the drafting of a district
    plan, it may not appoint a special master to do so. See Ohio Constitution, Article
    XI, Section 9(D)(2) (“No court shall order the commission to adopt a particular
    general assembly district plan or to draw a particular district”). And, as discussed
    above, this court may review commission-adopted district plans only under certain
    circumstances. See 
    id.
     at Sections 9(B) and (D)(1). Because this court lacks any
    authority to determine the validity of a plan before it is passed, I would not appoint
    a special master for that purpose.
    E. Declaration of an Impasse
    {¶ 205} The OOC petitioners argue that as a last resort, this court should
    “declare an impasse, after which a federal court will provide federal remedies.” See
    Growe v. Emison, 
    507 U.S. 25
    , 34, 
    113 S.Ct. 1075
    , 
    122 L.Ed.2d 388
     (1993)
    (recognizing that a federal court may become involved in reapportionment if there
    is evidence that the appropriate state entity “will fail timely to perform” its duty to
    reapportion). Article XI, Section 9 refers only to this court’s authority to consider
    the validity of a district plan; it does not authorize us to declare that the commission
    is incapable of performing its constitutional duty in a timely manner. Clearly, there
    is no basis in law or fact for this request.
    F. Contempt
    {¶ 206} The Bennett petitioners argue that this court should hold
    respondents in contempt until they adopt a plan that we declare to be constitutional.
    The OOC petitioners similarly note that “there is still time for this Court to schedule
    a contempt hearing to determine the appropriate remedy for the Commission’s
    refusal to adopt a constitutional plan.”
    {¶ 207} Contempt proceedings are “special proceeding[s].” In re Contempt
    of Common Pleas Court, 
    30 Ohio St.2d 182
    , 187, 
    283 N.E.2d 126
     (1972), overruled
    on other grounds, State ex rel. Edwards v. Murray, 
    48 Ohio St.2d 303
    , 305, 
    358 N.E.2d 577
     (1976). They are “sui generis in the law. They bear some resemblance
    to suits in equity, to criminal proceedings and to ordinary civil actions; but they are
    none of these.” Cincinnati v. Cincinnati Dist. Council 51, Am. Fedn. of State, Cty.,
    and Mun. Emps., AFL-CIO, 
    35 Ohio St.2d 197
    , 201-202, 
    299 N.E.2d 686
     (1973).
    71
    SUPREME COURT OF OHIO
    Any proceedings to hold respondents in contempt, therefore, are distinct from this
    court’s consideration of petitioners’ objections in these original actions. See
    Hansen v. Hansen, 
    132 Ohio App.3d 795
    , 799, 
    726 N.E.2d 557
     (1st Dist.1999), fn.
    5, citing 17 Corpus Juris Secundum, Contempt, Section 62(6), at 159-160 (1963).
    {¶ 208} To avoid conflating its consideration of petitioners’ objections with
    the separate contempt proceedings, this court must defer on deciding the contempt
    issues at this time.
    G. Attorney Fees
    {¶ 209} The Bennett petitioners argue that this court should award them
    attorney fees. They first refer to R.C. 2323.51, which authorizes an award of
    attorney fees when a party has engaged in “frivolous conduct” as defined in R.C.
    2323.51(A)(2). They forget that to award attorney fees under that statute, a court
    must schedule a hearing, R.C. 2323.51(B)(2)(a), give notice of the hearing, R.C.
    2323.51(B)(2)(b), and allow the parties to present evidence, R.C. 2323.51(B)(2)(c).
    Considering the significant time constraints that exist, this court should not act
    under R.C. 2323.51, because the commission’s actions have not been found
    frivolous.
    {¶ 210} The Bennett petitioners also argue that this court should award
    attorney fees based on “a determination that Respondents acted in bad faith.” “In
    Ohio, the general rule is that absent a statute allowing attorney fees as costs, the
    prevailing party is not entitled to an award of attorney fees unless the party against
    whom the fees are taxed acted in bad faith.” State ex rel. Maloney v. Sherlock, 
    100 Ohio St.3d 77
    , 
    2003-Ohio-5058
    , 
    796 N.E.2d 897
    , ¶ 55. “Bad faith” connotes “a
    dishonest purpose, moral obliquity, conscious wrongdoing, breach of a known duty
    through some ulterior motive or ill will partaking of the nature of fraud. It also
    embraces actual intent to mislead or deceive another.” Slater v. Motorists Mut. Ins.
    Co., 
    174 Ohio St. 148
    , 
    187 N.E.2d 45
     (1962), paragraph two of the syllabus,
    overruled on other grounds, Zoppo v. Homestead Ins. Co., 
    71 Ohio St.3d 552
    , 
    644 N.E.2d 397
     (1994), paragraph one of the syllabus. Because this type of inquiry
    would significantly overlap with what this court eventually may consider in
    72
    January Term, 2022
    contempt proceedings or when considering an attorney-fee request under R.C.
    2323.51, we must defer any decision on respondents’ alleged bad faith, if any.
    IV. Conclusion
    {¶ 211} The majority opinion constitutes yet another assertion of authority
    that this court has not been given under Article XI of the Ohio Constitution. See
    League I, ___ Ohio St.3d ___, 
    2022-Ohio-65
    , ___ N.E.3d ___, at ¶ 279 (Fischer,
    J., dissenting); League II, ___ Ohio St.3d ___, 
    2022-Ohio-342
    , ___ N.E.3d ___, at
    ¶ 149 (Fischer, J., dissenting). However, even being forced to look past that
    troubling constitutional and procedural issue to review the substance of the
    arguments now before this court, it is clear that petitioners once again have not
    carried their burden of proof to support their argument that the second revised plan
    is unconstitutional. Further, petitioners’ other requests are without any real basis
    in fact, and most are without any basis in Ohio law.
    {¶ 212} For these reasons, I must respectfully dissent and would overrule
    the objections.
    _________________
    ACLU of Ohio Foundation, Inc., Freda J. Levenson, and David J. Carey;
    American Civil Liberties Union, Alora Thomas, and Julie A. Ebenstein; and
    Covington & Burling, L.L.P., Robert D. Fram, Donald Brown, Joshua González,
    Juliana Goldrosen, David Denuyl, Alexander Thomson, Anupam Sharma, and Yale
    Fu, for petitioners in case No. 2021-1193.
    McTigue, Colombo & Clinger, L.L.C., Donald J. McTigue, and Derek S.
    Clinger; and Elias Law Group, L.L.P., Abha Khanna, Ben Stafford, Jyoti Jasrasaria,
    and Spencer W. Klein, for petitioners in case No. 2021-1198.
    Reed Smith, L.L.P., Peter M. Ellis, M. Patrick Yingling, Brian A.
    Sutherland, Ben R. Fliegel, Brad A. Funari, and Danielle L. Stewart; and Brennan
    Center for Justice at New York University School of Law, Alicia L. Bannon, Yurij
    Rudensky, Michael Li, Harry Black, and Ethan Herenstein, for petitioners in case
    No. 2021-1210.
    73
    SUPREME COURT OF OHIO
    Dave Yost, Attorney General, and Organ Law, L.L.P., Erik J. Clark, and
    Ashley T. Merino, special counsel to Attorney General Dave Yost, for respondent
    Ohio Redistricting Commission.
    Dave Yost, Attorney General, and Zeiger, Tigges & Little, L.L.P., John W.
    Zeiger, Marion H. Little Jr., and Christopher J. Hogan, special counsel to Attorney
    General Dave Yost, for respondent Ohio Governor Mike DeWine.
    Dave Yost, Attorney General, and Bridget C. Coontz, Julie M. Pfeiffer, and
    Michael A. Walton, Assistant Attorneys General, and Michael J. Hendershot,
    Deputy Solicitor, for respondent Ohio Secretary of State Frank LaRose.
    Taft, Stettinius & Hollister, L.L.P., W. Stuart Dornette, Beth A. Bryan, and
    Philip D. Williamson; and Nelson Mullins Riley & Scarborough, L.L.P., Phillip J.
    Strach, Thomas A. Farr, John E. Branch III, and Alyssa M. Riggins, for respondents
    Senate President Matt Huffman and Speaker of the House Robert Cupp.
    Cooper & Elliott, L.L.C., C. Benjamin Cooper, Charles H. Cooper Jr., and
    Chelsea C. Weaver, for respondents Senator Vernon Sykes and House Minority
    Leader Allison Russo.
    _________________
    74
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 2021-1193, 2021-1198, and 2021-1210

Citation Numbers: 2022 Ohio 789

Judges: Per Curiam

Filed Date: 3/16/2022

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 3/17/2022

Authorities (15)

Israel v. Chabra , 537 F.3d 86 ( 2008 )

Adams v. DeWine (Slip Opinion) , 2022 Ohio 89 ( 2022 )

Wilson v. Kasich , 134 Ohio St. 3d 221 ( 2012 )

M'culloch v. State of Maryland , 4 L. Ed. 579 ( 1819 )

League of Women Voters of Ohio v. Ohio Redistricting Comm. (... , 2022 Ohio 342 ( 2022 )

Youngstown City School Dist. Bd. of Edn. v. State (Slip ... , 2020 Ohio 2903 ( 2020 )

United States v. General Dynamics Corp. , 107 S. Ct. 1732 ( 1987 )

National Mutual Insurance v. Tidewater Transfer Co. , 69 S. Ct. 1173 ( 1949 )

Scott v. Germano , 85 S. Ct. 1525 ( 1965 )

Davis v. Bandemer , 106 S. Ct. 2797 ( 1986 )

Growe v. Emison , 113 S. Ct. 1075 ( 1993 )

Vieth v. Jubelirer , 124 S. Ct. 1769 ( 2004 )

League of United Latin American Citizens v. Perry , 126 S. Ct. 2594 ( 2006 )

Karcher v. Daggett , 103 S. Ct. 2653 ( 1983 )

Rucho v. Common Cause , 204 L. Ed. 2d 931 ( 2019 )

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