League of Women Voters of Ohio v. Ohio Redistricting Comm. (Slip Opinion) , 2022 Ohio 1235 ( 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-
    1235.]
    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-1235
    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-1235
    .]
    Redistricting—Original actions under Ohio Constitution, Article XI—The Ohio
    Redistricting Commission’s third revised plan violates Article XI, Sections
    6(A) and 6(B) of the Ohio Constitution—Third revised plan is invalid—The
    Ohio Redistricting Commission shall be reconstituted, convene, and draft
    and adopt an entirely new plan in conformity with the Ohio Constitution.
    (Nos. 2021-1193, 2021-1198, and 2021-1210—Submitted April 8, 2022—
    Decided April 14, 2022.)
    ORIGINAL ACTIONS filed pursuant to Ohio Constitution, Article XI, Section 9.
    SUPREME COURT OF OHIO
    _________________
    Per Curiam.
    I. INTRODUCTION
    {¶ 1} For the fourth time, we are called upon to consider the validity of a
    General Assembly–district plan adopted by respondent Ohio Redistricting
    Commission. The commission adopted three General Assembly–district plans
    between September 2021 and February 2022. We invalidated each of those plans
    because they did not comply with Article XI, Sections 6(A) and 6(B) of the Ohio
    Constitution. See League of Women Voters of Ohio v. Ohio Redistricting Comm.,
    ___ Ohio St.3d ___, 
    2022-Ohio-65
    , ___ N.E.3d ___, ¶ 2 (“League I”); League of
    Women Voters of Ohio v. Ohio Redistricting Comm., ___ Ohio St.3d ___, 2022-Ohio-
    342, ___ N.E.3d ___, ¶ 67-68 (“League II”); League of Women Voters of Ohio v.
    Ohio Redistricting Comm., ___ Ohio St.3d ___, 
    2022-Ohio-789
    , ___ N.E.3d ___,
    ¶ 2 (“League III”). Each time, we ordered the commission to be reconstituted and to
    adopt a new plan in conformity with the Ohio Constitution. League I at ¶ 138; League
    II at ¶ 67; League III at ¶ 44. In League III, we ordered the commission to draft and
    adopt an entirely new General Assembly–district plan by March 28, 2022. League
    III at ¶ 44-45.
    {¶ 2} The commission adopted its fourth plan—the “third revised plan”—on
    March 28. Petitioners1 have filed objections to that plan, arguing that it violates the
    standards of Article XI, Sections 6(A) and 6(B). We hold that petitioners have
    shown beyond a reasonable doubt that the third revised plan violates Article XI,
    1. Petitioners in Supreme Court 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 Supreme Court 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 Supreme Court 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.
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    January Term, 2022
    Sections 6(A) and 6(B). We again order the commission to be reconstituted and to
    adopt a new plan in conformity with the Ohio Constitution. We decline to order
    the other remedies that petitioners seek in their objections.
    II. BACKGROUND
    A. The commission retains independent map drawers
    {¶ 3} In League III, we noted, “The commission has adopted three plans so
    far, but it still has not drafted one.” (Emphasis sic.) Id. at ¶ 25. The previous plans
    had been drafted by staff members of the offices of respondents President of the
    Senate Matt Huffman and Speaker of the House Robert Cupp, who controlled the
    process and did not allow the Democratic members of the commission to participate
    in the creation of the plans. Id. at ¶ 25, 27, 30. We said that “[t]he 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.” Id. at ¶ 30. We also said that “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.” Id. at ¶ 44.
    {¶ 4} On March 18, two days after we decided League III, __ Ohio St.3d __,
    
    2022-Ohio-789
    , __ N.E.3d __, Ohio Attorney General Dave Yost issued a
    memorandum to the commission proposing a framework for complying with our
    decision. In it, the attorney general noted our language in League III suggesting that
    the commission “should” retain an independent map drawer. The attorney general
    recognized that we “used ‘should’ and not ‘shall’ ” but nevertheless advised the
    commission that “it would be wise to treat this suggestion with the degree of
    deference one might pay to the suggestions of one’s spouse.” Accordingly, the
    attorney general recommended hiring a “bipartisan duo” of consultants whose
    “charge should be simply to produce a map that complies with the Ohio Constitution
    and the orders of the Ohio Supreme Court.”
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    SUPREME COURT OF OHIO
    {¶ 5} In response to League III, the commission met on Saturday, March 19,
    and discussed different options for going forward. Its ideas included (1) having the
    map drawers for the Republican and Democratic legislative caucuses—which
    included Ray DiRossi and Blake Springhetti, who are employees of the Republican
    legislative caucuses, and Chris Glassburn, who is a consultant retained by the
    Democratic legislative caucuses—work together to draw a new district plan, (2)
    hiring mediators or independent map drawers, including the two suggested by the
    attorney general,2 or (3) combining those approaches. The commission delegated to
    its cochairs, respondents House Speaker Cupp, who is a Republican commission
    member, and Senator Vernon Sykes, who is a Democratic commission member, the
    task of recommending independent map drawers and mediators. The commission
    also decided that in the interim, the map drawers for the legislative caucuses and staff
    for each commission member would meet to discuss how they could work with
    independent map drawers.             Thus, it became clear to anyone following the
    commission’s proceedings that the commission had accepted this court’s and the
    attorney general’s recommendations to engage independent map drawers to craft a
    General Assembly–district plan.
    {¶ 6} At the commission’s next meeting, on Monday, March 21, Senator
    Sykes recommended Dr. Michael McDonald, a professor at the University of Florida,
    to serve as an independent map drawer. House Speaker Cupp recommended Dr.
    Douglas Johnson, the president of National Demographics Corporation, to serve as
    2. The attorney general’s March 18 memorandum to the commission stated that he had already
    retained two consultants who had collaborated to produce maps for the state of Virginia and were
    prepared “to go to work immediately” for the commission. The duo consisted of Sean Trende, a
    Republican analyst with the political-news website RealClearPolitics, and Bernie Grofman, a
    Democratic professor of political science at the University of California at Irvine. Respondent House
    Minority Leader Allison Russo expressed concern that Trende had served as a consultant for
    respondents in this litigation. But after speaking with Grofman and Trende, Leader Russo and Senator
    Sykes were in favor of the commission’s engaging them, as suggested by the attorney general.
    However, Senate President Huffman later indicated that the two experts either were not available or
    were unwilling to travel to Ohio to complete the work.
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    January Term, 2022
    the other independent map drawer. Both individuals had previously consulted on
    redistricting issues in other states. The commission unanimously voted to approve
    the hiring of Dr. McDonald and Dr. Johnson as independent map drawers. The
    commission agreed to pay Dr. McDonald and Dr. Johnson each at an hourly rate of
    $450, plus their related expenses, capped at $49,000 each.
    B. The commission meets daily and livestreams the map-drawing process
    1. The March 22 meeting
    {¶ 7} On Tuesday, March 22, the commission decided on a daily meeting
    schedule through Saturday, March 27. The commission then unanimously approved
    retaining two mediators employed by the United States Court of Appeals for the Sixth
    Circuit. The commission members discussed instructions for the independent map
    drawers—who would be arriving the following day—but could not come to an
    agreement regarding the instructions and decided to continue that discussion at the
    next meeting.
    2. The March 23 meeting
    {¶ 8} Dr. McDonald and Dr. Johnson appeared at the Wednesday, March 23
    meeting and introduced themselves to the commission. The commission members
    engaged in a lengthy discussion about written instructions for the independent map
    drawers and adopted 24 “Ground Rules.” Among other things, the rules specified
    that the independent map drawers were to draft the district plan at the commission’s
    direction and in conformity with Article XI and this court’s prior decisions, draft an
    entirely new plan without considering prior plan proposals or previous work product,
    and provide regular updates to the commission at its scheduled meetings. The rules
    also provided a process for resolving any disputes between Dr. McDonald and Dr.
    Johnson, including mediation if the commission were unable to unanimously resolve
    the dispute. In addition, the rules specified that all map drawing would occur in a
    designated room at the statehouse and would be livestreamed by the Ohio Channel.
    The commission members were expected to provide feedback and guidance to the
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    map drawers at commission meetings. Also, each commission member and their
    staff would have unlimited access to the map drawers, so long as the map drawers
    were not separately contacted.
    3. The March 24 meeting
    {¶ 9} The independent map drawers began working on Thursday, March 24.
    Their workroom was livestreamed so that the public could observe the process.
    During the March 24 commission meeting, Dr. McDonald and Dr. Johnson updated
    the commission on their progress, which, after some technical delays, had included
    drafting potential House districts in Franklin County. The map drawers sought
    guidance from the commission on a few issues, including how it wanted them to
    define a “toss up” district. Although several commission members opined on how
    they would define such a district, the commission did not reach an agreement.
    Senator Sykes said that the commission would get back to the independent map
    drawers on that issue. Near the end of the meeting, Senator Sykes noted that
    livestreaming the map-drawing process and the commission’s open discussion about
    map-drawing principles were “historic” for Ohio and the nation.
    4. The March 25 meeting
    {¶ 10} On Friday, March 25, the independent map drawers presented to the
    commission preliminary draft maps of potential House districts in Franklin and
    Union Counties; Cuyahoga, Lake, and Summit Counties; and Hamilton County. The
    map drawers acknowledged that they had not yet started on Senate maps. Some of
    the commission members had questions and comments for the map drawers. For
    example, respondent Auditor of State Keith Faber expressed concerns about the
    shapes of the districts in the maps and said that the map drawers should focus not
    only on Article XI, Section 6(B)’s “mystery ratio”—i.e., the proportionality
    standard—but also on Article XI’s other requirements, including Section 6(C)’s
    compactness requirement. Both map drawers indicated that they hoped to have
    complete drafts to the commission by Saturday afternoon.
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    January Term, 2022
    5. The March 26 meeting
    {¶ 11} At the Saturday, March 26 meeting, the independent map drawers
    reported that they had created two sketches of district plans for the commission’s
    consideration. One of the sketches included both a House map and a Senate map,
    while the second sketch included only a House map. Dr. McDonald said that both
    sketches were proportional—meaning that the House maps had 45 Democratic-
    leaning House seats and 54 Republican-leaning House seats.
    {¶ 12} Senate President Huffman moved the commission to insert the
    addresses of the 33 Senate members into the maps and requested that the map drawers
    consider those addresses in the map-drawing process. Senate President Huffman
    acknowledged that such considerations were not constitutionally required but
    explained why he thought they were important. Specifically, he noted that 16 current
    senators are in midterm and are therefore constitutionally entitled to serve out their
    terms; the goal, he said, should be to ensure that those senators continue to reside in
    the districts they represent. He further said that for the 17 remaining Senate seats, 11
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    senators are seeking reelection and had already filed candidacy petitions.3 4 It should
    also be a commission goal, Senate President Huffman said, to draw those senators
    into a district in which they can seek reelection—i.e., not into a district currently
    represented by a senator in midterm.
    {¶ 13} Senator Sykes and House Minority Leader Russo objected to adding
    incumbents’ addresses to the maps, and House Minority Leader Russo cited this
    court’s observation in League III that protecting incumbents is not grounded in
    Article XI. See ___ Ohio St.3d ___, 
    2022-Ohio-789
    , ___ N.E.3d ___, at ¶ 37-38.
    But Auditor Faber said that there is value in incumbency and that although protecting
    incumbents is not a “primary constitutional factor,” the map drawers should avoid
    placing incumbents together “where [they] can.” House Speaker Cupp agreed that
    the map drawers should make every effort to avoid drawing incumbents together
    when it was possible to do so without violating other constitutional requirements.
    The commission members agreed to take the issue to mediation.
    3. However, by this time, respondent Secretary of State Frank LaRose had already issued Directive
    No. 2022-31, dated March 23, 2022, instructing the boards of elections as follows: “Candidates’
    petitions for Ohio House, Ohio Senate, or State Central Committee were certified based on the
    February 24, 2022 General Assembly district plan. Due to the Supreme Court’s decision in [League
    III], by operation of law, a board’s decision to certify or reject those candidates’ petitions for the
    May 3, 2022 Primary Election is null and void. Board members must acknowledge this on the
    record at their next board meeting.” (Emphasis added.) Secretary of State Directive No. 2022-31,
    at 2, Instruction III: “Consequence for Certified Candidates for Ohio House, Ohio Senate, and State
    Central Committee.”
    Secretary of State directives are issued pursuant to R.C. 3501.05(B) and 3501.053, and
    boards of elections are legally bound to carry out elections consistently with these directives. R.C.
    3501.11(E). Thus, Senate President Huffman’s suggestion that the map drawers should aim to
    protect incumbent senators who had already filed petitions was baseless. These senators’
    candidacies had already been invalidated by another member of the redistricting commission—the
    secretary of state—because their petitions had been filed in districts determined to be
    unconstitutional by this court.
    4. Further, consideration of already-filed petitions for districts deemed unconstitutional was, in
    effect, a violation of the “Ground Rules” for the independent map drawers, which prohibited them
    from including or considering General Assembly–district plans or proposals created before March
    23, 2022.
    8
    January Term, 2022
    {¶ 14} The independent map drawers sought guidance from the commission
    on several issues. They again asked for clarification about how to define a toss-up
    district for purposes of determining whether there is a disparity in the number of such
    districts between the two political parties. After some discussion, the commission
    agreed to add that issue to the mediation list. At one point in the meeting, Dr. Johnson
    said that in their “quest to get as close to symmetry” as possible, they were “kind of
    blowing through compactness.” He asked what balance they were supposed to strike
    between symmetry and compactness. Auditor Faber again cautioned the map
    drawers not to focus solely on Article XI, Section 6(B) but to also comply with
    Sections 6(A) and 6(C). In the end, the commission members expressed that it was
    difficult to answer the map drawers’ questions without having a complete and
    consolidated district plan before them.
    6. The March 27 meeting
    {¶ 15} On March 27—one day before this court’s deadline for submitting a
    new plan—Dr. McDonald and Dr. Johnson presented three district plans to the
    commission: two drafted by Dr. McDonald and a third drafted by Dr. Johnson. They
    indicated that they had not yet had the chance to consolidate their ideas into one
    unified proposal and that they were still seeking the commission’s guidance on
    outstanding issues. Dr. Johnson again noted a trade-off between achieving symmetry
    of toss-up districts and drawing compact districts and expressed his preliminary
    belief that creating more Republican-leaning toss-up districts would lead to a less
    compact plan. Dr. McDonald disagreed and said that there was no trade-off, noting
    that his sketch achieved exact symmetry of toss-up districts and was more compact
    than Dr. Johnson’s. But in response to questions from Auditor Faber about splitting
    cities into multiple House districts, Dr. McDonald acknowledged that the “puzzle
    pieces don’t fit together very well” and that “the geography is extremely challenging
    in Ohio.”
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    SUPREME COURT OF OHIO
    {¶ 16} After lengthy discussion and a recess, some commission members
    offered suggestions in response to the map drawers’ questions about which counties
    should be paired together. But the commission did not decide any issue by a formal
    vote. Several members indicated that they needed more information and did not want
    to vote on how certain areas should be drawn without understanding the ramifications
    for other parts of the state.
    {¶ 17} In addition, House Speaker Cupp advised the map drawers that the
    commission had reached a mediated resolution about the issue of considering
    incumbents. Senate President Huffman read a mediation agreement that provided
    the following:
    Upon completion of the independent map drawers’ merger of
    their independent versions of the House and Senate maps and prior to
    any presentation to the Commission, the independent map drawers
    shall consider the residence locations of non-term limited House and
    Senate incumbents, and Senate incumbents in mid-term, in drafting a
    Commission       map,    and   where     possible   without   violating
    constitutional principles, avoid pairing incumbents and also drawing
    districts such that Senators protected under Section 5 of Article 11 no
    longer live in the district they represent.
    Incumbents will be identified as House or Senate and no other
    identifying information shall be used.
    The commission unanimously adopted the mediation agreement. But later in the
    meeting, Senate President Huffman and Senator Sykes disagreed about its meaning.
    C. Senate President Huffman proposes an alternative plan
    {¶ 18} The commission next met on the morning of Monday, March 28. Dr.
    McDonald and Dr. Johnson reported that they had merged their maps to create a
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    January Term, 2022
    unified proposed district plan. The plan, they said, was proportional for both the
    House and the Senate. With respect to the symmetry of toss-up districts, the plan had
    three Democratic-leaning and three Republican-leaning House districts with vote
    shares between 50 and 52 percent and two Democratic-leaning and zero Republican-
    leaning Senate districts with a vote share between 50 and 52 percent. They also
    reported that Dr. McDonald had started cleaning up splits of cities and townships and
    that Dr. Johnson had finished importing incumbents’ addresses into their system.
    They planned to consider the incumbency issues next.
    {¶ 19} The commission met again in the late afternoon that day. Dr. Johnson
    reported that they had adjusted most of the House map—except in northeast Ohio—
    to avoid incumbent pairings. They had not yet tackled the incumbency issues in the
    Senate, however, and said they would need a couple more hours. Dr. Johnson said
    that they were moving as fast as they could but that it was a slow process and that
    Ohio has “some of the most complicated geographic challenges, certainly the most
    strict geographic rules and also the most complicated Senate rules.” Around 5:00
    p.m., Dr. McDonald left the meeting—and the statehouse—so that he could return to
    Florida for a professional commitment.
    {¶ 20} House Speaker Cupp and Auditor Faber expressed concerns about the
    independent map drawers’ plan. Auditor Faber asked several questions about the
    compactness of the plan and noted that the map drawers had adopted the “hub and
    spoke model” by dividing the urban core of cities into different districts and drawing
    them with suburbs to create Democratic districts. Dr. Johnson acknowledged that
    “to hit that magic number, it involves a lot more work to draw those Democratic
    seats.”
    {¶ 21} Senate President Huffman also expressed concerns about the plan,
    stating that as of 5:00 p.m. on the day of the deadline, the map drawers had not yet
    produced a Senate map. He noted that after the commission adopted a plan, staff
    would need time to complete several administrative tasks; he said that to meet this
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    court’s midnight deadline, the commission would need to adopt a plan no later than
    10:30 p.m. Considering the approaching deadline, Senate President Huffman said
    that the commission needed a “failsafe.” He introduced a motion that would allow
    Dr. Johnson to continue working on the independent map drawers’ plan but also
    permit the Republican and Democratic legislative-caucus map drawers to jointly with
    Dr. Johnson or independently revise the commission’s second revised plan so that
    the commission could timely comply with this court’s order. Senate President
    Huffman emphasized that the commission must “have a product to vote on.” In his
    words, “if we’re not going to land the plane * * * it would be nice to have a parachute.
    And that’s what the motion is intended to do.”
    {¶ 22} Senator Sykes and House Minority Leader Russo objected to the
    motion, citing the resources the commission had invested in the independent map
    drawers and noting that the map drawers were almost finished. House Minority
    Leader Russo opined that this court would rather have the commission finish its job
    than submit another unconstitutional plan. She suggested that the commission take
    the issue to mediation. Senate President Huffman, however, did not believe that
    mediation would be productive.        Senator Sykes inquired about requesting an
    extension of time from this court, but Senate President Huffman and House Speaker
    Cupp said that League III prohibited any requests for extensions of time. The
    commission approved Senate President Huffman’s motion by a vote of five to two,
    along party lines. The commission agreed to meet again at 9:00 p.m.
    D. The commission adopts a district plan drawn by Republican-caucus staff
    {¶ 23} When the commission reconvened, Dr. Johnson reported that he had
    not yet finished the Senate map. He again said that the “Senate rules are extremely
    complex,” that he had hit “roadblocks” necessitating changes to the House map, and
    that he needed at least another 45 minutes to finish. Senate President Huffman said
    that his staff had identified some improper splits in the independent map drawers’
    House map, including one in a Cleveland Heights district. Fixing the problem, Senate
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    January Term, 2022
    President Huffman said, would cause the district to exceed the population
    requirements, which in turn would have “rippling effects” throughout northeast Ohio.
    Dr. Johnson responded that he was trying to “race through and get a map” and that
    he intended to run a few reports at the end of the process that would hopefully catch
    those errors but that he had not yet reached that step. Dr. Johnson also indicated that
    Auditor Faber had given him some larger-scale edits but that he would not have
    sufficient time to incorporate those changes before the deadline.
    {¶ 24} House Speaker Cupp said that it was not feasible at that point to expect
    the independent map drawers to produce a complete and constitutional plan by this
    court’s deadline. Therefore, he moved that the commission adopt his new proposal,
    which had just been distributed to the members. He said that compared to the second
    revised plan, his proposal improved the “symmetry measures” by reducing the
    number of Democratic-leaning toss-up districts by two in the House and by one in
    the Senate. And he said that the proposed plan was drawn in the livestreamed public
    workroom earlier that day.
    {¶ 25} House Minority Leader Russo and Senator Sykes opposed the motion.
    House Minority Leader Russo called the motion a “farce,” noted that the plan had
    again been drawn by only one party, and said that she had not been provided any
    information about the partisan leanings of the districts or symmetry of the toss-up
    districts. She also disputed House Speaker Cupp’s claim that Springhetti had
    prepared the map in the livestreamed public workroom: “Mr. Springhetti sat in the
    map room for about 45 minutes, clicked his mouse around a few times and called that
    public and transparency. That’s not public and transparency. This map was drawn
    long before this evening. I guarantee it.” Senator Sykes added that instead of trying
    to assist the independent map drawers to cross the finish line, the “majority” had
    withdrawn from the process and then hijacked it. In response to questioning from
    House Minority Leader Russo, Auditor Faber, respondent Governor Mike DeWine,
    respondent Secretary of State Frank LaRose, and Senator Sykes acknowledged that
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    they had not seen House Speaker Cupp’s proposal before it was distributed to all the
    commission members during the meeting.
    {¶ 26} House Minority Leader Russo requested a recess to review House
    Speaker Cupp’s proposal, but Senate President Huffman said that because it was
    already after 10:00 p.m., the commission needed to pass a plan to comply with this
    court’s deadline. He further noted that Dr. Johnson had not yet completed a final
    Senate map and that Dr. Johnson admitted that he would not have time to include any
    amendments to his proposal by the midnight deadline. House Minority Leader Russo
    requested that the commission file an emergency motion in this court for a 12-hour
    extension of time. The commission, however, voted four to three to adopt House
    Speaker Cupp’s plan—i.e., the third revised plan—as its final General Assembly–
    district plan. Because both Democratic members of the commission voted against
    the plan, the plan did not have the bipartisan support required by Article XI, Section
    8(B) of the Ohio Constitution to remain in effect for ten years. Therefore, the plan
    would remain in effect for no more than four years. See Ohio Constitution, Article
    XI, Section 8(C)(1)(a).
    {¶ 27} Senate President Huffman distributed the commission statement
    required by Article XI, Section 8(C)(2) of the Ohio Constitution. The statement said
    that the commission had gone to great lengths to comply with this court’s decisions
    but that the independent map drawers were unable to produce a plan by the court’s
    deadline. The statement further noted that to comply with the court’s deadline, the
    commission had instructed staff to prepare a “modification” of the second revised
    plan that “more closely complies” with the court’s decisions than did the second
    revised plan. The statement noted that the commission believed that the third revised
    plan met “strict proportionality” and “improved upon the number of asymmetric
    districts” identified in League III.
    E. Senator Sykes moves to adopt the independent map drawers’ plan
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    January Term, 2022
    {¶ 28} The commission recessed to allow its members to review Senate
    President Huffman’s Section 8(C)(2) statement and for Senator Sykes and House
    Minority Leader Russo to prepare their own statement. Upon reconvening, Senator
    Sykes moved the commission to adopt Dr. Johnson’s plan, which Senator Sykes
    claimed had been completed. As part of his motion, Senator Sykes also requested
    that the commission refrain from dissolving for up to four weeks so that it could
    improve Dr. Johnson’s plan. House Minority Leader Russo acknowledged that some
    commission members may have concerns about voting on a district plan without
    having an opportunity to review it. But she noted that the commission had just
    adopted a plan that was similarly distributed immediately before the commission’s
    vote. In response, Senate President Huffman said that the third revised plan included
    “only minor changes” from the second revised plan and that the commission
    members were therefore familiar with “probably 97 percent” of the third revised plan.
    {¶ 29} Other commission members also commented on the independent map
    drawers’ work.     House Speaker Cupp said that he noticed “some egregious
    compactness issues” in Dr. Johnson’s plan.       Governor DeWine indicated that
    although the independent map drawers had established proportionality and had
    created a similar number of toss-up districts, the independent map drawers’ plan had
    a “compact district problem” with more split cities and fewer competitive districts.
    Governor DeWine noted that competitive districts was a goal of the constitutional
    amendment. Auditor Faber praised the work of the independent map drawers and
    emphasized the difficulty of their task given the short amount of time that they had.
    But he said that they could not incorporate his suggestions, that their plan appeared
    to unnecessarily split cities, and that they had engaged in cracking and packing to
    create more Democratic districts. The commission voted five to two against adopting
    Dr. Johnson’s plan.
    {¶ 30} Senator Sykes and House Minority Leader Russo submitted their
    separate statement, which said that the third revised plan had been drawn in secret
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    “in a bunker at the Bureau of Worker Compensation building,”5 that they had
    received the plan only minutes before voting on it, and that it was merely a “tweaked
    version” of the second revised plan, which this court had invalidated. Auditor Faber
    also voted against adopting the third revised plan but did not concur in the statement
    of Senator Sykes and House Minority Leader Russo.
    {¶ 31} On March 29, the commission notified this court that it had adopted a
    fourth General Assembly–district plan.
    F. Petitioners file objections
    {¶ 32} On April 1, petitioners filed objections to the third revised plan,
    primarily criticizing the commission’s process in adopting the third revised plan and
    arguing that the plan violates Article XI, Sections 6(A) and 6(B).6 With their
    objections, petitioners collectively submitted three new expert reports. Some of the
    petitioners ask this court to issue additional remedies, including ordering the
    implementation of a specific General Assembly–district plan—such as the plan
    prepared by the independent map drawers—for the 2022 election.
    {¶ 33} Respondents filed four separate responses to petitioners’ objections.
    Senate President Huffman, House Speaker Cupp, Governor DeWine, and Secretary
    LaRose opposed petitioners’ objections. Senate President Huffman and House
    Speaker Cupp submitted an affidavit from Dr. Johnson, who averred that his work
    had been “highly constrained” by Ohio’s complex geography and constitutional rules
    and the limited window of time in which to draw the maps. He further stated that
    5. Earlier during the March 28 commission meeting, Senator Sykes noted the absence of the
    Republican-caucus map drawers—i.e., DiRossi and Springhetti—who had been instructed to assist the
    independent map drawers. In response, Senate President Huffman indicated that DiRossi was ill and
    was working at the “BWC Building” on March 28. Senator Sykes and House Minority Leader Russo
    believed that DiRossi had drafted the plan that the commission ultimately adopted.
    6. The petitioners in all three cases also filed motions on March 29 for an order directing respondents
    to show cause why they should not be held in contempt. Petitioners argue, among other things, that
    the commission violated this court’s order in League III by failing to adopt an entirely new General
    Assembly–district plan. We dispose of these motions in separate entries announced today.
    16
    January Term, 2022
    although he had made every effort to comply with Article XI’s line-drawing
    requirements, he had not had time to conduct a detailed review or run reports to
    confirm whether the plan complied with Article XI. And he noted that his final plan
    included a portion of northeast Ohio that was drawn by Glassburn prior to March 23,
    2022,7 and a configuration for Mahoning County to which Republican commission
    members had objected but that Dr. Johnson had run out of time to fix. Dr. Johnson
    also acknowledged that he had run out of time to include revisions requested by
    commission members or to even allow the commission members or their staff to
    review the plan.
    {¶ 34} Senator Sykes and House Minority Leader Russo filed responses to
    the objections that align with petitioners’ positions. They also submitted their own
    affidavits as well as an affidavit from Glassburn. Senator Sykes stated in his affidavit
    that when the independent map drawers proposed maps that were proportional and
    symmetrical, Republican commissioners seemed “rattle[d]” and started to impede
    and discredit the process by complaining about compactness and the double-bunking
    of incumbents (i.e., placing two incumbents in the same district). House Minority
    Leader Russo averred that after the independent map drawers had made progress and
    sought guidance from the commission, her Republican colleagues refused to give it.
    She also averred that any double-bunking that had occurred in the map drawers’
    initial drafts was inadvertent—because they did not have incumbent information—
    all of which was the byproduct of drawing a constitutional map.
    {¶ 35} Glassburn averred that in his opinion, the final plan submitted by Dr.
    Johnson complies with Article XI and its proportionality and symmetry
    requirements. He further averred that the independent map drawers’ plan is more
    compact than the third revised plan and that to the extent that there are any technical
    7. The “Ground Rules” for the independent map drawers prohibited them from including or
    considering General Assembly–district plans or proposals created before March 23, 2022.
    17
    SUPREME COURT OF OHIO
    flaws in the independently drawn plan, they could be easily remedied. Glassburn
    found no reason why the commission would need “more than a single day” to review
    the independent map drawers’ plan and fix any technical flaws.
    III. ANALYSIS
    A. The burden and standard of proof
    {¶ 36} A district plan adopted by the commission is presumptively
    constitutional. League I, ___ Ohio St.3d ___, 
    2022-Ohio-65
    , ___ N.E.3d ___, at
    ¶ 76. Petitioners therefore have the burden of proving that the third revised plan
    violates the Constitution. 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)
    {¶ 37} 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.
    1. The process leading to the third revised plan
    {¶ 38} In League III, this court found that substantial and compelling
    evidence showed that the process leading to the adoption of the second revised plan
    was evidence of an intent to draw a General Assembly–district plan that favored the
    Republican Party at the expense of the Democratic Party. ___ Ohio St.3d ___, 2022-
    Ohio-789, ___ N.E.3d ___, at ¶ 24-32. That evidence included the following: (1)
    staff members of Senate President Huffman and House Speaker Cupp (rather than
    the commission members) drew the second revised plan, (2) the Democratic
    members of the commission had no opportunity to provide input and no meaningful
    opportunity to discuss or review the second revised plan or to propose amendments
    once it was presented to the commission, and (3) the map-drawing process was
    controlled by the Republican-legislative staffs. Id. at ¶ 25, 27. In League II, this
    18
    January Term, 2022
    court found that the commission’s choice to start with an invalidated plan “and
    change it as little as possible” was “tantamount to an intent to preserve as much
    partisan favoritism as could be salvaged from the invalidated plan.” ___ Ohio St.3d
    ___, 
    2022-Ohio-342
    , ___ N.E.3d ___, at ¶ 38. The same could be said here.
    {¶ 39} In this case, the evidence shows that the commission began to heed
    our suggestions in League III, consistent with the recommendations of the attorney
    general’s March 18 memorandum to the commission, and that it made significant
    changes to its process. The commission retained independent map drawers and
    mediators, held meetings almost daily, ensured that the map drawers had a neutral
    set of written instructions, and allowed the public to observe the map-drawing
    process. Senator Sykes described these efforts as “historic” for Ohio and the nation.
    But what began as a “historic” process devolved into the same one-sided partisan
    map-drawing process that led us to invalidate the previous three plans.
    {¶ 40} Although the commission retained independent map drawers and held
    frequent meetings throughout the 12-day map-redrawing period, the commission
    ultimately readopted a modified version of the second revised plan that we
    invalidated in League III. The evidence suggests that Springhetti, a staff member for
    the Republican legislative caucus, modified the second revised plan in one afternoon
    to produce the third revised plan. Neither Senator Sykes, House Minority Leader
    Russo, nor their staff had an opportunity to provide input concerning the creation of
    the third revised plan or a meaningful opportunity to review the proposal or provide
    amendments to it once it was presented to the commission. Instead, the Democratic
    commission members were forced to vote on the plan within minutes of receiving it,
    even though they had not been provided any documents showing the partisan leaning
    of the plan’s districts. Further, Senator Sykes’s and House Minority Leader Russo’s
    requests for a recess were rebuffed, as were their requests to seek an extension of this
    19
    SUPREME COURT OF OHIO
    court’s deadline.8 The Democratic commission members were once again excluded
    from the process of creating what the commission adopted as its third revised plan.
    And as in League III, the record indicates that the statewide-officeholder members of
    the commission did not participate in drawing the third revised plan: they stated that
    they had not seen a copy of the plan until it was distributed to all the members.
    {¶ 41} Moreover, the third revised plan suffers from a similar fundamental
    flaw that we found obstructed the constitutionality of the plan we invalidated in
    League II. In League II, we found that the principal drawers of the first revised plan
    “started with the same plan we invalidated and then merely adjusted certain districts
    just enough so that they could nominally be classified as ‘Democratic-leaning.’ ” ___
    Ohio St.3d ___, 
    2022-Ohio-342
    , ___ N.E.3d ___, at ¶ 36. We observed that the
    commission’s choice to start from an unconstitutional plan and “change it as little as
    possible” was “tantamount to an intent to preserve as much partisan favoritism as
    could be salvaged from the invalidated plan.” Id. at ¶ 38.
    {¶ 42} Despite our admonition in League II, the commission’s self-described
    “parachute” was to have Springhetti use an invalidated plan and tweak it a bit. The
    third revised plan is no more than a modification of the second revised plan and, as
    admitted by Senate President Huffman, includes “only minor changes” from its
    predecessor. As before, the commission did not adopt a plan using a process that
    Article XI and this court’s prior decisions require.
    {¶ 43} We also discern intent of partisan favoritism from the timeline that led
    to the commission’s decision to scrap the work of the independent map drawers in
    8. Senate President Huffman and House Speaker Cupp took the position that our decision in League
    III forbade the commission from seeking an extension of time for adopting a plan and filing it with
    the secretary of state. They cited language in League III indicating that “the clerk of this court shall
    refuse to file any requests or stipulations for extension of time.” League III at ¶ 47. In isolation,
    paragraph 47 of League III supported the refusal to seek an extension of time to allow Dr. McDonald
    and Dr. Johnson to complete their work. However, it is not proper to read paragraph 47 in isolation;
    it should be read in context. And in the paragraph prior to paragraph 47, we stated that untimely
    filings “under this paragraph” were prohibited. Id. at ¶ 46. Paragraphs 46 and 47 refer to only the
    timeline for objections to the plan and responses to the objections. See id.
    20
    January Term, 2022
    favor of a plan that included minimal changes to one already invalidated as
    unconstitutional. Particularly, the evidence shows that on the final day before the
    commission adopted its third revised plan, some members of the commission
    blocked, rather than facilitated, Dr. McDonald’s and Dr. Johnson’s efforts to finish
    their work. The timeline of events demonstrates convincingly that the commission—
    or at least some members of the commission—when faced with one or more plans
    that closely matched constitutional requirements in the form of Dr. McDonald’s and
    Dr. Johnson’s plans, reverted to partisan considerations when time was running short,
    even though the potential for successful completion was high.
    {¶ 44} In Dr. Johnson’s words, it became clear on March 28 that he and Dr.
    McDonald “were not going to finish a map before the Court’s midnight deadline
    without more direct guidance from the Commission members’ staff.” This became
    apparent despite the fact that on March 27, Dr. McDonald and Dr. Johnson presented
    three district plans to the commission and sought the commission’s guidance on
    outstanding issues to enable them to merge their ideas with the commission’s into a
    final plan. As time for completion grew shorter, the commission failed to provide
    the guidance that Dr. McDonald and Dr. Johnson needed, hindering their ability to
    complete their work.
    {¶ 45} Particularly problematic was Senate President Huffman’s last-minute
    insistence that the independent map drawers consider the residence locations of non-
    term-limited and mid-term House and Senate incumbents in drafting a plan. The
    commission instructed the independent map drawers to consider incumbent
    residences “and where possible without violating constitutional principles, avoid
    pairing incumbents.” Although this instruction was not necessarily inconsistent with
    this court’s admonitions in League III, ___ Ohio St.3d ___, 
    2022-Ohio-789
    , ___
    N.E.3d ___, at ¶ 37, because it required the map drawers to consider incumbency
    only “where possible,” the timing of it pulled the rug out from under the independent
    map drawers. Rather than including the instruction in the March 23 “Ground Rules,”
    21
    SUPREME COURT OF OHIO
    this new criterion was imposed on March 27—one day before the deadline and after
    the independent map drawers had already completed separate drafts of potential
    district plans without consideration of incumbents’ addresses.           This belated
    instruction added to the map drawers’ difficulty in finalizing their work in sufficient
    time for the commission to review it and file it with the secretary of state. Contrary
    to our admonitions in League III, the commission’s last-minute incumbency-
    protection instruction to the independent map drawers effectively prioritized
    protecting incumbents over the requirements of Article XI, Section 6.
    {¶ 46} Although the commission appeared to be engaging in a more
    collaborative process in drafting a legislative map, the final day leading up to the
    adoption of the third revised plan revealed anything but that. Rather than helping the
    independent map drawers finish their work on a plan, the commission instead chose
    to modify a previously invalidated plan. That plan was prepared by a member of the
    Republican legislative caucus’s staff, and the Democratic commission members and
    the statewide-officeholder commission members were effectively prevented from
    participating in preparing the plan. These facts indicate beyond a reasonable doubt
    an intent to favor the Republican Party at the expense of the Democratic Party in the
    commission’s fourth try at drafting the General Assembly–district plan.
    2. The third revised plan’s substantive noncompliance with Article XI, Section 6(A)
    {¶ 47} In League III, we noted that the second revised plan contained 19
    districts in which the Democratic vote share was between 50 and 52 percent with no
    comparably competitive Republican-leaning districts, resulting in the conclusion that
    “the 54 percent seat share for Republicans is a floor while the 46 percent share for
    Democrats is a ceiling—an observation similar to the one [this court] found
    persuasive in League II.” League III at ¶ 32. We found that “[t]he remarkably one-
    sided distribution of toss-up districts is evidence of an intentionally biased map
    * * *.” Id. at ¶ 33.
    22
    January Term, 2022
    {¶ 48} In League III, ___ Ohio St.3d ___, 
    2022-Ohio-789
    , ___ N.E.3d ___,
    we found that this unequal distribution of highly competitive or “toss up” districts
    led to partisan asymmetry such that with a 50 percent statewide vote share,
    Republicans would win 53 percent of the House seats and that with the same share,
    Democrats would win approximately 44 percent of the House seats. Id. at ¶ 33. We
    noted Dr. Rodden’s calculation that a 5 percent uniform swing in Republicans’ favor
    would net them up to 23 additional seats, while a 5 percent uniform swing in
    Democrats’ favor would net them, at most, two additional seats. Id. As we did in
    League II, this court in League III found that the “monolithically disparate” quality
    of partisan favoritism in the second revised plan overwhelmingly demonstrated that
    the plan’s drafters intended to favor the Republican Party and disfavor the
    Democratic Party. Id. at ¶ 34.
    {¶ 49} As discussed above, the third revised plan is merely the second revised
    plan with just a few alterations. Even Senate President Huffman described it as
    “probably 97 percent” of the previous map. Two of petitioners’ experts, Dr. Michael
    Latner and Dr. Christopher Warshaw, calculate that regarding the House, only 451
    census blocks out of more than 276,000 were assigned to a different district in the
    third revised plan, affecting only 0.265 percent of the total population. As Dr. Latner
    explains, “[o]therwise, the Second and Third Revised Plans are identical, which
    explains their similar performance.” Dr. Warshaw calculates that regarding the
    Senate, only 270 census blocks out of more than 276,000 were assigned to a different
    district in the third revised plan, affecting only 0.2 percent of the total population.
    Thus, 31 of 33 Senate districts and 92 of 99 House districts are the same in the third
    revised plan as they were in the second revised plan. Another of petitioners’ experts,
    Dr. Jonathan Rodden, explains that only a few district boundaries were moved in the
    Worthington/Upper Arlington area and in the Canton area, which shifted a few
    Democratic districts from just under a 52 percent Democratic vote share to just over
    a 52 percent Democratic vote share.
    23
    SUPREME COURT OF OHIO
    {¶ 50} The third revised plan is materially identical to the invalidated second
    revised plan on the measures this court looked to in League III. The two plans contain
    a nearly identical one-sided distribution of toss-up districts. The overall number of
    toss-up districts has been reduced from 26 to 23, but all those districts are
    Democratic-leaning districts and there are no similarly competitive Republican-
    leaning districts. The third revised plan is also asymmetrical in the same way that
    the second revised plan was. Dr. Latner calculates that with a 50 percent statewide
    vote share, Republicans would win 53 percent of the House seats while Democrats
    would win 44 percent—the same as his analysis of the second revised plan, see
    League III at ¶ 33.
    {¶ 51} Dr. Latner further observed:
    A small two percentage point shift in the electorate in favor of
    Republicans would be expected to wipe out 17 Democratic House
    seats and 6 Democratic Senate seats, giving Republicans 72% percent
    of House seats and 73% percent of Senate seats—a supermajority in
    both chambers. Equivalent shifts among voters in favor of Democrats
    would not yield any additional seats * * *.”
    (Emphasis deleted.) He further opined that, as before, the plan is structured to create
    a floor for Republicans and a ceiling for Democrats: “[S]imilar to the First and
    Second Revised Plans, the Third Revised Plan performs like a ‘winner-take-all’
    gerrymander but with only a one-way ratchet in favor of Republicans.” In League
    III, this court found such a structure to be persuasive evidence of an Article XI,
    Section 6(A) violation. __ Ohio St.3d __, 
    2022-Ohio-789
    , __ N.E.3d __, at ¶ 32.
    {¶ 52} Senate President Huffman and House Speaker Cupp point out that the
    third revised plan improves upon the second revised plan. While this may be true,
    the improvement falls short of landing in constitutional territory. Dr. Latner notes,
    24
    January Term, 2022
    “Compared to the Second Revised Plan, the number of seats where Democrats win 5
    percent or more than their statewide vote average has increased by one, slightly
    improving symmetry, but consistent with each of the Commission’s plans,
    Republicans maintain a substantial, and statistically significant, advantage.”
    Similarly, regarding the Senate, the results mirror those of the second revised plan,
    with no more than marginal improvement in some sectors. The aggregate asymmetry
    in the assignment of toss-up districts remains strong evidence of an intentionally
    biased plan, as does the partisan asymmetry of the plan itself.
    {¶ 53} Senate President Huffman and House Speaker Cupp argue that the
    third revised plan performs similarly to the rejected independent map drawers’ plan
    in the event of a hypothetical 5 percent swing in either party’s favor. They further
    argue that the independent map drawers’ plan was not a commission-drawn plan,
    because the commission members did not have the opportunity to propose
    amendments. But they fail to explain how their assertions about the independent map
    drawers’ plan relates to a Section 6(A) analysis or even how their actions and
    arguments negate the evidence of partisan intent with respect to the plan the
    commission actually adopted. Indeed, we found a Section 6(A) violation in League
    III without reference to or comparison with any of the proposed alternative plans.
    See id. at ¶ 24-37.
    {¶ 54} Senate President Huffman and House Speaker Cupp also criticize the
    independent map drawers’ plan for what they call “hub and spoke” districts, “where
    the map drawer slices into an urban core and ‘spokes’ the district out of the urban
    core into a rural or suburban area.” They assert that these districts are noncompact
    and demonstrate that the third revised plan’s “supposed asymmetry * * * is not
    unreasonable and that to achieve ‘better’ symmetry cities must be carved up like a
    pizza.” But they cite no evidence or authority for the proposition that the “hub and
    spoke” districts they describe are not compact. And petitioners have submitted
    evidence showing that the independent map drawers’ plan has better scores for
    25
    SUPREME COURT OF OHIO
    compactness under three different measures (Reock, Polsby-Popper, and
    Area/Convex Hull) than the third revised plan. Further, the independent map
    drawers’ plan splits the same number of counties and fewer voting precincts than the
    third revised plan. Thus, petitioners have offered unrebutted evidence that the third
    revised plan is less compact than the independent map drawers’ plan.
    {¶ 55} In sum, the third revised plan has not materially changed from the
    invalidated second revised plan. The evidence supports the finding that the third
    revised plan violates Article XI, Section 6(A), just as we found with regard to the
    second revised plan in League III.
    C. Article XI, Section 6(B)
    {¶ 56} Article XI, Section 6(B) of the Ohio Constitution requires the
    commission to attempt to draw a district plan to meet the constitutional requirement
    that “[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 shall correspond closely to the statewide preferences of the voters of
    Ohio.” The statewide preferences of Ohio’s voters “are 54 percent in favor of the
    Republican Party and 46 percent in favor of the Democratic Party.” League II, __
    Ohio St.3d __, 
    2022-Ohio-342
    , __ N.E.3d __, at ¶ 64.
    {¶ 57} In League II, this court held that if the term “favor” is to be applied
    equally to both parties, “the quality and degree of favoritism in each party’s allocated
    districts” may not be “grossly disparate.” Id. at ¶ 61. We explained that while
    Section 6(B) does not “prohibit[] the creation of competitive districts,” to give effect
    to the term “favor,” such districts “must either be excluded from the proportionality
    assessment or be allocated to each party in close proportion to its statewide vote
    share.” Id. at ¶ 62. We held that the revised plan at issue in League II violated Section
    6(B), in part because that plan contained 12 competitive House districts with
    Democratic vote shares between 50 and 51 percent that the commission had counted
    26
    January Term, 2022
    as Democratic districts, id. at ¶ 61, yet the plan contained zero such districts with
    similar Republican vote shares that were counted as Republican districts, id.
    {¶ 58} In League III, this court held that the second revised plan violated
    Section 6(B) because it contained 26 districts (19 House districts and 7 Senate
    districts) with Democratic vote shares between 50 and 52 percent that the
    commission had counted as Democratic districts and zero such districts with similar
    Republican vote shares that were counted as Republican districts. __ Ohio St.3d __,
    
    2022-Ohio-789
    , __ N.E.3d __, at ¶ 39, 42. We concluded that the 26 “so-called
    Democratic-leaning districts” did not “favor” the Democratic party and were instead
    “competitive” districts that must be excluded from the proportionality assessment.
    Id. at ¶ 41-42. In the second revised plan, 67.9 percent of the noncompetitive districts
    favored Republicans and 32.1 percent favored Democrats—leading us to conclude
    that the plan’s allocation of districts favoring each political party did not closely
    correspond to the statewide preferences of the voters. Id. at ¶ 42.
    {¶ 59} The third revised plan contains 23 districts (17 House districts and 6
    Senate districts) with Democratic vote shares between 50 and 52 percent—three
    fewer than did the second revised plan. As before, the third revised plan contains
    zero districts with a Republican vote share between 50 and 52 percent. For the
    reasons explained in League III, see id. at ¶ 40-42, these 23 competitive districts
    should be excluded from the proportionality assessment. Therefore, in the third
    revised plan, 66.1 percent of the noncompetitive districts favor Republicans and 33.9
    percent favor Democrats. The third revised plan’s slight improvement over the
    second revised plan still leaves it far short of close correspondence with the statewide
    preferences of the voters. Indeed, this disproportionality is still greater than the
    original plan that we invalidated in League I, in which 64.4 percent of the districts
    favored the Republican Party. See __ Ohio St.3d __, 
    2022-Ohio-65
    , __ N.E.3d __,
    at ¶ 105.
    27
    SUPREME COURT OF OHIO
    {¶ 60} In reaching the conclusion in League III that the second revised plan’s
    Democratic-leaning districts with vote shares under 52 percent were, in reality,
    “competitive districts,” we considered evidence showing that these 26 competitive
    districts “represent[ed] the foundation of a politically asymmetric plan,” in that a two-
    point statewide swing in the Republican Party’s favor would result in that party
    winning 74 percent of the House seats and 79 percent of the Senate seats under the
    second revised plan, while the same two-point swing in the Democratic Party’s favor
    would result in no seat gains for that party in either chamber. League III at ¶ 41. We
    find the same for the third revised plan: a statewide swing of 2 percent in the
    Republican Party’s favor would sweep all the competitive districts into its column,
    while a similar swing in favor of the Democratic Party would earn it no additional
    seats.
    {¶ 61} In their response to petitioners’ objections, Senate President Huffman
    and House Speaker Cupp compare each party’s seat share in the third revised plan
    and the independent map drawers’ plan in the event of a 5 percent statewide vote
    swing in each party’s favor. Their argument appears to be that the numbers look
    similar for both plans, so the asymmetry of the plans is similar. But Senate President
    Huffman and House Speaker Cupp fail to articulate how this comparison of the
    adopted plan with a nonadopted plan relates to the requirements of Article XI, Section
    6(B). In other words, they do not explain how their analysis counters the conclusion
    that the third revised plan’s 23 districts with Democratic vote shares between 50 and
    52 percent do not actually “favor” the Democratic party in light of the plan’s
    allocation of zero such districts to the Republican Party.
    {¶ 62} The third revised plan violates Article XI, Section 6(B) of the Ohio
    Constitution for the same reasons that the second revised plan did.
    D. Remedies
    {¶ 63} Because the commission and its third revised plan did not and do not
    comply with Article XI, Sections 6(A) and 6(B), we declare the third revised plan
    28
    January Term, 2022
    invalid. See Ohio Constitution, Article XI, Section 9(B).         We order that the
    commission be reconstituted and adopt a General Assembly–district plan that
    complies with the Ohio Constitution. See 
    id.
     In their objections, however, petitioners
    ask this court to do more than simply invalidate the third revised plan and order the
    commission to adopt a new plan that complies with the Ohio Constitution. We deny
    petitioners’ requests for additional or alternative relief submitted with their
    objections.
    1. Adoption of an alternative plan
    {¶ 64} The petitioners in Bennett v. Ohio Redistricting Comm. (Supreme
    Court case No. 2021-1198) and the petitioners in Ohio Organizing Collaborative v.
    Ohio Redistricting Comm. (Supreme Court case No. 2021-1210) (“OOC petitioners”)
    ask this court to itself adopt a plan—either the independent map drawers’ plan or Dr.
    Rodden’s latest plan (referred to previously as “the Rodden III plan”). We decline
    to do so because we lack the constitutional authority to grant that relief. The Ohio
    Constitution expressly 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.” 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”).
    {¶ 65} The Bennett petitioners acknowledge that Article XI, Section 9(D)
    prohibits the relief they are seeking, but they argue that “the facts have changed and
    now stand far beyond what Article XI contemplates.” They argue that Section 9(D)
    “must bend in this moment.” Yet they offer weak legal support for this assertion.
    Instead, they assert that it would be better for an Ohio court—as opposed to a federal
    court—to implement a plan and that doing so “will do the least violence to Ohio’s
    constitutional structure.” But we cannot disregard Section 9(D) simply to avoid the
    possibility that a federal court may take action under federal law. And as a matter of
    29
    SUPREME COURT OF OHIO
    comity, a federal court imposing a remedy under federal law would be mindful of the
    reality that we have declared that all four maps adopted by the commission violate
    the Ohio Constitution.
    {¶ 66} The OOC petitioners take a slightly different approach: they argue that
    this court should enforce the federal Constitution by adopting a General Assembly–
    district plan. Put another way, they ask us to disregard the Ohio Constitution to
    vindicate the federal Constitution. But there is not a basis for this court to grant relief
    under the OOC petitioners’ theory. For one thing, no petitioner has asserted a claim
    arising under the federal Constitution. And further, such a claim would conflict with
    the Ohio Constitution’s conferred standing in original jurisdiction that appears in
    Article IV, Section 2(B)(1), which defines this court’s original jurisdiction. Our
    original jurisdiction under Article XI, Section 9(A) of the Ohio Constitution applies
    only to cases arising under Article XI. See Ohio Constitution, Article XI, Section
    9(A) (“The supreme court of Ohio shall have exclusive, original jurisdiction in all
    cases arising under this article” [emphasis added]). Finally, even if we were to
    entertain such a federal claim, the OOC petitioners have failed to sufficiently
    articulate the nature of the federal claim that might properly be before this court.
    {¶ 67} The remedies suggested by the Bennett and OOC petitioners are
    based on their belief that a three-judge panel of the United States District Court for
    the Southern District of Ohio in Gonidakis v. Ohio Redistricting Comm, S.D.Ohio
    case No. 2:22-cv-0773, will order the implementation of a General Assembly plan
    by April 20, 2022. They are concerned that the federal court may implement a plan
    that we have already found unconstitutional, at least for the 2022 election cycle.
    According to the Bennett petitioners, questioning by the three-judge panel in
    Gonidakis during a March 30 preliminary-injunction hearing “made clear” that if
    the federal court does impose a plan, the options it is considering include the second
    revised plan that we declared invalid in League III, the third revised plan that we
    30
    January Term, 2022
    declare invalid today, the district plan that was in place from 2011 to 2020, and
    other plans presented to that court.
    {¶ 68} We are mindful of representations made by or on behalf of the
    secretary of state in the pending Gonidakis federal court proceedings that a district
    plan must be in place by April 20 for the last possible primary-election date for the
    2022 election, August 2, to be feasible. However, we fail to see how this contention
    should motivate us—or the federal court for that matter—to adopt a plan for the 2022
    state legislative elections by April 20. It is unclear as to why August 2, 2022, is the
    last available date for a primary election in Ohio.9 We note that several states will
    have primary elections on August 16, 2022, or later, including four states that will
    have their primary elections in September.                   National Conference of State
    Legislatures, 2022 State Primary Election Dates and Filing Deadlines (Apr. 4,
    2022),            https://www.ncsl.org/research/elections-and-campaigns/2022-state-
    primary-election-dates-and-filing-deadlines.aspx              (accessed      Apr.      12,   2022)
    [https://perma.cc/Y73V-2TSB]. Thus, on the record before us, the so-called April
    20 “deadline” for implementing a General Assembly–district plan appears to be an
    artificial deadline that is based on a speculative, potential primary-election date for
    state legislative races.
    {¶ 69} While the commission has yet to adopt a constitutionally valid plan
    in time for the May 3 primary election,10 sufficient time remains for the commission
    to perform its constitutional duty to adopt a valid General Assembly–district plan
    for use in the 2022 election cycle, including a primary election. Any suggestion
    that the federal court could—much less that it should—set an August 2 primary-
    election date as a remedy in the federal-court litigation strikes us as a dubious
    9. August 2, 2022, is a date authorized for special elections, as provided in R.C. 3501.01(D).
    10. The May 3 primary is proceeding for statewide, congressional, and local offices.
    31
    SUPREME COURT OF OHIO
    proposition at best. The authority for setting the date for a primary election belongs
    to the General Assembly, not to the Ohio Supreme Court, the secretary of state, or
    a federal court. See R.C. 3501.40 and 3501.01(E)(1). Principles of federalism and
    comity cut against a federal court ordering the date of a primary election for purely
    state offices due to a dispute over the validity of state legislative maps under the
    state constitution. Even when federal constitutional questions have been at issue in
    legislative-redistricting cases, the United States Supreme Court “has required
    federal judges to defer consideration of disputes involving redistricting where the
    State, through its legislative or judicial branch, has begun to address that highly
    political task itself.” (Emphasis sic.) Growe v. Emison, 
    507 U.S. 25
    , 33, 
    113 S.Ct. 1075
    , 
    122 L.Ed.2d 388
     (1993). In this case, the commission and this court have
    been addressing the task within the framework of Article XI of the Ohio
    Constitution.
    {¶ 70} While the process has proved challenging for the commission, as
    evidenced by four legislative plans falling short of Article XI’s requirements, the
    difficulty of the task is not a reason for federal-court intervention. In this case,
    there is a clear and viable path forward to having a constitutionally valid General
    Assembly–district plan in place for the 2022 election cycle. As set forth in detail
    below, the independent map drawers retained by the commission after League III
    started the commission down what could be a viable path of a General Assembly–
    district plan that complies with Article XI of the Ohio Constitution. Under these
    circumstances, we think it appropriate for the federal court to “stay[] its hand” in
    recognition of the principle that “[t]he power of the judiciary of a State to require
    valid reapportionment * * * has not only been recognized by [the United States
    Supreme] Court but appropriate action by the States in such cases has been
    specifically encouraged,” Scott v. Germano, 
    381 U.S. 407
    , 409, 
    85 S.Ct. 1525
    , 
    14 L.Ed.2d 477
     (1965).
    32
    January Term, 2022
    {¶ 71} For these reasons, we decline to order the additional remedies that
    the Bennett and OOC petitioners request.
    2. Validation of an alternative plan
    {¶ 72} Senator Sykes and House Minority Leader Russo ask us to declare that
    the independent map drawers’ plan is presumptively constitutional. There is also no
    constitutional basis for this court to grant that remedy. Article XI, Section 9(A)
    grants this court jurisdiction in cases arising under Article XI, and Section 9(B)
    contemplates that we may determine the constitutional validity of a “general
    assembly district plan made by the Ohio redistricting commission.” (Emphasis
    added.) While the independent map drawers’ plan may be the closest yet to meeting
    the Ohio Constitution’s requirements, Article XI does not authorize this court to
    address the validity of a district plan in the absence of it being lawfully presented to
    this court for such a determination.
    {¶ 73} We also note that by the admission of one of the plan’s primary
    drafters, Dr. Johnson, that plan is not yet fully completed. According to Dr.
    Johnson, certain potential constitutional defects cannot be identified without
    running reports that he did not have time to complete before the commission’s
    deadline for adopting the third revised plan.
    E. Possible approach for the commission
    {¶ 74} Though we do not have the power under Article XI to validate the
    independent map drawers’ plan, we are also mindful of the secretary of state’s
    position—taken in the federal-court litigation—that a General Assembly–district
    plan must be in place by April 20 for the last possible primary-election date for the
    2022 election cycle, August 2, to be feasible. No matter what the primary date is to
    be, time is of the essence. With time in mind, it appears that the most efficient way
    for the commission to proceed may well be to continue working with Dr. McDonald
    and Dr. Johnson to complete the plan on which they have made considerable
    progress—if they are willing and available and if the commission has the authority
    33
    SUPREME COURT OF OHIO
    to timely retain them for additional work. By certain measures, their plan—though
    incomplete—is on track to being constitutionally compliant.
    {¶ 75} The independent map drawers acknowledge that the process of
    finalizing their plan is incomplete. Although they have stated that they tried to
    comply with all provisions of the Constitution, no one has yet verified that their
    plan fully complies with Article XI, Sections 2, 3, 4, and 7. Nor have the
    independent map drawers had an opportunity to address or incorporate any of the
    commission’s requests for amendments. With that caveat, there is evidence that
    the independent map drawers’ plan—in its current form—outperforms the third
    revised plan on measures of partisan symmetry and on the distribution of
    competitive districts. For example, the independent map drawers’ plan contains
    three House districts with a Democratic vote share between 50 and 52 percent and
    three House districts with a Republican vote share between 50 and 52 percent—an
    equal number—whereas the third revised plan contains 17 such Democratic House
    districts but zero such Republican House districts. Regarding the Senate, the
    independent map drawers’ plan has two Democratic seats in that competitive range
    whereas the third revised plan has six such seats. Neither plan has any Republican
    Senate seats in that range.
    {¶ 76} Moreover, Dr. Rodden’s analysis indicates that the independent map
    drawers’ plan outperforms the third revised plan on a number of other metrics: the
    plan achieves partisan proportionality that closely corresponds to statewide voter
    preferences, splits fewer voting precincts, and is more compact as a whole. Dr.
    Rodden’s analysis also cuts against a consistent theme of respondents throughout this
    litigation—that the commission’s prior maps were necessitated by Ohio’s political
    geography. Dr. Rodden explained that the independent map drawers’ plan helps to
    confirm that this was not the case. In other words, the plan on which Dr. McDonald
    and Dr. Johnson performed considerable work appears on track to achieve what
    respondents have consistently argued is impossible due to Ohio’s political
    34
    January Term, 2022
    “geography” by which Republican and Democratic voters are distributed throughout
    the state.
    {¶ 77} Regardless of the availability of Dr. McDonald and Dr. Johnson to
    complete their work on the plan they were preparing, the commission should continue
    the course it began when it followed our and the attorney general’s recommendations
    to engage independent map drawers. Even if the commission is unable to engage Dr.
    McDonald and Dr. Johnson, the commission has a head start toward a complete and
    possibly constitutionally compliant plan. Dr. McDonald and Dr. Johnson produced
    an almost completed set of General Assembly–district maps for which the
    commission agreed to pay them nearly $100,000. To completely abandon that work
    seems like a waste of resources and taxpayer dollars and could take us further away
    from the constitutionally required goal of a fair district plan. Just as in League III,
    when we recommended that the commission take certain steps to ensure a
    constitutional process, we now likewise express the view that the commission should
    use the independent map drawers’ work thus far as a starting point for the next plan.
    IV. CONCLUSION
    {¶ 78} We sustain petitioners’ objections to the third revised plan under
    Article XI, Sections 6(A) and 6(B) of the Ohio Constitution and invalidate the third
    revised plan in its entirety. We further order the commission to be reconstituted, to
    convene, and to draft and adopt an entirely new General Assembly–district plan
    that meets the requirements of the Ohio Constitution, including Article XI, Sections
    6(A) and 6(B) as we have explained those provisions in each of our four decisions
    in these cases. As we suggested in League III, to promote transparency and increase
    public trust, the drafting of the plan is best accomplished in public view with
    frequent meetings to demonstrate the commission’s bipartisan efforts to reach a
    constitutional plan. See __ Ohio St.3d __, 
    2022-Ohio-789
    , __ N.E.3d __, at ¶ 44.
    35
    SUPREME COURT OF OHIO
    {¶ 79} We further order the commission to file the district plan with the
    secretary of state by 9:00 a.m. on May 6, 2022, and to file it with this court by noon
    on the same date. We retain jurisdiction for the purpose of reviewing the new plan.
    {¶ 80} 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
    by 9:00 a.m., three days after the objections are filed. If the deadline for 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 of the court shall refuse
    to accept any filings under this paragraph that are untimely or prohibited.
    {¶ 81} No requests or stipulations for extension of time for the objections
    or responses shall be filed, and the clerk shall refuse to file any requests or
    stipulations for extension of time. For good cause shown, the commission may file
    a motion for extension of time to file the district plan with the secretary of state.
    And for the reasons explained above, we deny petitioners’ requests for additional
    relief.
    Objections sustained
    and alternative or additional relief denied.
    O’CONNOR, C.J., and STEWART and BRUNNER, JJ., concur.
    DONNELLY, J., concurs, with an opinion.
    KENNEDY, J., dissents, with an opinion.
    FISCHER, J., dissents, with an opinion and joins paragraphs 151-152 and
    157-158 of Justice DeWine’s dissenting opinion.
    DEWINE, J., dissents, with an opinion joined by KENNEDY, J.
    _________________
    DONNELLY, J., concurring.
    {¶ 82} I join the majority opinion in full. I write separately only to make
    some additional observations.
    36
    January Term, 2022
    {¶ 83} In League of Women Voters of Ohio v. Ohio Redistricting Comm.,
    __ Ohio St.3d __, 
    2022-Ohio-789
    , __ N.E.3d __, ¶ 30, we suggested that “[t]he
    [Ohio Redistricting 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.”            The commission
    commendably seemed to heed our suggestion by retaining two independent map
    drawers, at public expense, whose map drawing was viewable by livestream to
    promote transparency and increase public trust in the redistricting process.
    {¶ 84} But just when the independent map drawers were perilously close to
    showing that the difficult was achievable by drawing a General Assembly–district
    plan that satisfied the proportionality requirements of Article XI, Section 6(B) of
    the Ohio Constitution without partisan asymmetry that violated Article XI, Section
    6(A), the commission’s majority-party members summarily pulled the plug on that
    process. Discarding the independent map drawers’ work product, and to the shock
    of many, commission member and respondent President of the Senate Matt
    Huffman revealed a plan that had been prepared by majority-party staffers within
    days of the deadline that cosmetically tweaked the invalidated second revised plan.
    He then laid the third revised plan before the commission less than two hours before
    the expiration of its deadline for adopting a new plan.
    {¶ 85} The independent map drawers’ efforts were apparently little more
    than a sideshow—yet more fodder in this political sport. In 2018, commission
    member and respondent Secretary of State Frank LaRose, who was then a state
    senator, co-authored an article calling for substantive changes to the way that state-
    and federal-legislative districts are drawn. He was correct when he acknowledged
    at that time that “[a]lthough both parties have been guilty of unfairly reconfiguring
    districts to their benefit, Republicans have taken the heat in recent years for
    prominent gerrymandering cases.” LaRose & Olsen, The Supreme Court didn’t act
    on gerrymandering, so it’s up to state legislators to stop doing it, NBC News (June
    37
    SUPREME COURT OF OHIO
    18,    2018),    https://www.nbcnews.com/think/opinion/supreme-court-didn-t-act-
    gerrymandering-so-it-s-state-ncna884501 [https://perma.cc/M7U7-2NUP].11                       He
    further stated, “Take it from us two Republican state legislators: Even if our party
    benefitted, it’s still wrong. By gerrymandering districts, we send the message that
    winning elections is more important than finding effective policy solutions for all
    citizens. And when that happens, we lose the trust and confidence of the people we
    were elected to represent.” 
    Id.
     And he concluded the article by stating, “It’s time
    to end gerrymandering—which protects party politics at the expense of the
    American people—and allow true democracy to flourish.” 
    Id.
    {¶ 86} Yet, since the adoption of the constitutional reforms mandated by
    Article XI, these cases have regrettably confirmed that relatively little has changed
    in how legislative-district plans are drawn. The design of legislative districts
    remains firmly in the grip of the majority party’s legislative politicians to the
    exclusion of all others. The Ohio Redistricting Commission is independent in
    theory only. Indeed, the commission’s plans in these cases have consistently been
    drafted by the majority party’s political staffers to the exclusion of the minority
    party and at times even to the virtual exclusion of the majority-party commission
    members in order to maintain dominance by the majority party. The revised plans
    were based largely on plans that we previously declared invalid and were withheld
    until the majority party’s then-newest plan was revealed and perfunctorily adopted
    at the 11th hour with no time for review or discussion. Yet Secretary of State
    LaRose’s current stance is not to reexamine the flawed process used to generate
    district plans but to remain open to the prospect of impeaching a judicial officer
    who dared to have the temerity to support and defend the constitutional reforms
    11. Indeed, as we said in Adams v. DeWine, __ Ohio St.3d __, 
    2022-Ohio-89
    , __ N.E.3d __, ¶ 2,
    partisan gerrymandering, “by whichever political party has control to draw geographic boundaries
    for elected state and congressional offices” to strategically exaggerate the power of the majority
    party’s voters while diminishing the power of the minority party’s voters, perverts representative
    democracy.
    38
    January Term, 2022
    that Ohioans—like LaRose when he was a state senator—celebrated over partisan
    tribal politics that value political power over all else. See Schladen, LaRose would
    “be fine with” chief justice’s impeachment over redistricting rulings (Apr. 1, 2022),
    https://ohiocapitaljournal.com/2022/04/01/larose-would-be-fine-with-chief-
    justices-impeachment-over-redistricting-rulings/ [https://perma.cc/YXC8-JBLY].
    {¶ 87} What appeared to be the start of a transparent redistricting process
    when the two independent map drawers were engaged by the commission became
    transparent only in the sense that it exposed the falsehood that some of the
    commission members had fulfilled their obligations under the Ohio Constitution.
    As to that, Ohioans are still watching and waiting.
    _________________
    KENNEDY, J., dissenting.
    {¶ 88} The measure of power is its limits. Respecting the limits of power
    is essential to our American form of government. Anything less is an affront to it.
    {¶ 89} The essential characteristic of our government—the separation of
    powers—is part of the woven fabric of the Ohio Constitution. See S. Euclid v.
    Jemison, 
    28 Ohio St.3d 157
    , 158-159, 
    503 N.E.2d 136
     (1986). At their core, the
    issues in these cases concern that basic concept.
    {¶ 90} In yet another wiping-egg-from-its-face moment, the majority
    retreats from its edicts in League of Women Voters of Ohio v. Ohio Redistricting
    Comm., __ Ohio St.3d __, 
    2022-Ohio-789
    , __ N.E.3d __ (“League III”), to explain
    that when it set out the steps the commission “should” take, it did not mean that the
    commission must take those steps, and it now admits to petitioners in these cases
    that this court does not have the power to tell the commission how to perform its
    constitutional duties. All the majority can do is “suggest” steps the commission
    could take. I agree that the Ohio Constitution does not give this court the power to
    tell respondent Ohio Redistricting Commission, an independent constitutional
    body, whom to hire, how to do its work, or who should draw a redistricting plan.
    39
    SUPREME COURT OF OHIO
    Article XI, Section 9(B) of the Ohio Constitution merely provides that if a map is
    invalidated, the redistricting commission is reconstituted pursuant to Article XI,
    Section 1. And nothing in Section 9(B) or Section 1 gives this court power to
    control the work of the commission.
    {¶ 91} By recognizing this limitation, the majority takes one step forward
    but two steps back, because it continues to ignore the limitations of its power by
    redefining its power under Section 9. The plain, limiting language of Section
    9(D)(3) provides that this court cannot invalidate a plan without a predicate
    violation of the objective map-drawing requirements of Sections 2, 3, 4, 5, or 7. By
    adhering to its view of unlimited power, the majority keeps bringing us back to
    September 2021—the time when these redistricting cases were first filed; we are
    stuck in a time loop, like the characters in the movie Groundhog Day. The movie,
    of course, was comedic entertainment, but the outcome of these cases is anything
    but that for the people of this state. The majority’s continued denial of the limitation
    of this court’s power may end up costing the taxpayers millions of dollars—money
    that is being consumed by the never-ending cycle of map drawing, litigation, and
    now, two primaries, one on May 3 and the other perhaps on August 2, all ordained
    by the majority’s overreach. The state is still without functional House and Senate
    districts, and its voters have no idea when a primary will take place for General
    Assembly offices.
    {¶ 92} Because the Ohio Constitution does not give this court the power to
    tell the commission how it “should” exercise its power and perform its work, I agree
    with the majority that this court cannot hold it in contempt. I disagree, however,
    with the majority’s determination that this court may continue to exercise judicial
    power over these redistricting cases pursuant to Article XI, Sections 6(A) and 6(B),
    and I dissent from its judgment invalidating yet another plan.
    40
    January Term, 2022
    The Commission Cannot Be Held in Contempt
    {¶ 93} The majority tries to walk back the imperative language it used in its
    March 16 decision, which stated that the commission “should” hire an independent
    map-drawing expert, convene frequent meetings to draw the maps in public, and
    adopt a plan prepared by the commission as a whole. League III, __ Ohio St.3d __,
    
    2022-Ohio-789
    , __ N.E.3d __ at ¶ 30, 44. It now frames these directives as mere
    suggestions or recommendations, even though the word “should” expresses a duty
    or obligation, Webster’s Third New International Dictionary 2104 (2002). The
    majority also attempts to shift responsibility for its overreach onto Ohio Attorney
    General Dave Yost, noting that he suggested treating the court’s directions “with
    the degree of deference one might pay to the suggestions of one’s spouse.”
    {¶ 94} But regardless of how the majority characterizes its prior opinion,
    this court does not have the power to hold the commission or its members in
    contempt. This court recently explained in Toledo v. State, 
    154 Ohio St.3d 41
    ,
    
    2018-Ohio-2358
    , 
    110 N.E.3d 1257
    , that “ ‘[t]he power of contempt is inherent in a
    court, such power being necessary to the exercise of judicial functions.’ ” Id. at ¶
    22, quoting Denovchek v. Trumbull Cty. Bd. of Commrs., 
    36 Ohio St.3d 14
    , 15, 
    520 N.E.2d 1362
     (1988). The primary interest at stake in a contempt proceeding is the
    court’s “ ‘authority and proper functioning,’ ” 
    id.,
     quoting Denovchek at 16, so a
    litigant may be held in contempt of court for conduct that “ ‘ “brings the
    administration of justice into disrespect, or which tends to embarrass, impede or
    obstruct a court in the performance of its functions,” ’ ” 
    id.,
     quoting Denovchek at
    15, quoting Windham Bank v. Tomaszczyk, 
    27 Ohio St.2d 55
    , 
    271 N.E.2d 815
    (1971), paragraph one of the syllabus.
    {¶ 95} Our decision in Toledo continued, stating that “ ‘[i]f a valid
    restrictive order has been issued, a court has the statutory and inherent power to
    entertain contempt proceedings and punish disobedience of that order.’ ” Id. at ¶
    23, quoting Planned Parenthood Assn. of Cincinnati, Inc. v. Project Jericho, 52
    41
    SUPREME COURT OF OHIO
    Ohio St.3d 56, 61, 
    556 N.E.2d 157
     (1990). “But a court order cannot be enforced
    in contempt unless the order was ‘clear and definite, unambiguous, and not subject
    to dual interpretations.’ ” 
    Id.,
     quoting State ex rel. Cincinnati Enquirer v. Hunter,
    
    138 Ohio St.3d 51
    , 
    2013-Ohio-5614
    , 
    3 N.E.3d 179
    , at ¶ 25.
    {¶ 96} This court had no authority to tell the commission whom to hire or
    how to do its work; therefore, it follows that the court cannot hold the commission
    in contempt. Redistricting is a legislative process, Wilson v. Kasich, 
    134 Ohio St.3d 221
    , 
    2012-Ohio-5367
    , 
    981 N.E.2d 814
    , ¶ 20, and “the great heritage of the common
    law and the principles of free government” provide the basis for legislative
    immunity and, by extension, immunity to others when exercising a legislative
    function, Bigelow v. Brumley, 
    138 Ohio St. 574
    , 582, 
    37 N.E.2d 584
     (1941). Article
    XI gives the responsibility for drafting and adopting a General Assembly–district
    plan to the Ohio Redistricting Commission, an independent constitutional body, so
    its members are not subject to personal liability or personal incarceration as
    punishment for contempt for actions taken while engaged in the legislative process
    of redistricting, see id. at 583-584. As we explained in Hicksville v. Blakeslee,
    “[t]hat legislative officers are not liable personally for their legislative acts is so
    elementary, so fundamentally sound, and has been so universally accepted, that but
    few cases can be found where the doctrine has been questioned and judicially
    declared.” 
    103 Ohio St. 508
    , 517, 
    134 N.E. 445
     (1921).
    {¶ 97} Adherence to the defined roles of each branch is essential to the
    functioning of our representative democracy. Therefore, maintaining respect for
    the enumerated powers granted expressly to the commission precludes this court
    from interfering with the exercise of those powers or attempting to supervise the
    commission’s work through the threat of contempt. In DeRolph v. State, the court’s
    reasoning that “it is not the function of the judiciary to supervise or participate in
    the legislative and executive process” applies equally to the commission, an
    independent constitutional body exercising the legislative power. 
    78 Ohio St.3d 42
    January Term, 2022
    419, 420, 
    678 N.E.2d 886
     (1997). It is therefore only after the commission has
    completed its work and adopted a General Assembly–district plan that this court
    has any power to review it. See Toledo at ¶ 29. Even then, the court may not
    invalidate the plan unless it is inconsistent with the Constitution. See 
    id.
     “The
    separation-of-powers doctrine * * * precludes the judiciary from asserting control
    over ‘the performance of duties that are purely legislative in character and over
    which such legislative bodies have exclusive control.’ ” Toledo, 
    154 Ohio St.3d 41
    , 
    2018-Ohio-2358
    , 
    110 N.E.3d 1257
    , at ¶ 27, quoting State ex rel. Grendell v.
    Davidson, 
    86 Ohio St.3d 629
    , 633, 
    716 N.E.2d 704
     (1999).
    {¶ 98} For these reasons, the commission cannot be held in contempt for
    submitting a redistricting plan that did not come from the independent map drawers,
    because this court had no power to order the commission to hire the independent
    map drawers and to yield its constitutional power to them.
    A Standalone Violation of Section 6 Is Not Actionable
    {¶ 99} Seemingly, the majority eschews the limitations on this court’s
    power established in Article XI, Section 9, because since the beginning of these
    cases, the majority has construed Article XI broadly as granting this court the power
    to invalidate a General Assembly plan for any reason.
    {¶ 100} No one disputes that this court’s authority to review a General
    Assembly–district plan comes from Section 9. However, Section 9(A) says only
    that this court has subject-matter jurisdiction over all cases arising under Article
    XI, and Section 9(B) does not contain any additional grant of power. And contrary
    to its declaration in League I that it may invalidate a district plan for any reason,
    the majority now recognizes that the court’s power of review is not unlimited,
    because Sections 9(D)(1) and (D)(2) “expressly forbid,” majority opinion at ¶ 64,
    this court from adopting the plans drawn by the commission’s independent map
    drawers or by experts who have prepared alternative plans.
    43
    SUPREME COURT OF OHIO
    {¶ 101} Under Article XI, Section 9(D)(3), “[i]f the supreme court of Ohio
    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,” it may
    invalidate a district plan in whole or in part, depending on the violation. And
    because Article XI, Section 9(D) limits the available remedies to a plan that fails to
    comply with Article XI, Sections 2, 3, 4, 5, or 7, petitioners’ claims asserted in this
    litigation—that the plans adopted by the commission violate Sections 6(A) and
    6(B)—have failed to state a claim for relief. This court has no power to invalidate
    a plan simply because it violates Section 6.
    Alternative Remedies
    {¶ 102} Petitioners ask this court to adopt the incomplete redistricting plan
    drawn by the commission’s independent map drawers. However, this plan has not
    yet been judged in the crucible of cross-examination, and the majority admits that
    “no one has yet verified that their plan fully complies with Article XI, Sections 2,
    3, 4, and 7,” majority opinion at ¶ 75. The majority dismisses respondents Senate
    President Matthew Huffman and Speaker of the House Robert Cupp’s concern that
    the independent map drawers achieved a more proportional division by slicing
    heavily Democratic urban areas and joining (or “spoking”) those slices with
    Republican-leaning areas in rural or suburban areas. The majority then contends
    that there is “no evidence” that this method of drawing districts results in less
    compact districts. 
    Id.
     at ¶ __. However, Dr. Michael Barber, an associate professor
    of political science at Brigham Young University, explained early on in this
    litigation that this method of drawing districts “requires intentional gerrymandering
    and violates Article XI’s neutral map-making requirements” by dividing more
    government units than allowed by Article XI, Section 3(D)(3). League of Women
    Voters of Ohio v. Ohio Redistricting Comm., ___ Ohio St.3d ___, 
    2022-Ohio-342
    ,
    ___ N.E.3d ___ (“League II”), ¶ 124-127 (Kennedy and DeWine, JJ., dissenting).
    Sections 6(A) and 6(B) provide that the commission must attempt to adopt a plan
    44
    January Term, 2022
    that neither favors nor disfavors a political party and that corresponds closely to the
    statewide preferences of Ohio voters. However, as Dr. Barber’s report explains,
    Ohio’s political geography makes that practically impossible.
    How Did We Get Here?
    {¶ 103} This is the fourth time that petitioners have challenged the validity
    of a General Assembly–district plan adopted by the commission, and a majority of
    this court has invalidated each plan for not complying with Article XI, Sections
    6(A) and 6(B) of the Ohio Constitution. See League of Women Voters of Ohio v.
    Ohio Redistricting Comm., ___ Ohio St.3d ___, 
    2022-Ohio-65
    , ___ N.E.3d ___,
    ¶ 2 (“League I”); League II at ¶ 68; League III, ___ Ohio St.3d ___, 2022-Ohio-
    789, ___ N.E.3d ___, at ¶ 2.
    {¶ 104} This history is summarized in the following charts:
    League I, __ Ohio St.3d __, 
    2022-Ohio-65
    , __ N.E.3d __
    January 12, 2022
    Commission’s Redistricting      Petitioners’ Challenges                   Majority’s Holding                 Majority’s Order
    Plan
    Plan favors Republicans:       Court may invalidate a plan        Commission did not “attempt” to         Reconstitute
     House: 62-to-37 margin        for stand-alone violations of       comply with Section 6(A) or 6(B)         commission to adopt
     Senate: 23-to-10 margin       Section 6                          The statewide preference of Ohio         a plan in conformity
     Plan violates Section 6(B)          voters over the prior ten years was      with the Ohio
    because proportional political      such that 54 percent of Ohio voters      Constitution within
    leaning of the districts within     voted in favor of Republican             ten days
    the plan does not correspond        candidates and 46 percent in favor      Court retains
    closely to the statewide            of Democratic candidates, and the        jurisdiction to review
    preferences of Ohio voters          plan did not closely correspond with     the plan for
     Plan violates Section 6(A)          those preferences                        compliance with the
    because it was drawn               Plan violates Section 6(B) because       majority’s order
    primarily to favor the              the commission had not shown that
    majority party of the General       a more proportionate plan was not
    Assembly and disfavor the           possible
    minority party                     Plan violates Section 6(A) because
    the commission as a whole had not
    drafted the plan, it had not hired
    independent map drawers, and one
    party had controlled the map-
    drawing software
    45
    SUPREME COURT OF OHIO
    League II, __ Ohio St.3d __, 
    2022-Ohio-342
    , __ N.E.3d __
    February 7, 2022
    Commission’s Redistricting        Petitioners’ Challenges                 Majority’s Holding                   Majority’s Order
    Plan
    Plan favors Republicans:        Revised plan violates Sections    To closely correspond with the           Court orders the
     House: 57-to-42 margin         6(A) and 6(B)                      statewide preferences of Ohio voters      commission to draft a
     Senate: 20-to-13 margin       Commission violated Section        under Section 6(B), a plan must           new map from scratch
    6(A) by drawing nominally          match a 54-46 ratio, which is a          Toss-up districts must
    Democratic-leaning districts       “foundational ratio created not by        be excluded from the
     The process the commission         this court or by any particular           proportionality
    followed created the               political party but instead etched by     assessment or allocated
    appearance of partisanship:        the voters of Ohio into our               to each party in close
    (1) the commission did not         Constitution,” League II at ¶ 64          proportionality to its
    draw the maps as a body;          Plan violates Section 6(B) because        statewide vote share
    instead, the maps were drawn       it achieved proportionality by           Commission must
    by the same Republican             drawing all close seats in                adopt a plan by
    staffers; and (2) the              Democratic-leaning areas and not in       February 17, 2022
    commission failed to hold          Republican-leaning ones, resulting       Clerk of this court to
    public hearings                    in partisan asymmetry                     “refuse to file any
     Commission violated Section       Districts with 51 percent or less         requests or stipulations
    6(B) because the number of         Democratic lean are not districts         for extension of time”
    toss-up districts favors           that favor Democrats
    Republicans                       Plan violates Section 6(A) because
    the drawing process showed the
    intent to favor the Republican party:
    (1) the commission did not redraw
    the map from scratch, (2) the
    commission failed to hold frequent
    public meetings, and (3) the plan
    was drafted by partisan staffers
    46
    January Term, 2022
    League III, __ Ohio St.3d __, 
    2022-Ohio-789
    , __ N.E.3d __
    March 16, 2022
    Commission’s Redistricting            Petitioners’ Challenges                   Majority’s Holding                 Majority’s Order
    Plan
    Plan favors Republicans:           Commission failed to adopt a          Plan violates Section 6(A) because      Commission should
     House: 54-to-45 margin           new plan by February 17, 2022,         the commission did not follow the        retain an independent
     Senate: 18-to-15 margin          and petitioners request that it be     process that Article XI requires         map drawer
    ordered to show cause why it          Commission did not draft the plan;       answerable to all
    should not be held in contempt.        instead, the plan was drawn by           commission members
    Republican staffers                     Drafting should occur
    After the commission filed its        Majority-party members of the            in public
    plan, the chief justice continues      commission excluded the minority-       Commission should
    the hearing on the show-cause          party members from participating         convene frequent
    order.                                 in the plan’s creation                   meetings
     Districts with a sub-52-percent         Plan must be filed by
    Petitioners argue that the third       Democratic lean allocated to the         March 28
    revised plan violates Section          Democratic Party under the second       Clerk of this court
    6(A) because                           revised plan are “competitive”           “shall refuse to file any
     19 Democratic-leaning House           districts and, under the court’s         requests or stipulations
    districts favor Democrats by         holding in League II, must be            for extension of time,”
    two points or less                   excluded when assessing the plan’s       League III at ¶ 47
     plan was drafted in private by        overall proportionality
    Republican staffers
    .
    Petitioners contend that the plan
    violates Section 6(B) because the
    26 competitive Democratic-
    leaning districts could be won by
    Republicans if the election
    favored them by two points.
    League of Women Voters of Ohio v. Ohio Redistricting Comm., __ Ohio St.3d __ 2022-Ohio-__, __ N.E.3d
    __
    April 14, 2022
    Commission’s Redistricting            Petitioners’ Challenges                   Majority’s Holding                 Majority’s Order
    Plan
    Plan favors Republicans:           Petitioners renew their motions       Plan violates Section 6(A) because      Adopt a new plan by
     House: 54-to-45 margin           to hold the commission in              it was not drafted and adopted by        May 6
     Senate: 18-to-15 margin          contempt and object to the third       the commission but, rather,             Suggests drafting best
     Number of sub-52-percent         revised plan:                          modified the prior invalid plan; the     accomplished in
    Democratic-leaning               Plan fails to comply with the        plan remains disproportional             frequent public
    districts reduced by two in        court’s order to hire an            because all districts labeled as         meetings to promote
    House and by one in                independent map drawer, to          competitive lean Democratic              transparency and
    Senate                             draw the map in public as the      There remains an aggregate               increase public trust
    commission, and to draw a           asymmetry in the assignment of          Recommends that
    proportional map without            toss-up districts, demonstrating         commission use the
    seeking to favor a party            partisan bias under Section 6(A)         independent map
     Plan violates Section 6(A) for      Too many districts that were             makers’ work from
    the same reasons plan in            counted as Democratic districts are      latest attempt as
    League III did                      instead tossups, and that lack of        starting point
     Plan also violates Section           proportionality violates Section        Court retains
    6(B), because all competitive       6(B)                                     jurisdiction
    seats have been drawn to lean                                               “For good cause
    Democratic                                                                   shown, the
    commission may file a
    motion for extension
    of time to file the
    district plan with the
    secretary of state,”
    majority opinion, ¶ 81
    47
    SUPREME COURT OF OHIO
    {¶ 105} These charts show how we have gotten to this point, but this flow
    chart shows how the Constitution envisioned the redistricting process:
    48
    January Term, 2022
    {¶ 106} We are far afield from this roadmap, and Ohio is now stuck in a
    proverbial “time loop” because the Constitution does not contemplate the outsized
    role in redistricting that the majority has assumed for itself. Article XI includes an
    impasse procedure that governs when the partisan officeholders who make up the
    commission are at a stalemate. The result is a map that stays in place for four years.
    The Constitution did not anticipate the majority’s claim to power under Article XI,
    Section 9, and therefore, no procedure applies when a majority of this court and the
    commission are at loggerheads. Instead, the process endlessly repeats itself. That
    is where we are.
    Conclusion
    {¶ 107} The complaints in these cases allege that the General Assembly–
    district plan adopted by the commission is unconstitutional, because the
    commission failed to comply with Article XI, Sections 6(A) and 6(B) of the Ohio
    Constitution. The majority continues relying on its overreach of power to invalidate
    the plan based solely on a stand-alone violation of Section 6(A) or 6(B). Now, after
    months have passed and thousands of taxpayer dollars have been spent, we are right
    back to where we were on September 21, 2021, without any end in sight. With two
    separate primaries looming, the taxpayers are looking at spending millions more.
    Had we adhered to this court’s power to invalidate a district plan only if it violates
    Sections 2, 3, 4, 5, or 7, the complaints would have been dismissed and the people
    of Ohio would have been able to vote in all races on May 3, 2022.
    _________________
    FISCHER, J., dissenting.
    {¶ 108} I respectfully dissent from the majority opinion’s decision to
    sustain petitioners’ objections to the latest General Assembly–district plan.
    49
    SUPREME COURT OF OHIO
    I. The majority opinion’s approach creates problems by running afoul of the
    Ohio Constitution
    {¶ 109} As noted in my previous separate opinions, all three complaints in
    these cases allege that this matter is governed by the impasse procedures set forth
    in Article XI, Section 8 of the Ohio Constitution. See League of Women Voters of
    Ohio v. Ohio Redistricting Comm., ___ Ohio St.3d ___, 
    2022-Ohio-65
    , ___ N.E.3d
    ___, ¶ 280 (“League I”) (Fischer, J., dissenting); League of Women Voters of Ohio
    v. Ohio Redistricting Comm., ___ Ohio St.3d ___, 
    2022-Ohio-342
    , ___ N.E.3d ___,
    ¶ 152 (“League II”) (Fischer, J., dissenting); League of Women Voters of Ohio v.
    Ohio Redistricting Comm., ___ Ohio St.3d ___, 
    2022-Ohio-789
    , ___ N.E.3d ___,
    ¶ 195 (“League III”) (Fischer, J., dissenting). This court can neither ignore nor
    change those allegations, and these are the same allegations that form the basis of
    the challenges to the current plan in these cases. But, yet again, the majority opinion
    does not take those uncontradicted allegations into account—all to the detriment of
    Ohio and its citizens.
    {¶ 110} Accordingly, once again, the majority opinion fails to follow the
    words of the Ohio Constitution. See League III at ¶ 151 (Fischer, J., dissenting).
    In doing so, as more fully explained below, the majority opinion undermines,
    undercuts, and guts the entire structure of Article XI. See League II at ¶ 151
    (Fischer, J., dissenting). And it is this subversion of the wording of Article XI that
    is the reason the majority opinion today continues to create more and more
    problems for Ohio.
    {¶ 111} By eliminating the “stick” of a possible four-year plan, as specified
    in the Ohio Constitution in Article XI, Section 8(C)(1)(a), while maintaining only
    the “carrot” of a ten-year plan, today’s majority opinion tells, as it effectively has
    repeatedly told, the minority-party members of respondent Ohio Redistricting
    Commission to never agree, i.e., never, ever reach a compromise with the majority-
    party members, because if the minority party does not get everything that it desires,
    50
    January Term, 2022
    then the minority group can just go back to court again and again and again until
    the minority party gets exactly what it desires. And that is exactly what is
    happening here.
    {¶ 112} Without the continuing “threat” of the four-year plan as a “stick”
    to prod compromise, the majority opinion destroys Article XI’s very foundation
    and makes it mere dust. And the essence of that “dust” is then the “whims” or
    current “feelings” of what a plan should be in the mind of a majority of this court.
    The Ohio Constitution, and Article XI in particular, do not support this type of
    decision.
    {¶ 113} Thus, we have yet another majority opinion declaring a plan of the
    commission unconstitutional—as there is no reason for any minority-party member
    of the commission to come to a compromise with the majority-party members of
    the commission, contrary to what Article XI, Section 8 of the Ohio Constitution
    specified when it was approved by more than 70 percent of Ohio voters in 2015.
    See League I, ___ Ohio St.3d ___, 
    2022-Ohio-65
    , ___ N.E.3d ___, at ¶ 313
    (Fischer, J., dissenting), citing Ohio Secretary of State, Statewide Issue History,
    https://www.ohiosos.gov/elections/election-results-and-data/historical-election-
    comparisons/statewide-issue-history/          (accessed     Jan.      2,       2022)
    [https://perma.cc/CK6W-2KUC]. If the majority opinions in these cases had not
    undercut the Ohio Constitution by ignoring the constitutional text of Section 8, as
    explained again below and in my prior separate opinions in these cases, then the
    state of Ohio would have had a four-year General Assembly–district plan months
    ago, no problems setting election dates, no threat of a federal court taking over the
    drawing of Ohio’s House and Senate district lines, no extraconstitutional orders in
    majority opinions in these cases, no motions for show-cause orders, and certainly
    no continuing constitutional crisis.
    {¶ 114} One might argue that I overreached when using the word
    “generations” in my first dissent in these cases, League I at ¶ 351 (Fischer, J.,
    51
    SUPREME COURT OF OHIO
    dissenting) (“[t]he resulting lack of the citizens’ support will harm the judicial
    branch of Ohio’s government for generations”), and that perhaps I should have used
    the phrase “for many years to come” instead. Nevertheless, my prediction of
    problems to come to Ohio because of the majority opinions disregarding the text of
    Article XI, Section 8, unfortunately has come true, although I wish I had been
    wrong. But the list of problems set forth in the paragraph above is directly—and
    undeniably—caused by the majority opinions not following the wording of the
    Constitution.
    II. The structure of Article XI, Section 8
    {¶ 115} As I have said before, see id. at ¶ 282-286 (Fischer, J., dissenting);
    League II, ___ Ohio St.3d ___, 
    2022-Ohio-342
    , ___ N.E.3d ___, at ¶ 152 (Fischer,
    J., dissenting), Article XI, Section 8(C)(1)(a) specifies that a four-year plan—and
    all the adopted plans have been four-year plans—is in effect for two election cycles
    (four years), without exception, unlike the six-year plan in the same part of Article
    XI and the ten-year plan in Article XI, Section 8(B):
    (B) If the commission adopts a final general assembly
    district plan in accordance with division (A)(3) of this section 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 the next year ending in the
    numeral one, except as provided in Section 9 of this article.
    (C)(1)(a) 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
    52
    January Term, 2022
    remain effective until two general elections for the house of
    representatives have occurred under the plan.
    (b) 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) of Section 1 of this article, and that
    plan is adopted to replace a plan that ceased to be effective under
    division (C)(1)(a) of this section before a year ending in the numeral
    one, the plan adopted under this division shall take effect upon filing
    with the secretary of state and shall remain effective until a year
    ending in the numeral one, except as provided in Section 9 of this
    article.
    (Emphasis added.) I emphasize, once again, see League I at ¶ 286 (Fischer, J.,
    dissenting); League II at ¶ 152 (Fischer, J., dissenting), that Section 8(C)(1)(a)
    contains no exception providing that the effectiveness of a four-year plan is subject
    to Article XI, Section 9.
    III. The majority opinion continues to head in the wrong direction
    {¶ 116} As a further “bad consequence” of ignoring this wording, the
    majority opinions have either wrongfully ordered or improperly “advised” the Ohio
    Redistricting Commission to take particular actions, and this court has no authority
    to do either of those things. See League III, ___ Ohio St.3d ___, 
    2022-Ohio-789
    ,
    ___ N.E.3d ___, at ¶ 30 (“[t]he commission should retain an independent map
    drawer” [emphasis added]); id. at ¶ 44 (“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” [emphasis
    added]).
    53
    SUPREME COURT OF OHIO
    {¶ 117} If this “should” language of the League III majority opinion stating
    that the commission should/must follow certain procedures in drafting a plan
    constituted an order of this court, then it was an order of dubious enforceability, as
    the Ohio Supreme Court has no authority under the Ohio Constitution to demand
    another state constitutional entity, especially one acting in a legislative capacity, to
    do anything. See State ex rel. State v. Lewis, 
    99 Ohio St.3d 97
    , 
    2003-Ohio-2476
    ,
    
    789 N.E.2d 195
    , ¶ 34, quoting DeRolph v. State, 
    78 Ohio St.3d 419
    , 422, 
    678 N.E.2d 886
     (1997) (Moyer, C.J., concurring in part and dissenting in part)
    (“ ‘Typically, when a Supreme Court declares a legislative act to be
    unconstitutional it does not order the legislative body to enact new legislation. Nor
    does it remand the case to a trial court with an order to retain jurisdiction over the
    consequent act of the legislative authority, including jurisdiction to rule upon the
    constitutionality of the new legislation’ ”); Toledo v. State, 
    154 Ohio St.3d 41
    ,
    
    2018-Ohio-2358
    , 
    110 N.E.3d 1257
    , ¶ 2 (a court cannot order the legislature not to
    enact specific legislation, as the legislature has exclusive authority over duties that
    are purely legislative in nature).
    {¶ 118} And     if   the     majority   opinions’   wordings    were    merely
    “recommendations” or “advisory,” in any way, then the majority opinions—like
    today’s version—constitute unconstitutional advisory opinions, in absolute
    disregard of longstanding and repeated caselaw of this court. See, e.g., State ex rel.
    White v. Kilbane Koch, 
    96 Ohio St.3d 395
    , 
    2002-Ohio-4848
    , 
    775 N.E.3d 508
    , ¶ 18
    (“Our conclusion comports with our well-settled precedent that we will not indulge
    in advisory opinions”), citing State ex rel. Baldzicki v. Cuyahoga Cty. Bd. of
    Elections, 
    90 Ohio St.3d 238
    , 242, 
    736 N.E.2d 893
     (2000); Egan v. Natl. Distillers
    & Chem. Corp., 
    25 Ohio St.3d 176
    , 
    495 N.E.2d 904
     (1986), syllabus (“it is well-
    settled that this court will not indulge in advisory opinions”). And as today’s
    majority opinion, id. at ¶ 39, and concurring opinion, id. at ¶ 83 (Donnelly, J.,
    concurring), indicate, if the “should” language was advisory and/or merely
    54
    January Term, 2022
    suggestive, then this court must later consider whether petitioners’ motions for
    show-cause orders/contempt violate Civ.R. 11. Members of this court have had to
    spend substantial time reviewing those baseless and unnecessary motions.
    {¶ 119} Either extraconstitutional action from these majority opinions is the
    result—and an outward and obvious sign or symbol—of this court far exceeding its
    role in Ohio’s government, violating the separation of powers inherent in the Ohio
    Constitution, see Cleveland Bar Assn. v. Picklo, 
    96 Ohio St.3d 195
    , 2002-Ohio-
    3995, 
    772 N.E.2d 1187
    , ¶ 4, quoting S. Euclid v. Jemison, 
    28 Ohio St.3d 157
    , 158-
    159, 
    503 N.E.2d 136
     (1986), citing State v. Warner, 
    55 Ohio St.3d 31
    , 43-44, 
    564 N.E.2d 18
     (1990); State ex rel. Atty. Gen. v. Harmon, 
    31 Ohio St. 250
     (1877), and
    thus undermining the rule of law in this state—a mistaken and problematic role for
    this court, which must always act to support the rule of law.
    {¶ 120} This         latest      majority        opinion        takes       the
    extraconstitutional/unconstitutional approach a step further by conducting an
    approving advisory review of the independent map drawers’ incomplete plan,
    which the map drawers have not even reviewed to verify whether it complies with
    the Ohio Constitution, as acknowledged in the majority opinion. See majority
    opinion at ¶ 70. Again, this advisory review contravenes longstanding precedent
    from this court. See Egan at syllabus (“it is well-settled that this court will not
    indulge in advisory opinions”); Miner v. Witt, 
    82 Ohio St. 237
    , 238, 92 N.E.21
    (1910), quoting Mills v. Green, 
    159 U.S. 651
    , 653, 
    16 S.Ct. 132
    , 
    40 L.Ed. 293
    (1895) (“ ‘The duty of this court, as of every other judicial tribunal, is to decide
    actual controversies by a judgment which can be carried into effect, and not to give
    opinions upon moot questions or abstract propositions * * *’ ”).
    {¶ 121} Not only does the majority opinion conduct an advisory review, but
    it also tries to “signal” to the commission what type of redistricting plan it demands,
    see majority opinion at ¶ 69-74, because the court knows that it cannot directly
    create a plan under Article XI. Article XI, Section 9(D)(1) and (D)(2). And this
    55
    SUPREME COURT OF OHIO
    court cannot indirectly do, via signaling, what it cannot do directly. See Suon v.
    Mong, 10th Dist. Franklin No. 17AP-879, 
    2018-Ohio-4187
    , ¶ 16; State v. Jamison,
    2d Dist. Montgomery No. 23211, 
    2010-Ohio-965
    , ¶ 37; Tarr v. Walter, 7th Dist.
    Jefferson No. 01 JE 7, 
    2002-Ohio-3188
    , ¶ 31.
    IV. Once again, the “beyond a reasonable doubt” standard has not been met
    {¶ 122} I also point out that petitioners once again fail to prove anything
    beyond a reasonable doubt, which is the applicable standard in these cases. League
    III, ___ Ohio St.3d ___, 
    2022-Ohio-789
    , ___ N.E.3d ___, at ¶ 153-154 (Fischer, J.,
    dissenting), citing 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.
    {¶ 123} As an initial example, Dr. Douglas Johnson’s affidavit, as even
    today’s majority opinion notes, majority opinion at ¶ 33, shows that the independent
    map drawers were constrained by Ohio’s geography, Constitution, and time
    limitations. And one of the map drawers had to leave at the last minute. And the
    so-called independent maps have obvious constitutional problems, which Dr.
    Johnson acknowledged still needed to be resolved. It should be emphasized that
    the commission members did not have an opportunity to incorporate their own
    amendments into Dr. Johnson’s work. Moreover, the “independence” of this map
    is dubious, as Dr. Johnson acknowledged that he used a portion of a map of
    northeast Ohio that was drawn by Chris Glassburn, a consultant who had been
    retained by the Democratic legislative caucuses. Thus, any evidentiary analysis in
    the majority opinion as to the maps that were submitted is wrongful, improper, and
    unconstitutional under our caselaw as well as Article XI.
    {¶ 124} As a second example, the majority opinion attempts to rely on Dr.
    Michael Latner’s concept of a “2 percentage” change in future voting. Majority
    opinion at ¶ 51. This is, at best, pure speculation because the shift of 2 percentage
    points may not be equally distributed as current voting patterns occur, just like the
    56
    January Term, 2022
    geographic distribution of Ohio voters is “all over the place,” as recognized by Dr.
    Michael McDonald, and no one may reasonably predict how local issues, especially
    local tax-increase issues and other local initiatives and referenda, can “tweak” the
    whereabouts of changes in locations of voter turnout. Moreover, the record
    includes contrary viewpoints on this subject, i.e., under a 5 percent future vote-
    change concept.
    {¶ 125} Now, both concepts are speculative, at best, and based on in futuro
    concepts that are inadmissible under Ohio’s Rules of Evidence. Neither should be
    accepted by this court without proper cross-examination.
    {¶ 126} But even if not speculative and somehow admissible, both theories
    would then apply to this court’s analysis. And if those pushing the 2 percent
    concept have the burden to show unconstitutionality beyond a reasonable doubt,
    then those submitting the 5 percent contrary authority negate the evidence
    supposedly amounting to proof beyond a reasonable doubt. In addition, while the
    majority opinion relies on the assertion that the map drawers were nearly finished
    with completing a map when commission members decided to move forward with
    an alternative approach, see majority opinion at ¶ 23, no one has offered an
    explanation why it took until April 12 for a so-called independent map to be filed
    with this court, see April 12, 2022 Notice of Filing, case No. 2021-1198. Once
    again, just like the prior majority opinions, the majority opinion here touts the
    proper standard of evidence but then refuses to actually enforce that standard. See
    League I, ___ Ohio St.3d ___, 
    2022-Ohio-65
    , ___ N.E.3d ___, at ¶ 343 (Fischer,
    J., dissenting); League III, ___ Ohio St.3d ___, 
    2022-Ohio-789
    , ___ N.E.3d ___, at
    ¶ 154 (Fischer, J., dissenting).
    V. Conclusion
    {¶ 127} The majority opinions in these cases continue to harm this court,
    the Ohio Constitution, and all citizens of this great state. These opinions have
    placed this state on an unconstitutional path. While this latest majority opinion asks
    57
    SUPREME COURT OF OHIO
    the federal court to stay its hand, in reality, it may take federal intervention to place
    Ohio back “enroute” because the extraconstitutional—and thus unconstitutional—
    analysis embraced in the majority opinions prevents a return to Ohio’s actual
    constitutional road. See League II, ___ Ohio St.3d ___, 
    2022-Ohio-342
    , ___
    N.E.3d ___, at ¶ 151 (Fischer, J., dissenting).        By ignoring its constitutional
    limitations, usurping authority it lacks, and violating the separation-of-powers
    doctrine inherent in the Ohio Constitution, Picklo, 
    96 Ohio St.3d 195
    , 2002-Ohio-
    3995, 
    772 N.E.2d 1187
    , at ¶ 4, the majority opinions in these cases have gotten this
    court stuck in the mud. If the federal court does not tow this court out of that mud,
    these cases may be relitigated and relitigated, over and over, all year.
    {¶ 128} For these reasons, in the hope of saving this honorable court from
    future misadventures like these, I respectfully dissent. See Lewis, 
    99 Ohio St.3d 97
    , 
    2003-Ohio-2476
    , 
    789 N.E.2d 195
    , at ¶ 32-33 (once a legislative act has been
    declared unconstitutional, the duty lies with the legislative branch to remedy that
    unconstitutional act and the courts should refrain from exercising further
    jurisdiction).
    _________________
    DEWINE, J., dissenting.
    {¶ 129} It’s déjà vu all over again.12 For the fourth time, the majority holds
    that a map enacted by the Ohio Redistricting Commission violates the Ohio
    Constitution. That’s what it says, anyway. But if anything is clear at this point, it
    is that the majority has long ago forsaken any concern about the actual words of the
    Constitution—it simply demands a General Assembly–district plan that achieves
    its policy goals.
    {¶ 130} With each iteration of these cases, it becomes more evident that a
    rogue majority is simply exercising raw political power.           No one should be
    12. Yogi Berra.
    58
    January Term, 2022
    deceived. The document that the majority issues today may be in the “form of a
    judicial opinion,” Bostock v. Clayton Cty., __ U.S. __, __, 
    140 S.Ct. 1731
    , 1754,
    
    207 L.Ed.2d 218
     (2020) (Alito, J., dissenting), but what the majority does today is
    legislate, not adjudicate.
    {¶ 131} A more comprehensive discussion of how the majority has gone
    astray is provided in the dissenting opinions in the previous decisions in these cases.
    See League of Women Voters of Ohio v. Ohio Redistricting Comm., ___ Ohio St.3d
    ___, 
    2022-Ohio-65
    , ___ N.E.3d ___; League of Women Voters of Ohio v. Ohio
    Redistricting Comm., ___ Ohio St.3d ___, 
    2022-Ohio-342
    , ___ N.E.3d ___
    (“League II”); League of Women Voters of Ohio v. Ohio Redistricting Comm., ___
    Ohio St.3d ___, 
    2022-Ohio-789
    , ___ N.E.3d ___ (“League III”). For today, I will
    make just a few points.
    I. We have a mess on our hands because this court has ignored the
    constitutional limits on its authority
    {¶ 132} Ohio will have two primary elections this year, costing taxpayers
    an estimated extra $20 to $25 million. Candidates and voters still have no idea
    which candidates will be running in which districts. And a federal court is weighing
    whether it needs to step in and save us from ourselves.
    {¶ 133} All of this was easily avoidable. The Ohio Constitution explicitly
    provides that “if the supreme court of Ohio 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,” this court may order the commission to
    reconvene and adopt a new map. (Emphasis supplied.) Article XI, Section 9(D)(3).
    The alleged violations here—related to statewide proportionality and excessive
    partisanship—are all premised on Section 6. There is nothing in the Constitution
    that gives this court authority to order the commission to create a new district plan
    based on violations of Section 6. Rather, if Republicans and Democrats fail to
    cooperate and adopt a plan that both political parties consider fair, the Ohio
    59
    SUPREME COURT OF OHIO
    Constitution provides a nonjudicial remedy: a plan that lasts only four years instead
    of ten. See 
    id.
     at Section 8(C)(1)(a).
    {¶ 134} It may be that the architects of the General Assembly–redistricting
    amendment were overly optimistic. Perhaps the threat of a plan lasting only four
    years was not the stick it was thought to be to induce partisan political actors to
    cooperate. But that is the remedy provided by the Constitution—this court has no
    authority to make up one of its own. And now Ohio’s citizens are paying in
    electoral chaos the price of this court’s overreach.
    II. The majority’s extraconstitutional hostility toward competitive districts
    {¶ 135} The Constitution says that the commission “shall attempt to draw a
    general assembly district plan” in 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 shall correspond closely to the
    statewide preferences of the voters of Ohio.” Article XI, Section 6(B). Without
    question, the commission not only attempted to meet, but actually met, this
    standard. Both the third and now the fourth enacted plans contain districts that
    precisely achieve this metric, with 54 Republican-leaning House districts and 45
    Democratic-leaning House districts and an 18-to-15 ratio in the Senate.
    {¶ 136} The majority, though, has created a new standard—“partisan
    symmetry,” majority opinion, ¶ 75—found nowhere in the Constitution. It says
    that competitive districts “ ‘must either be excluded from the proportionality
    assessment or be allocated to each party in close proportion to its statewide vote
    share.’ ” Id. at ¶ 57, quoting League II, ___ Ohio St.3d ___, 
    2022-Ohio-342
    , ___
    N.E.3d ___, at ¶ 62. But why? And how? There is certainly no basis for this
    requirement in the text of the Constitution. And no one has shown that it is even
    possible to meet this judge-crafted standard.
    {¶ 137} Indeed, the “independent map drawers” that the commission hired
    on the majority’s instructions, League III, ___ Ohio St.3d ___, 
    2022-Ohio-789
    , ___
    60
    January Term, 2022
    N.E.3d ___, at ¶ 30 (“The commission should retain an independent map drawer”),
    didn’t do much better at achieving this extraconstitutional metric than the
    commission. Not only did the independent map drawers fail to complete their work
    by this court’s deadline, but they made only modest gains in reducing partisan
    asymmetry. For example, in finding the third enacted plan unconstitutional, the
    majority relied on expert testimony that “a 5 percent uniform swing in favor of the
    Republican Party across all [House] 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.” Id. at ¶ 33. Under the incomplete plan drawn
    by the independent map drawers, a 5 percent Republican swing would result in 21
    additional Republican seats while the same swing in favor of the Democratic Party
    would result in only 6 additional Democratic seats.
    {¶ 138} And the limited progress the independent map drawers made
    toward the majority’s made-up partisan-symmetry benchmark came at the expense
    of constitutional requirements governing compactness and keeping political
    subdivisions intact. Dr. Douglas Johnson, one of the independent map drawers,
    explained that in their “quest to get as close to symmetry” as possible, they were
    “kind of blowing through compactness.”
    {¶ 139} As Speaker of the House Robert Cupp and President of the Senate
    Matt Huffman point out, the independent map drawers used a “hub and spoke”
    approach to draw districts in urban and suburban areas so that cities are carved up
    like slices of a pizza. The majority doesn’t dispute this characterization. (How
    could it?) Rather, it says respondents “cite no evidence or authority for the
    proposition that the ‘hub and spoke’ districts they describe are not compact.”
    Majority opinion at ¶ 54. No evidence? How about a simple eyeball test? Take a
    gander at a few examples of the independent map drawers’ work in Cincinnati,
    Akron, and Dayton:
    61
    SUPREME COURT OF OHIO
    62
    January Term, 2022
    {¶ 140} The Constitution requires that district boundaries be created “using
    the boundaries of counties, municipal corporations, and townships.” Article XI,
    Section 7. And the commission “shall attempt” to draw districts that are “compact.”
    Section 6(C). Does anyone really believe that slicing up metropolitan areas like a
    pizza with no concern for political-subdivision boundaries meets these
    requirements? Of course not. But that’s exactly the process the majority has foisted
    upon the commission.
    {¶ 141} The work of the independent map drawers proves the lie of the
    majority’s premise. As every expert in this case—including the independent map
    drawers—to opine on the issue has acknowledged, the political geography of Ohio
    makes it nearly impossible to meet the majority’s requirement to achieve partisan
    symmetry in the makeup of competitive districts. See League III, ___ Ohio St.3d
    63
    SUPREME COURT OF OHIO
    ___, 
    2022-Ohio-789
    , ___ N.E.3d ___, at ¶ 90 (Kennedy and DeWine, JJ.,
    dissenting).   The majority’s answer is to require the commission to reverse-
    gerrymander (or hire map drawers who will)—that is, carve up Ohio’s metropolitan
    areas like a pie to maximize the number of solidly Democratic districts. In doing
    so, it commands exactly what the Constitution forbids: gerrymandering.
    {¶ 142} The majority turns the language of Article XI, Section 6(A)—“[n]o
    general assembly district plan shall be drawn primarily to disfavor or favor a
    political party”—on its head. It orders the commission to draw maps with a single
    objective: overcoming Ohio’s political geography through the creation of safe
    districts that guarantee Democratic wins. That may meet the policy objectives of
    some, but it has no basis in the text of the Ohio Constitution.
    III. This court has no authority to direct the commission’s work
    or to advise its duties
    {¶ 143} Likely fearing that an activist court would do exactly what the
    majority has done, the drafters of the redistricting amendment placed sharp limits
    on this court’s authority. In its first sentence, the amendment commands that the
    redistricting commission “shall be responsible for the redistricting of this state for
    the general assembly.” (Emphasis supplied.) Article XI, Section 1(A). And in a
    belt-and-suspenders approach, it provides further: “No court shall order, 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 supplied.) 
    Id.
     at Section 9(D)(1). And if that weren’t
    enough to get the point across, the amendment adds that “[n]o court shall order the
    commission to adopt a particular general assembly district plan or to draw a
    particular district.” 
    Id.
     at Section 9(D)(2). Further, this court may order the
    commission to revise or draw a new map only for certain violations of objective
    standards. See 
    id.
     at Section 9(D)(3). (The majority, of course, has long since
    blown past this last restraint.)
    64
    January Term, 2022
    {¶ 144} Despite these limits, the majority has repeatedly attempted to
    micromanage the commission’s work, imposing requirements found nowhere in the
    Constitution. For example, one of the reasons the court gave in League III for
    finding the plan unconstitutional was a purported violation of Article XI, Section
    1(C), which provides: “The commission shall draft the proposed plan in the manner
    prescribed in this article.” According to the majority, “the commission has adopted
    three plans so far, but it still has not drafted one.” (Emphasis deleted.) League III,
    ___ Ohio St.3d ___, 
    2022-Ohio-789
    , ___ N.E.3d ___, at ¶ 25. Thus, the majority
    directed the commission to “retain an independent map drawer” and ordered the
    commission to produce a new map within 12 days. Id. at ¶ 30, 45.
    {¶ 145} Heeding the majority’s admonition, the commission hired two
    independent map drawers. It’s hard to see how a map drafted by independent map
    drawers would any more comply with the majority’s requirement that the plan be
    drafted by the commission than the previous plans that were drafted by staff and
    adopted by a majority vote of the commission. After all, neither would be drafted
    collectively by the commission. But the commission nonetheless did what it was
    told. And while the independent map drawers made substantial progress in drafting
    a plan, they were not able to comply with the arbitrary 12-day deadline this court
    had set.
    {¶ 146} One might think that the majority would have learned a lesson
    about imposing arbitrary deadlines on an independent constitutional body.
    Apparently not. Instead, it engages in a remarkable bit of revisionist history. The
    majority acknowledges that the independent map drawers were unable to meet this
    court’s deadline.    But instead of recognizing the failure of its attempt to
    micromanage the commission’s work, it faults the commission for not asking for
    an extension of the deadline. And it goes so far as to claim that Senate President
    Huffman and House Speaker Cupp misread League III when they told the
    65
    SUPREME COURT OF OHIO
    commission that this court had said that no requests for an extension would be
    entertained.
    {¶ 147} But that is exactly what League III provided. Paragraph 45 of
    League III, ___ Ohio St.3d ___, 
    2022-Ohio-789
    , ___ N.E.3d ___, ordered the
    commission to file the district plan with the secretary of state no later than March
    28 and with this court by 9:00 the next morning. Paragraph 46 ordered objections
    to be filed no more than three days later. And paragraph 47 provided that “[n]o
    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.” The
    majority now says that “it is not proper to read paragraph 47 in isolation; it should
    be read in context. And in the paragraph prior to paragraph 47, we stated that
    untimely filings ‘under this paragraph’ were prohibited.” Majority opinion at ¶ 40,
    fn. 8. That’s nonsense. If paragraph 47 was meant to be a continuation of paragraph
    46, there would have been no need to make it a separate paragraph at all. By making
    paragraph 47’s no-extensions order into a separate paragraph and placing it
    immediately after the two paragraphs setting deadlines, it is clear that the court
    meant no extensions would be granted. Period.
    IV. The majority’s cavalier approach to Ohio election law and the duties of Ohio’s
    election officials
    {¶ 148} The majority spends a good portion of its opinion practically
    begging a federal court not to intervene and clean up the mess that the majority has
    created. At the same time, though, the majority inspires little confidence that it will
    allow the state of Ohio to conduct an orderly election. To the contrary, it cavalierly
    treats Ohio’s statutory framework for elections as an unnecessary nuisance and
    disregards the complexities of holding multiple elections in a short time frame.
    {¶ 149} In addition to the regular May primary in non-presidential-election
    years and the November general election, R.C. 3501.01(E)(1) and (A), Ohio law
    provides that a special election may be held on the first Tuesday after the first
    66
    January Term, 2022
    Monday in August, R.C. 3501.01(D). The majority, though, treats the statutorily
    prescribed special date as a mere suggestion:
    We are mindful of representations made by or on behalf of
    the secretary of state in the pending Gonidakis federal-court
    proceedings that a district plan must be in place by April 20 for the
    last possible primary-election date for the 2022 election, August 2, to
    be feasible. However, we fail to see how this contention should
    motivate us—or the federal court for that matter—to adopt a plan for
    the 2022 state legislative elections by April 20. It is unclear as to
    why August 2, 2022, is the last available date for a primary election
    in Ohio. We note that several states have primary elections on
    August 16, 2022, or later, including four states that will have their
    primary elections in September. Thus, on the record before us, the
    so-called April 20 “deadline” for implementing a General
    Assembly–district plan appears to be an artificial deadline that is
    based on a speculative, potential primary-election date for state
    legislative races.
    (Emphasis supplied; footnote and citation omitted.) Majority opinion at ¶ 68, citing
    Gonidakis v. Ohio Redistricting Comm., S.D.Ohio case No. 2:22-cv-0773. Wow.
    Take a minute to unpack what the majority has just said.
    {¶ 150} Start with the majority’s assertion that this court shouldn’t be
    “motivated” by deadlines based on election dates established by statute. That right
    there pretty much sums up the majority’s attitude about the other—supposedly
    coequal—branches of government. The legislature’s considered judgment about
    when to hold elections matters not; there is no reason to bother the court with such
    frivolities. But see R.C. 3501.40 (“no public official shall cause an election to be
    67
    SUPREME COURT OF OHIO
    conducted other than in the time, place, and manner prescribed by the Revised
    Code”).
    {¶ 151} Next, consider the majority’s characterization of the secretary of
    state’s representation that to hold an orderly election, districts must be finalized by
    April 20. The majority brushes this off as “an artificial deadline that is based on a
    speculative, potential primary-election date for state legislative races.” Majority
    opinion at ¶ 68. What possibly is the basis for this claim by the majority? The
    majority hasn’t asked for any evidence on this point from the secretary of state, the
    “chief election officer of the state,” R.C. 3501.04. And the only thing the majority
    points to in support of its bluster is the fact that a few other states—which
    presumably have different election systems and laws—hold later elections.
    {¶ 152} Indeed, the majority does not even try to account for the myriad
    laws that govern elections in Ohio and the constraints that they impose on the
    timing of elections. For example, under the Uniformed and Overseas Citizens
    Absentee Voting Act, 52 U.S.C. 20302, overseas ballots must be printed and
    prepared 46 days before the primary election.            R.C. 3509.01(B)(1); R.C.
    3511.04(B). After the primary election is held, there is a 20-day period in which
    overseas ballots may be received. 2022 Am.Sub.S.B. No. 11, Section 5(B)(1).
    Provisional ballots may not be opened until 7 days after an election, see R.C.
    3505.183, and the election results are not certified until 21 days after the election.
    2022 Am.Sub.S.B. No. 11, Section 5(D). And, of course, general-election ballots
    cannot be prepared until the primary election results are certified and it is
    determined who the candidates are. Under federal law, overseas general-election
    ballots must be printed and mailed 45 days before the general election. 52 U.S.C.
    20302(a)(8)(A); see also R.C. 3511.04(B) (46 days). Early voting begins 29 days
    before the general election. See R.C. 3509.01(B).
    {¶ 153} Then there are the practical difficulties in holding another primary
    election close in time to the general election. Ohio had some 3,563 polling places
    68
    January Term, 2022
    in 2020.13 Poll workers need to be recruited, hired, and trained to staff these
    locations. R.C. 3501.27(B) and (D). Ballots need to be printed. See generally R.C.
    3505.08; R.C. 3505.13. Voting machines need to be programmed. See R.C.
    3506.14. Presumably, a good number of localities will hold an August special
    election as provided by statute. See R.C. 3501.01(D). These localities will face the
    additional challenges inherent in holding three separate elections within a four-
    month period.
    {¶ 154} (And let’s not forget why we have elections in the first place. The
    voters are entitled to the information they need to make meaningful choices. That
    entails some period of time in which voters and candidates know the district lines
    so candidates can campaign and voters can assess the candidates.)
    {¶ 155} To be fair, I can’t say with certainty that what the majority suggests
    is impossible. But the majority cannot fairly say that it is possible. We are judges,
    after all, not election officials. We have no institutional expertise in the mechanics
    of holding elections. And the person who does—Ohio’s secretary of state—has
    made clear that he thinks April 20 is the drop-dead date for holding an orderly
    election. There is nothing in the record before us that would suggest that that is
    untrue. This court is no better qualified to dispute the administrative calculus of
    Ohio’s chief election official than is the secretary of state to tell this court the
    meaning of the Ohio Constitution. See majority opinion at ¶ 36 (“We do not defer
    to the commission’s legal interpretations”).
    {¶ 156} At this juncture, though, the majority’s dismissive attitude toward
    the practical concerns of holding an orderly election should hardly come as a
    13. See U.S. Election Assistance Commission, Election Administration and Voting Survey 2020
    Comprehensive Report, available at https://www.eac.gov/sites/default/files/document_library/files
    /2020_EAVS_Report_Final_508c.pdf#page=29 (accessed Apr. 14, 2022) [https://perma.cc/TN9T-
    G4R2] and Election Administration and Voting Survey 2020 Datasets Version 1.1, available at
    https://www.eac.gov/research-and-data/datasets-codebooks-and-surveys (accessed Apr. 14, 2022)
    [https://perma.cc/AX9A-XV6X].
    69
    SUPREME COURT OF OHIO
    surprise. Throughout this litigation, the majority has shown little concern for the
    realities facing the commission and election officials. On the first three go-rounds,
    this court gave the commission ten, ten, and twelve days, respectively, to adopt a
    new plan. In contrast, the court allowed itself a leisurely 111 days to review the
    first enacted plan, 13 days to review the second enacted plan, 16 days to review the
    third enacted plan, and now 13 days to review the fourth plan. Today, the majority
    is a little more generous in the time it gives the commission to draft a new plan.
    But that “generosity” comes late—perhaps too late—in the game.
    {¶ 157} Furthermore, the majority has made the commission’s task
    considerably more difficult by prohibiting it from using a previously invalidated
    plan as a starting point. See id. at ¶ 78 (“We further order * * * that the commission
    draft and adopt an entirely new General Assembly–district plan”); see also League
    II, ___ Ohio St.3d ___, 
    2022-Ohio-342
    , ___ N.E.3d ___, at ¶ 38. In the eyes of the
    majority, issuing a revised plan that is “no more than a modification” of a
    previously invalidated plan, majority opinion at ¶ 42, is “ ‘tantamount to an intent
    to preserve as much partisan favoritism as could be salvaged from the invalidated
    plan,’ ” id. at ¶ 41, quoting League II at ¶ 38. Why on earth should that be the case?
    Isn’t it conceivable that a few tweaks could fix a close-but-not-quite-good-enough
    plan? Nonetheless, it seems that the commission has only two options that will
    satisfy the majority: either try to fix the independent map drawers’ slice-and-dice
    plan or start entirely from scratch. What basis for that is there in the Constitution?
    {¶ 158} Indeed, it is amazing that despite prohibiting the commission from
    working off its previous plan, the majority has no qualms about strongly suggesting
    that the commission work from the independent map drawers’ plan—a plan that
    has never been adopted or subjected to adversarial testing. The majority tells the
    commission that it “appears that the most efficient” course is for the independent
    map drawers to continue to work on the map and it provides various other guidance
    about how the commission should proceed. Majority opinion at ¶ 74. This court,
    70
    January Term, 2022
    however, is forbidden from “order[ing] the commission to adopt a particular
    general assembly district plan.” Article XI, Section 9(D)(2). In defiant disregard
    of that proscription, the majority prejudges a plan yet to be adopted and strongly
    implies that any alternative will be frowned upon. The majority’s insistence on
    telling the commission how to do its job is simply more evidence of how far away
    the majority has gotten from its own.
    V. Conclusion
    {¶ 159} This court’s job is to adhere to the text of the Constitution. It is not
    to impose extraconstitutional standards on the commission in an attempt to achieve
    political outcomes that the court finds desirable. And it is not to micromanage a
    task that the Constitution entrusts solely to the commission.
    {¶ 160} If it is really true that history repeats itself, first as tragedy then as
    farce, we are now comfortably in the farce stage. The fourth enacted plan complies
    with all constitutional standards.      It is long past time for the majority to
    acknowledge as much and put an end to the chaos it has created. Because the
    majority does not, I respectfully dissent.
    KENNEDY, J., concurs in the foregoing opinion.
    FISCHER, J., concurs in paragraphs 151-152 and paragraphs 157-158 of the
    foregoing opinion.
    _________________
    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 Supreme Court 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,
    71
    SUPREME COURT OF OHIO
    Spencer W. Klein, Harleen K. Gambhir, and Raisa M. Cramer, for petitioners in
    Supreme Court 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, and Harry Isaiah Black, for petitioners in Supreme Court case No. 2021-
    1210.
    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, Jonathan D. Blanton, Deputy Attorney
    General, Michael J. Hendershot, Deputy Solicitor, and Julie M. Pfeiffer and
    Michael A. Walton, Assistant Attorneys General; and Dickinson Wright, P.L.L.C.,
    David A. Lockshaw Jr., Terrence O’Donnell, and Manuel D. Cardona, for
    respondent Ohio Secretary of State Frank LaRose.
    Bricker & Eckler, L.L.P., Brodi J. Conover, and Anne Marie Sferra, for
    respondent Auditor of State Keith Faber.
    Dave Yost, Ohio Attorney General, and 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, special counsel to Attorney General Dave Yost, for
    respondents Senate President Matt Huffman and Speaker of the House Robert
    Cupp.
    72
    January Term, 2022
    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.
    _________________
    73