Des Moines, Iowa — The Iowa legislature has overwhelmingly approved the second plan for reconfiguring the boundaries for Iowa’s congressional and legislative districts.
Redistricting happens once a decade, after population changes are identified in the Census. Senate Republicans rejected the first redistricting plan October 5th, but Republicans say the non-partisan Legislative Services Agency developed a second plan that had more compact districts and districts that were closer to equal in population. The plan passed the Senate on a 48-to-one vote. Senate Republican Leader Jack Whitver of Ankeny says he started making calls last night to recruit candidates to run in open senate seats. “Now that the map has passed, we’re really six to eight months behind in the typical cycle,” Whitver says, “and both sides, both parties are going to have to work really hard to get caught up and find recruits.” Senator Pam Jochum of Dubuque, a Democrat, says redistricting has an immense impact. “It influences who wins elections, who is at the table when laws are considered,” she says, “and what laws actually pass.” Early Thursday evening, the plan passed the House on a 93-to-two vote. House Minority Leader Jennifer Konfrst of Windsor Height says Democrats were ready to approve the maps, sight unseen, because they were drawn by a non-partisan agency and without consideration for where incumbents live.
Representative Bobby Kaufmann, a Republican from Wilton, blasted other Democrats who accused the GOP of intending to draft a redistricting plan to favor Republican candidates.
Neither the House nor the Senate spent long debating the plan and Governor Kim Reynolds has indicated she’ll quickly sign it into law. The legislators who opposed the bill were Senator Ken Rozenboom, a Republican from Oskaloosa, who lives in the same senate district as Republican Senator Dickey of Packwood. Representatives Jon Jacobsen, a Republican from Council Bluffs, and Tom Jeneary, a Republican from Le Mars, voted no in the House. All three live in districts with another Republican incumbent, setting up the possibility of GOP Primaries in 2022.