SPRINGFIELD, Ill. (AP) — The once-a-decade exercise by lawmakers to redraw Illinois' political boundaries has left some questioning whether the proposed redistricting maps fairly represent a growing Latino population, and one prominent advocacy insisted Tuesday that they do not.
The Mexican American Legal Defense and Educational
Fund testified at a state Capitol hearing that the proposed districts fracture Latino
voters in some Chicago area districts and don't maximize Latino districts in
suburban areas. Nina Perales, the group's vice president for litigation, said
that "denies Latinos an opportunity to elect their candidates of
choice."
Perales declined to say whether MALDEF will sue if
the Legislature passes redistricting maps they don't like.
An Illinois House committee has approved new
legislative districts despite MALDEF's opposition. The districts drawn by
Democrats advanced on a party-line vote, although it's not clear when the full
House might vote.
Other Latino groups have said the proposed
redistricting maps are fair and balance the political interests of Latinos
against that of other minority groups such as African-Americans, who saw their
population numbers in Illinois shrink.
The number of people in Illinois who identified
themselves as Hispanic grew at a sharp 32.5 percent rate, according to the
latest national census, while the state's populations of both whites and blacks
decreased.
Adjusting the state's political boundaries is a
delicate process. Democrats are in charge of the process because they control
the Legislature and the governor's office.
House Majority leader Barbara Flynn Currie said
some have said that lawmakers can draw maps that will give more effective
Latino representation and not come at the expense of black districts.
"Others have said that really isn't accurate
and I think we have to look carefully to see whether it is or it isn't,"
Currie said.
Copyright 2011 The Associated Press.






