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North Carolina's new political maps hang in the balance as redistricting trial is set to start Jan. 3.
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Tested takes another look back at the year in Politics in North Carolina. On this episode: redistricting.
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North Carolina’s highest court has delayed the state’s planned March 8 primary until May so state courts can review lawsuits claiming illegal gerrymandering.
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The start of North Carolina candidate filing for U.S. House and legislative seats was blocked by an appeals court panel. But it was restored hours later. For now, it means filing will begin for the General Assembly and U.S. House seats on Tuesday morning.
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Another lawsuit challenging North Carolina’s latest round of redistricting has been filed. A conservation group, university mathematicians and voters involved in the suit accuse Republican mapmakers of illegal partisan and racial gerrymandering in both the state’s congressional and General Assembly districts.
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Checking redistricting from the bench: How the judiciary has helped reshape the districts we live inIn the second episode of our radio and podcast series “Behind The Lines,” Host Jeff Tiberii reviews some of the key legal challenges that have helped shape North Carolina’s redistricting process.
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North Carolina is getting a 14th congressional seat. The public can weigh in on how the new map should be drawn. People can also discuss the map-making process for new state House and Senate districts.
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North Carolina's Republican-led legislature will soon start the decennial redistricting process. WUNC's politics reporter Rusty Jacobs looks at lessons learned from the past decade's legal battles over North Carolina's voting maps.
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States across the South are the center of the upcoming, once-a-decade redistricting battle. The region is the fastest growing in the country and as a result will be adding an estimated half-a-dozen House seats.