About 100 people came to a public forum Wednesday in Charlotte to ask North Carolina legislators to draw non-gerrymandered political maps.
Most speakers talked about the states congressional map, which was drawn by Republicans earlier last decade to allow the GOP to win 10 of 13 seats. A court-ordered redraw in 2019 shrunk the GOPs advantage to 8 of 13 seats.
Because of growth in the states population, North Carolina is getting one new congressional seat, bringing the number to 14.
A big question in North Carolina and nationally is will the new map favor the GOP with a 9-5 map or even a 10-4 map?
Angela Lunking of Charlotte said she wants more public hearings after draft maps are released.
And the only way we can do that is by seeing the initial drafts of the maps, having input from everyone, she said during the hearing at Central Piedmont Community College. Because at the end of the day if its a fair map its not going to make everyone happy its going to piss everybody off. But if we know that the process is fair and the process was correct then we can all unite in unity and restore the trust.
Other speakers asked that cities not be split and that so-called "communities of interest" be kept intact. Republican legislators, who were forced to draw new maps in 2019 after litigation, have said they will keep counties whole and that they wont use racial or political data.
The GOP is also drawing new maps for district and House seats in the General Assembly. John Lingle of Davidson said he hopes that the north Mecklenburg towns arent divided, either into a new congressional district or state legislative district.
But if one of the three towns get spun off into an Iredell (County) district, its going to very tough to try and advocate for the community because you would have to go to two different legislators or two different senators, he said.
The forum is one of 14 statewide held by the House and Senate redistricting committees.
State Sen. Paul Newton of Cabarrus County attended. The other elected officials on the podium were members of Mecklenburg Countys 17-member House and Senate delegation. All but one of those members are Democrats.
The Republican-controlled legislature will control the map-making process. Democratic Gov. Roy Cooper doesnt have veto power over the maps.
Copyright 2021 WFAE. To see more, visit .