The Ohio Supreme Court has let stand ballot language that will describe this fall's Issue 1 as requiring gerrymandering, when the proposal is intended to do the opposite.
If this seems muddy and confusing, it's because it is. Working exactly as designed.
The Ohio Redistricting Commission is responsible for multiple maps that have been ruled unconstitutional/biased, Vote Yes to reform Ohio's process for drawing district maps.
The measure’s description will say that the commission created by Issue 1 is “required to gerrymander the boundaries of state legislative and congressional districts to favor the two largest political parties.”
Lolwut? The issue explicitly does the opposite of that.
An anti-gerrymandering bill was introduced, this would take the power of drawing district maps away from a partisan committee made of all republicans, and give that power to a board of 15 people, including 5 reps from each party and 5 non-affiliated citizens.
The people who write the bill summary that appears on the ballot (republicans) worded it as "requires gerrymandering [...] in favor of the two largest parties". This clearly wrong summary was challenged in court, and the OH supreme court (republicans) has ruled this inverse description is legal, and will appear on the ballot.
We're in a position now where voters will have to vote Yes to 'gerrymander the district borders', to put this new bipartisan board in place.
And then if the initiative passes they can come back and say 'But the people clearly voted to require gerrymandering to favor the 2 largest parties'. Head I win, Tails you lose.