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MIAMI – A federal judge ruled in May that the City of Miami radically gerrymandered its commission districts. On Friday, the city filed a new map with the city. Recommended Videos Nicholas ...
The city re-charted the map of its five commission districts this spring after the 2020 U.S. Census revealed Miami jumped in population, with much of that growth centered in District 2, which ...
Host Sam Dorr, Secretary of the Miami-Dade Democrats, sits down with Damian Pardo, City of Miami District 2 Commissioner, for ...
UPDATE: After a judge said the City of Miami must make a new district map, community groups that sued the city held a forum in Coconut Grove to get input from residents.
Miami residents spoke against a citywide expansion of transit-oriented zoning incentives, which commissioners approved on ...
Monday marked the first day of a high-stakes trial to determine whether Miami drew an unconstitutional voting map with district boundaries that sorted city residents based on race and ethnicity ...
Miami could go back to at-large districts or draw new boundaries as it faces accusations of racial gerrymandering in a federal ... District 1, at the City of Miami commission meeting in Miami, ...
District 2 covers the eastern part of Miami, including Virginia Key, Coconut Grove, Downtown and Brickell, and north into the Edgewater and Morningside neighborhoods. District 4 ...
The City of Miami unconstitutionally gerrymandered voting districts by race and ethnicity, a federal judge found on Wednesday, throwing out the city’s voting map and rejecting the way city ...
If ACLU attorneys prevail in a racial gerrymandering trial, new elections could dramatically alter Miami’s political establishment in 2024.