The editorial in today’s Honolulu Star-Advertiser writes:
The state Supreme Court’s ruling in January that determined how boundary lines should be drawn for this year’s election in August made scant reference to the agency created primarily for that purpose: the U.S. Census Bureau. That is why a lawsuit in federal court should result in the prompt ordering of the lines to be redrawn to conform with the nationally customary method of including military and out-of-town students in the population count, in time for the upcoming elections.
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The commission noted in its final report last year that the U.S. Supreme Court had ruled in 1962 that a state could not exclude military people from the population base “based solely on the nature of their employment,” but that seems to be what the state’s high court mistakenly has done.
In 48 other states, lines are drawn according to the Census Bureau’s
Continue Reading Star-Advertiser: “Census should guide election boundaries”