FRANKFORT, Ky. — Kentucky Senate Republicans introduced two bills on the first day of session Tuesday that would redraw maps for the state’s Senate districts and Congressional districts. 


What You Need To Know

  • Kentucky Senate Republicans filed two bills on the first day of session to create new Kentucky Senate and Congressional maps

  • Lawmakers draw new legislative maps every 10 years after the U.S. Census

  • Kentucky House Republicans also filed a redistricting map for the House Tuesday

  • Republican leaders have said they plan to pass the redistricting maps by Saturday

“They’re different, make no doubt, they’re different,” Senate President Robert Stivers (R-Manchester) said. “But let’s be realistic: our guiding principles are naturally, legally, and constitutionally are defensible, and I think we’ve done that with both maps.”

A spokesman for the Kentucky Senate Republican caucus sent Spectrum News 1 a copy of the maps .

Senate Minority Floor Leader Morgan McGarvey (D-Louisville) said he got no advanced warning of the maps, and was still processing the information after the first day of session ended.

“I want this process to be as transparent as possible,” he said. “That’s why I think we should have nonpartisan redistricting to start out with; that’s why I don’t think we should play politics with redistricting maps.”

A spokesman for the Kentucky Senate Republican caucus sent Spectrum News 1 a copy of the maps around 5:30 p.m., several hours after the first day of session wrapped up.

Stivers said the Senate map doesn’t pit any incumbents against each other, and with the congressional map, he said Jefferson County will be split up: Louisville’s urban area will remain the 3rd Congressional District, while parts of southeast Jefferson County will move to Kentucky’s 2nd Congressional District.

House Republicans unveiled their map for the Kentucky House last week and filed a subsequent bill during the first day of session Tuesday as well. All three maps are expected to be passed by lawmakers and sent to Gov. Andy Beshear by Saturday. 

Several groups, including many Democrats, have criticized the process, but Stivers said any discussion about transparency or the maps being done too quickly is overblown.

“I’ve not had a single person ask me about redistricting. They want to know it gets done. They want to know they’re represented and they move forward,” he said. “I think it’s a greater issue because some people want to create an issue. You can’t be a dragon slayer unless you have a dragon.”

Senators filed a slew of other bills on the first day of session, including Senate Bill 1, which removes some hiring powers that site-based decision making (SBDM) councils currently have in school districts.

Stivers said Kentucky is the only state that has such a system.

“We have had this discussion point for many years that site-based councils are the ones that make the decisions on the hirings, but they are not held responsible if a school goes in decline,” Stivers said.

The filing deadline for candidates in the upcoming election is Friday, although a bill to delay the deadline is expected this week.

Stivers also filed a bill that would create a three-judge panel to deal with appeals of redistricting maps. Several other bills were filed Tuesday as well. 

(Legislative Research Commission)
(Legislative Research Commission)
(Legislative Research Commission)