Oregon
Related: About this forumFormer Oregon speaker set to back moving Oregon-Idaho border
Mark Simmons, a Republican former speaker of the Oregon House, was set to testify this week at the Idaho Legislature in favor of letting Eastern and Southern Oregon counties become part of Idaho.
But a not-so-funny thing happened in the Idaho Capitol. Nine new COVID-19 infections were reported there, and the Idaho Legislature abruptly decided last Friday to shut down for a few weeks.
Simmons, of Elgin in Union County, presided during the 2001-2002 legislative cycle. He was among a string of Republican House speakers. Now we have the longest-serving presiding officers in Oregon history, both Democrats, in Senate President Peter Courtney of Salem and House Speaker Tina Kotek of Portland.
Simmons testimony at the Idaho Legislature has been rescheduled for April 12. Mike McCarter, president of the newly formed Citizens for Greater Idaho and head of Move Oregons Border, said testimony would show that moving the Oregon/Idaho border farther from Boise will protect Idahoans from the ill effects of Oregons new drug law, an apparent reference to last falls passage of Ballot Measure 110.
Read more: https://www.oregoncapitalinsider.com/news/capitol-chatter-former-oregon-speaker-set-to-back-moving-oregon-idaho-border/article_4c5a574c-8dc2-11eb-a129-93db12c08fee.html
dameatball
(7,605 posts)in NW North Carolina, SW Virginia and NE Tennessee want the old State of Franklin back. Probably many other areas of the country where politicians will see it as an opportunity.
quakerboy
(14,216 posts)Just as long as the new borders bring the respective states approximately even in population.
Like.. Montana, Idaho, Wyoming, Eastern Washington and Eastern Oregon could merge into one state, and have two senators representing a population nearly equivalent to western Washington or western Oregon.
And California could split. Into 6+ states. each with roughly equal populations, each with two senators.
Etc.
I think there's an opportunity in their desire to redraw state borders.