(CNN) A federal court in Ohio found Friday that the state's congressional map is unconstitutional, striking down the map as a partisan gerrymander and ordering that a new map be drawn for the 2020 election.

It's the latest in a series of states where congressional maps have been thrown out by the courts -- following Michigan's maps last week

However, the ultimate fate of the decisions in Ohio and Michigan likely depends on how the Supreme Court handles gerrymandering cases in two other states: Maryland and North Carolina. Cases involving those states' maps were argued before the court in March, and the court's eventual ruling would likely determine the outcome of appeals in Ohio and Michigan, too. The states will likely ask the courts to put the recent rulings on hold, while it considers the Maryland and North Carolina cases

Ohio Attorney General Dave Yost tweeted Friday that the state would appeal.

"Ohioans already voted to reform how we draw our congressional maps," Yost tweeted. "This opinion takes that decision out of the hands of the people and is a fundamentally political act that has no basis whatsoever in the Constitution. Ohio will seek a stay of this decision and appeal it."

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