We'll start with a look at the big three states: Florida, Michigan, and Ohio. Following those, you can find our maps for Arkansas, Mississippi, Missouri, Nebraska, and Utah.

Florida — Proposed Map:

Drawn by: Republican governor and legislature

Intended to Favor: Republicans

Delegation: 10 Democrats, 17 Republicans

2012 Vote: Obama 50, Romney 49

Summary: Republicans blatantly ignored the recently enacted Fair Districts amendment and the original map was struck down, with litigation currently on appeal.

Net Impact: Democrats could gain two to six seats in 2016.

Republicans drew an aggressive gerrymander that blatantly violated the Fair Districts amendment passed via ballot initiative in 2010. Democrats won a Pyrrhic victory last July when circuit court struck down parts of the map, but let Republicans get away with making minimal changes with little partisan impact. The case is currently being appealed to the state Supreme Court where the left-leaning bloc has a majority thanks to former Gov. Charlie Crist.

Democratic-trending Florida would provide Democrats with tremendous opportunities for gains if the state switched to nonpartisan redistricting. Compared to the current map, the above proposal automatically would result in two additional Democrats in 2016 in the Orlando-based 10th district and South Florida-based 26th. Obama won the St. Petersburg-based 13th and Miami-based 25th by around ten percent and both Republican incumbents would be ripe targets.

In Central Florida, Obama now won the 7th District and while Republican Rep. John Mica is entrenched, the 72 year old won't be around forever and this part of the state is trending Democratic. The 6th District is roughly 50-50 and with an open seat in 2016, Democrats very well could win it. On the flip side the 5th now only went for Obama by 5.6 percent, but this is a worthwhile trade-off because the new 10th is a safe seat.

Florida absolutely needs to be one of the top priorities for redistricting reform. Unlike every other initiative state, activists would need to win 60 percent of the vote to pass a constitutional amendment. However, we previously saw the voters pass both reform measures on the ballot even in the 2010 disaster. Therefore, it's quite feasible to pass one final initiative to take redistricting completely out of the hands of the legislature, especially if aided by presidential-cycle turnout.

Michigan — Proposed Map:

Drawn by: Republican governor and legislature

Intended to Favor: Republicans

Delegation: 5 Democrats, 9 Republicans

2012 Vote: Obama 54, Romney 45

Summary: Republicans effectively maximized their seats.

Net Impact: Democrats could gain two to four extra seats in 2016.

Republicans lost the congressional popular vote in Michigan in 2012 yet walked away with nearly two-thirds of the seats due to their gerrymander. This nonpartisan map immediately gives Democrats two additional districts that Obama won by double digits, with the suburban Detroit-based 11th and Lansing-based 8th. Two more Republican-held seats narrowly voted for Obama, with Rep. Fred Upton looking somewhat rusty in the 6th while freshman Rep. John Moolenaar would have been an excellent target in the 4th. The 1st District Rep. Dan Benishek would remain vulnerable in the 1st, but that seat barely changes.

Democrats were fools not to target this state in 2012 after we lost the 2010 gubernatorial election, but Democratic activists are organizing to finally put reform on the ballot in 2016. Along with Florida, Michigan should be one of our top priorities as it could give us several more seats.

Drawn by: Republican governor and legislature

Intended to Favor: Republicans

Delegation: 4 Democrats, 12 Republicans

2012 Vote: Obama 51, Romney 48 Summary:

Republicans effectively maximized their seats.

Net Impact: Democrats could gain four to five seats in 2016.

Ohio is essential to fighting the bias of Republican map making. A nonpartisan map like this one would ensure Democrats win at least seven seats in anything but a Republican wave, while it very likely could give the party nine seats in a good year. The Cincinnati-based 1st, Akron-based 13th, and Cleveland-based 9th all went for Obama by double digits while the new 16th District gave him a 5-point margin. Even the 6th is still competitive down-ballot.

There is no good reason not to pursue an initiative here when Republicans are guaranteed three-fourths of the seats despite Ohio being consistently close to the national median. Democratic state legislators shamefully prevented the current map from being put to a 2011 referendum by voting for the Republican gerrymander and there is no excuse for Democrats not to fight to ensure our electoral system is fair.

Drawn by: Democratic legislature

Intended to Favor: Democrats

Delegation: 4 Republicans

2012 Vote: Obama 37, Romney 61

Summary: Democrats drew a dummymander, which is a map that unintentionally functions as a gerrymander for the opposite party.

Net Impact: Democrats might still be able to win a district in the 2020s.

Arkansas Democrats drew by far the most moronic map of anyone in the country in 2012 when they erred in thinking they could win three districts and instead were left with none. While a nonpartisan map only significantly improves the 1st District and it's still fairly Republican-leaning, this map would be considerably better than anything Republicans would draw in 2022, when they would seek to make the 1st and 2nd ironclad.

While the state would not provide a substantial boost to Democrats, nonpartisan redistricting is still worth pursuing, because a compact 2nd District that gave Obama 44 percent of the vote could potentially be won with a good candidate in a good year. When states like Texas lack the initiative, our options are limited.

Drawn by: Republican legislature overrode veto of the Democratic governor with turncoat legislative Democrats.

Intended to Favor: Republicans

Delegation: 2 Democrats, 6 Republicans

2012 Vote: Obama 44, Romney 54

Summary: Democrats complained when this map passed with turncoat Democratic support along with Republicans. However, the only effect of the map was to protect Democratic Rep. Emanuel Cleaver, who had quite modest wins in both 2010 and 2014.

Net Impact: Democrats don't lose one of their two seats in 2022.

A nonpartisan Missouri map wouldn't win Democrats any additional seats, but in 2022 it very likely could prevent Republicans from eliminating one of the two we hold. Geography bias against Democrats is terrible in Missouri and thus it's quite likely that Republicans will keep their veto-proof majority in the legislature, giving them total control over congressional redistricting in 2022. It would not take much for them to make the Kansas City-based 5th District significantly less Democratic, but a nonpartisan map like this makes that considerably less likely.

It's only a difference of one seat, just like Arkansas, but think of it this way: it's more efficient to spend several million dollars now to ensure a seat remains safe than to have to spend much more than that over future years to target another seat cycle after cycle.

Mississippi — Proposed Map: Click to enlarge • Interactive version​ • District summary stats Current Map: Drawn by: Federal court

Intended to Favor: Neither

Delegation: 1 Democrat, 3 Republicans

2012 Vote: Obama 44, Romney 55

Summary: The court implemented a least-change version of last decade’s court-drawn map. However, both maps were flawed. Net Impact: Democrats could gain one seat. A court drew Mississippi’s congressional map this decade thanks to divided government, but Republicans are poised to control the process next decade. However, the court-drawn map practically functions as a Republican gerrymander because it unnecessarily splits the Jackson area and packs the 2nd District with excess black voters, causing all three neighboring districts to be dark red. A commision-drawn map like this one could create a more compact and competitive 3rd District by uniting Jackson and lower the proportion of black voters in the 2nd without infringing on their ability to elect their candidate of choice. Romney only carried the 3rd here by 3.6 percent and it has been trending Democratic, meaning by 2022 Mississippi Democrats could compete in a second seat. Nebraska — Proposed Map: Click to enlarge • Interactive version • District summary stats Current Map:

Drawn by: Republican governor and legislature

Intended to Favor: Republicans

Delegation: 1 Democrat, 2 Republicans

2012 Vote: Obama 38, Romney 60

Summary: Republicans' minimalist gerrymander made a crucial difference in 2012 and just barely failed in 2014. They could have split Omaha and made the 2nd safely Republican.

Net Impact: Democrats might keep their lone seat in 2016 and beyond.

Republicans will almost certainly still control the process in Nebraska and after Democrats won the 2nd District in a bit of an upset in 2014, they will be more likely to seriously alter the district in 2022 to ensure Democrats can't win it. A nonpartisan map would result in a 2nd District that is slightly less Republican than it currently is. If Democrats were to be extra cunning, they would have Nebraska's commission utilize partisan competitiveness as Arizona's does, allowing the 2nd District to be close to a 50-50 seat by 2012 presidential performance.

Drawn by: Republican governor and legislature

Intended to Favor: Republicans

Delegation: 4 Republicans

2012 Vote: Obama 25, Romney 73 Summary:

Republicans effectively maximized their seats.

Net Impact: Democrats gain one safe seat.

A nonpartisan Utah map would practically guarantee Democrats one solid seat in blue-trending Salt Lake City, compared to the four dark-red seats currently in place. Unfortunately, Utah would be one of the most difficult states to do because organizers would need signatures equivalent to 10 percent of the presidential ballots cast in 26 of the 29 state senate districts and many of these districts are nearly monolithically Republican. The measure would also only be statutory rather than constitutional.

However this state is still worth pursuing. Rather than having close races to elect a conservative Democrat costing the party millions in 2012 and 2014, we could wage a ballot campaign once and create a safe district, allowing us to save our future millions for more worthwhile Democrats.

All in all, establishing independent redistricting commissions in these states could win Democrats over a dozen extra seats, and the party would be foolish not to pursue them.

For all of our posts in our Nonpartisan Redistricting series, click here.