What is NATO? Why is it in Dayton? Everything to know about the parliamentary assembly
Over 1,000 diplomats, staff, journalists, and guests from dozens of countries are expected to attend the NATO Parliamentary Assembly meetings from May 22 to 26.
According to the Ohio Statehouse News Bureau, this is the first time NATO has come to the US since 2003, "coming at a precarious time for US-international relations."
But what is NATO, and why is it in Dayton? Here's everything to know.
The assembly was created in 1955 to link the North Atlantic Treaty Organization with the parliaments of NATO's 32 member nations.
NATO's Parliamentary Assembly is held twice annually, per the Dayton Daily News. Sessions occur in the spring and the fall, bringing NATO members and partner legislators together for a series of debates and reports.
The news site adds that this week, the alliance will discuss key issues and policy recommendations on its defense and security agenda, including discussions related to the war in Ukraine.
This will be the first time the U.S. has hosted the assembly since Orlando did in 2003.
NATO stands for the North Atlantic Treaty Organization.
Republican Congressman Mike Turner has been working for more than three years to bring the NATO Parliamentary Assembly to Dayton to align with the 30th anniversary of the Dayton Peace Accords.
Turner, 65, was mayor of Dayton in 1995 when the Dayton Peace Accords were reached at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, bringing an end to the Bosnian War. He's been in Congress for 23 years, including 16 years as an appointee to the NATO Parliamentary Assembly.
According to the event's website, the NATO sessions and plenary will be held at various venues in the NATO village in downtown Dayton, including the Schuster Center, Victoria Theatre, and CareSource headquarters. Traffic will be restricted, and pedestrian access will be limited.
The city of Dayton and its partners are preparing for potential protests.
On the first night of the NATO Parliamentary Assembly meeting in Montreal in November 2024, protests turned violent with people throwing objects at police, lighting vehicles on fire, and breaking windows, according to the Canadian Broadcasting Corp.
The state has allocated $3 million for security expenses, including anti-scaling fencing and concrete barriers, drones, and radios.
The event's website states that only credentialed individuals are allowed to access the NATO Village and assembly sessions.
Roughly 300 parliament members from the 32 NATO countries will be in Dayton for the spring session. Their families and staff, U.S. officials, and guest speakers have also been invited to join. The total number of attendees is predicted to be around 1,000.
State Representative Desiree Tims (D-Dayton) announced in March that $4.3 million has been allocated for the NATO Parliamentary Assembly, including $2.8 million in reimbursement costs to the city of Dayton for policing, fire, public works, and equipment expenses.
This article originally appeared on Cincinnati Enquirer: What is NATO? Why is it in Dayton? Everything to know
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Hill
13 minutes ago
- The Hill
Tariff rebate checks in 2025? What we know about current legislation
(WJW) – It's not a pandemic stimulus check, but Congress is currently weighing the possibility of sending the American people more money. As part of the American Worker Rebate Act, introduced by Republican Sen. Josh Hawley of Missouri in July, people would receive hundreds of dollars in tariff rebate checks, which work to counteract the financial burden imposed on families by the Trump administration's tariffs. As the bill stands now, a household would get $600 for every child and adult – meaning a family of four would receive $2,400. Check amounts go down for those U.S. residents who are making more than $150,000 as a family or $75,000 individually. The bill has not been passed by the Senate or the House, and it must overcome multiple obstacles before being brought to President Trump's desk to sign. However, last month, Trump did say he was 'thinking about' approving a rebate. If the revenue from the latest tariff rollout exceeds projections, the bill leaves room for a larger rebate to be sent out to the American people. So far, there has been no word from Congress or the IRS on the possibility of a fourth stimulus check, like those issued during the height of the COVID-19 pandemic. A rebate is a refund of something already paid for, while a stimulus is simply money given to pump up the economy. The U.S. Senate is currently on break for the summer and will be back in action on Sept. 2.
Yahoo
17 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Newsom to unveil redistricting plan for California in response to Texas
The Brief Newsom and other Democratic leaders plan to announce an effort to quickly redraw the state's congressional districts. This move comes after Texas announced plans to add five more Republican districts. The California legislature will take up the issue next week to call a Nov. 4 special election. LOS ANGELES - California Gov. Gavin Newsom is expected to formally unveil his plan on Thursday to redistrict California's congressional districts in response to Trump's plan to redraw Texas. Newom said if Texas redistricts its congressional districts to add five more Republican districts, then California will change its maps to add five more Democratic districts. Newsom, along with other Democratic leaders, will hold a press conference at 11:30 a.m. in Los Angeles. Fight fire with fire' Taking a note from Trump himself, Newsom took to X to announce his news conference in all caps: "HUGE "HISTORIC" EVENT — THURSDAY 11:30AM PACIFIC IN LOS ANGELES!!! A "BEAUTIFUL RALLY" / PRESS CONFERENCE WITH GAVIN CHRISTOPHER NEWSOM & STRONG DEMS. DEMOCRATS WILL DESTROY GREG ABBOTT'S "TOTALLY RIGGED MAPS." TREMENDOUS WORK IS BEING DONE. DONALD TRUMP (THE CRIMINAL PRESIDENT) GET READY FOR THE MOST BEAUTIFUL PAYBACK YOU'VE EVER SEEN!!! COULD BE THE WORST DAY OF YOUR LIFE AS YOUR PRESIDENCY ENDS (DEMS RETAKE CONGRESS!). AMERICA WILL BE LIBERATED — "LIBERATION DAY" MANY ARE CALLING IT!!! THANK YOU FOR YOUR ATTENTION TO THIS MATTER! — GCN." Newsom's social media team also mocked Speaker Mike Johnson and President Trump by saying in a separate post on X that California will "fire him with new, more beautiful maps." Redrawing Texas Newsom has repeatedly criticized efforts that are continuing in Texas to redraw that state's congressional districts ahead of next year's mid-term elections, with the new maps potentially adding between three and five Republican seats in Congress, bolstering the GOP's slim majority in the House of Representatives. That redistricting effort has been on hold due to Texas state Democrats leaving the state, blocking the legislature's ability to achieve a quorum and vote on the issue. But Newsom acknowledged in an interview this week that the move in Texas is likely to ultimately succeed. "We're going to fight fire with fire," Newsom said. Redistricting plan could be left to voters He said the California legislature will take up the issue next week to call a Nov. 4 special election to put new maps before voters to increase Democratic representation in Congress -- offsetting the actions of Texas. The move would set aside the current California district maps that were drawn by an independent commission. Paul Mitchell, vice president of Political Data Incorporated, a bipartisan voter data firm, said the idea of doing a mid-decade redistricting is pretty unheard of, especially in a compressed timeline. He said this would also be the first time voters would get to vote on the maps. "This is crazy," Mitchell said. "It is unprecedented. It shouldn't be happening. But since it is happening, I think California voters are ready. We'll fight fire with fire if we have to." Newsom recently sent a letter to Trump saying California would halt its redistricting effort if Texas agreed to do the same, but Trump did not respond to the request. Corrin Rankin, chair of the California Republican Party, issued a statement this week saying the party would go to court to fight Newsom's plans to redistrict the state. "The California Republican Party will fight it in the courts, at the ballot box and in every community," Rankin said. Abbott told Fox News that if California does move to redraw its district, Texas will simply counter by amending its lines again to add even more Republican seats in Washington. "If California thinks they're going to move their needle to the extreme and eliminate five Republican numbers of the United States Congress there, Texas is not going to do five: We will add 10 more Republican seats using the same procedure they are using in California," Abbott said. The Source Information for this story came from a series of posts on X made by Gov. Newsom's press office. City News Service and KTVU's James Torres contributed to this report.
Yahoo
36 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Why Democrats have limited power to fight Republican redistricting
Though Democrats such as New York Gov. Kathy Hochul say they will "fight fire with fire" and counter Texas Republicans' planned redistricting, the GOP is in a much stronger position to alter congressional maps in its favor before the 2026 midterms. Republicans could flip at least nine seats in the House of Representatives if they redraw district maps in heavily populated states where they have the power to redistrict. Democrats, on the other hand, are hamstrung in the biggest blue states such as California and New York, which have enacted redistricting changes to prevent one party from having too much control over map-drawing. In all, five new Republican seats could come from Texas, two to three from Ohio, and at least one from Florida. The ruby-red states of Indiana and Missouri have discussed redrawing their maps and could add one seat each, but they have not taken steps forward. The number of seats Democrats could win is less clear because the process would be slower and less certain. Michael McDonald, a political science professor at the University of Florida, said the purpose of Democrats pushing back on Republican efforts to redistrict "is really to shine a light on the Republicans' anti-democratic tendencies" as part of their messaging strategy. The mid-decade redistricting movement could provide a short-run benefit to Republicans, who are at risk of losing their 219-212 majority in the House of Representatives. What is gerrymandering? See where the term comes from. Though states typically redistrict every decade in the two years that follow the new census, President Donald Trump has encouraged redistricting to happen ahead of 2026. Even several seats may not be enough to withstand the tendency of the party in the White House to lose seats in between presidential elections. In 2010, under President Barack Obama, the House of Representatives swung toward Republicans by 63 seats. Here's a look at where redistricting is in progress, and where leaders have said they're considering redrawing their maps. The process is moving in Texas, Florida and Ohio Republicans' biggest gains in redistricting would come from Florida, Ohio and Texas, the most populous states with unified Republican control of state government. All of these states are taking action related to redistricting, and the resulting maps could provide Republicans up to nine new seats. In Texas, the Republican-led state Legislature is moving aggressively to pass a new congressional map with five new districts likely to lean Republican. Democrats left the state in protest to deny their colleagues a quorum, but Republican Gov. Greg Abbott issued arrest warrants for the Democrats who fled, and Trump suggested the FBI may have to force them back to the state. "I'm a little skeptical that that shift is going to be enough to withstand what's going to happen in the larger blue wave that's likely to happen in the 2026 election nationally in response to Trump," McDonald said of the five congressional seats Texas Republicans are trying to capture. Ohio was already planning to redraw its congressional map because of gerrymandering reform language in the state Constitution. Because no Democrats in the state Legislature voted in favor of the new maps drawn in response to the 2020 Census, the Republican-approved map could legally be used only in 2022 and 2024. The Legislature must draw a new map and pass it by Nov. 30. Observers are expecting two to three more seats to lean Republican, possibly affecting voters in the Akron, Cincinnati and Toledo areas. Florida House of Representatives Speaker Daniel Perez has announced a special committee for redistricting that will focus exclusively on the state's congressional map, not state legislative maps. He said there is limited time to handle additional redistricting and points to a recent state Supreme Court case that upheld the Republican-friendly congressional map. Gov. Ron DeSantis said Aug. 11 that Florida should have gotten an additional seat during the 2020 census and raised questions about the congressional districts in South Florida. Politico pointed to any of three Democratic-held seats in south Florida as possible targets. The Washington, DC-based news outlet Punchbowl reports that Republicans want at least three seats from a new map. Indiana and Missouri consider redrawing, too Additional Republican congressional seats could be drawn in the staunchly Republican states of Indiana and Missouri − one in each state − but the process for doing so is not as far along as in other states. Governors of both states would need to call special legislative sessions to have the maps redrawn. Vice President JD Vance took the unusual step of visiting Indiana to meet with some of the state's top Republican officials Aug. 7 and discuss redistricting. Though Republicans already hold seven of the state's nine congressional seats, an expert says they have their eyes on the 1st Congressional District, which covers the northwest corner of Indiana and includes the suburbs of Chicago. It's more moderate than the other Democratic-leaning district, which encompasses Indianapolis, and the Cook Partisan Voting Index now ranks the district as a slight Democratic lean, so changing the boundary to add GOP voters could tip the balance. Republicans also have targeted the seat in past elections. Republicans hold a supermajority in the state Legislature in Missouri. The state has eight congressional seats, and only two are held by Democrats. Republicans are eyeing Missouri's 5th District, according to the Missouri Independent. The district encompasses a large portion of the Kansas City area and is held by Democratic Rep. Emanuel Cleaver. But even the Republican Legislature rejected a similar map in 2022 that gave seven seats to the Republicans, according to St. Louis Public Radio. Democratic states grapple with redistricting changes Democrats who run populous states are considering redistricting, but some of them face a hurdle: Their parties don't have control over drawing legislative maps. Instead, the power is in the hands of independent commissions, something often left-leaning pro-democracy advocates have supported to enact fair maps that reduce gerrymandering. In California, the only state more populous than Texas, Gov. Gavin Newsom wants to hold a special election in November so voters can greenlight a one-time redistricting plan to add seats for Democrats, according to ABC 7 News. He wants five to six seats in time for 2026, according to CalMatters. The congressional maps that are drawn every decade are usually completed by the California Citizens Redistricting Commission, which includes Democrats, Republicans and independents. New York Gov. Kathy Hochul wrote in an Aug. 5 op-ed that she's looking at ways to redraw the maps. "If Republicans are changing the rules, we'll meet them on the same field," she wrote. That includes asking voters to approve a constitutional amendment to allow for mid-decade redistricting, according to City & State New York. The move would bypass the state's independent redistricting commission, which essentially stops the Democrat-led Legislature from drawing its own maps. Change wouldn't come before 2028. Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker said in a social media post Aug. 10 that Congress should pass new, fair maps, but he added that until that happens, "Democratic states must consider all the options to protect our constitutional republic." Common Cause, a left-leaning nonpartisan group that supports redistricting reform, gives Illinois an F grade for its maps that are drawn by the Democrat-led state Legislature. It's not clear how many seats Illinois could gain or when. New Jersey has a redistricting commission that was created by a state constitutional amendment. A change to the process would require a change to the state constitution, according to Politico. Despite the long odds, House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries specifically told CNN he'd be interested in redistricting New Jersey. Gov. Phil Murphy didn't rule it out, but also hasn't taken action, making any seats gained unclear. "Never bring a knife to a gunfight," Murphy told the New Jersey Globe on July 21, quoting a Sean Connery movie. "So if that's the way we're going, we're from Jersey, baby, and we won't be laying down." Contributing: Columbus Dispatch reporter Jessie Balmert; Indianapolis Star reporters Brittany Carloni, Tony Cook and Kayla Dwyer; and Tallahassee Democrat reporter Gray Rohrer This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Republicans have upper hand in House seats in redistricting battle