Gerrymandering Is Making Elections Less Competitive
Cynical single-party gerrymandering contributes to and is driven by the hyperpartisanship that defines American politics right now.

By the time voters go to the polls in November's midterm elections, the vast majority of congressional races will have effectively been decided.
That's because the number of competitive congressional districts has declined sharply since two years ago, thanks to the bipartisan effort at carving safe seats during the once-per-decade redistricting process. Under the new congressional maps recently approved by state governments, there will be just 60 districts (out of 435 in total) that would have been decided by fewer than eight percentage points in the 2020 election, according to a recent analysis from the Brennan Center for Justice, a pro-democracy think tank housed at New York University.
Both Republican-drawn and Democrat-drawn maps trended toward less political competitiveness during the most recent round of redistricting, according to the Brennan Center's review. But the decline in the overall number of competitive seats was more noticeable in states where Democrats controlled the mapmaking process. In those states, just 6 percent of all congressional districts are competitive, down from 12 percent previously.

To understand why this happens, take a look at Illinois—where the new congressional map was drawn by the Democrats who control the state Legislature. As I wrote last year, Democrats were focused on packing as many of the state's Republican voters into as few districts as possible, thus maximizing the number of districts where Democrats would be favored to win. The result is three deeply red districts and 14 blue districts, many of which are nearly impossible for Republicans to hope to win—though a few of them rate as barely competitive. The map got a grade of "F" from the independent Princeton Gerrymandering Project, but fairness isn't the goal of the partisans who control redistricting in many states. Maximizing victories is.
But that means many voters don't get a meaningful say in who represents them in Washington. Cynical single-party gerrymandering contributes to—and, circularly, is driven by—the hyperpartisanship that defines American politics right now.
"As a district leans further toward one party or the other, the general election becomes increasingly insignificant while the favored party's primary becomes the real contest," write Brennan Center analysts Michael Li and Chris Leaverton. "As a result, primary voters can effectively decide which candidate will represent the district in Congress, even though they make up a small fraction of the electorate and are often far more partisan than the average general election voters."
That effect is compounded in states where strict ballot access laws limit the ability of third-party and independent candidates to compete as well. The two major parties limit competition between their own candidates by drawing single-party districts, then keep anyone who can't win a Republican or Democratic primary election off the ballot as well—a pretty neat trick!
Of course, looking at the 2020 election and overlaying those results using [OK?] the new district lines is only one metric for scoring a district's competitiveness. But other measures also show that the number of contested congressional races has been declining in recent decades as both major parties have gotten progressively better (thanks to technology) at drawing single-party districts.
According to the Cook Partisan Voting Index, which scores each congressional district along a Republican/Democrat axis based on registration totals and recent election results, the number of swing districts has been shrinking dramatically. In 1998, there were 105 districts rated "hyper-competitive"—that is, with a rating of between R+3 and D+3—in the Cook system. Now, there are only 45.
Yes, efforts to "fix" redistricting are imperfect at best, but attempts to make the process even marginally more legitimate in the eyes of the public should be taken seriously.
The alternative is the current scenario where a few handfuls of districts scattered across the country effectively determine which party controls Congress. Giving voters fewer choices might benefit the powerful political parties who rig the game by carefully gerrymandering districts—but like in any market, monopolies aren't great for the public.
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So what's the answer?
How about requiring districts to be made up of zip code groupings?
It might work, at least until the democrats pull the USPS back into direct federal service and appoint the board that makes up zip codes.
More districts. What's so magical about 435? Why not 4350? Then when you're not in a line behind ten thousand people if you want to talk with your representative, they might start doing some actual representing.
I'm on board with having each representative tied to around 100K population. Might actually open up for more third-parties to win local majorities and get elected to Congress.
I think the House should fluctuate with population, as in each person represents x number of people, but I haven't given enough thought to x to agree or disagree with 100K.
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There's no way the Republicans would be on board with repealing the Apportionment Act. The city populations would completely overwhelm the outlying areas if that happened.
"What's so magical about 435?"
Nothing magical. That's what the physical infrastructure of the US Capitol building is set up to handle.
If you want to keep expanding the House of Representatives, we have to constantly build new buildings to house it.
That's a small price to pay for some actual representation. Might also get them to stop building palaces of stone for themselves.
You won't get any actual representation.
Sure, you're one of 250,000 people the Representative 'represents' right now.
But pare it down to 10,000 and sure, your Representative might even know your name - but they'll be one of 2000 Representatives and won't have a voice.
None of this would be a serious issue if people like you didn't insist on continuing to have ever more of daily life controlled by DC.
Your *STATE* legislature should be the important one to you, not the DC one.
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Why, in current year, does all of Congress need to be sitting in the exact same physical location in order for the government to operate?
With the vote whipping seen why does adding more people solve anything?
The rules of Congress are still set as a 2 party system with the evaders of both parties appointing committee members, which is what each politician seeks.
Do you really see a change by adding 100 more party line voting members?
Inflation Reduction Act passed on purely party lines even of members at risk of losing their seat.
The leaders*
"evaders" fits, too. Hard to pin many of them down on anything.
Its easier to control them through perks and punishments if they're all dependent on the DC infrastructure. How can you disinvite someone from the right cocktail parties if they're spending most of the year in Kansas *actually talking to constituents*! Can you imagine?
Above 500 members, it becomes increasingly difficult for individual legislators to follow what is going on and do their jobs effectively. The PRC's "National People's Congress" functions with 2,980 members only because they vote the way the Party tells them to. The British House of Commons is an outlier with 650 members, but they are kept in line with close party discipline. There is not even enough room to seat all the members in their legislative chamber.
This is just a bunch of assertions without evidence. There are organizations the world over that operate with more than 500 people. "Kept in line with close party discipline" doesn't even make sense when in any given administration there are 10 - 14 different parties represented.
They have coalitions where the group leaders negotiate over the votes and policies.
There aren't organizations operating with more than 500 *peers* who all have equal say in what is happening.
Individual legislators have no problem following what’s going on regardless of how many there are.
But the more legislators there are, the harder it is to manipulate and bribe them. THAT is why authoritarians like you hate the idea.
I would argue that 500 is already far too high. Dunbar's Number suggests that the maximum effective size of a legislature should be below 150 - probably well below so the representatives retain cognitive capacity for some non-legislators as well.
Yes, that means more diluted representation - which reinforces Agammamon's point above that the solution also requires a reduction in the scope of authority of the federal legislature with a return of responsibility to state and local legislatures.
Everything happens in committee anyway. And it would be much better for many elected critters to focus on very few large subcommittees. Where budget oversight can happen, where agencies can be audited etc. Rather than spreading committes thinly where everything happens through the 20,000 unelected unaccountable staff
Great! So let Congress meet in a suburban airplane hangar with folding chairs. We can use the Capitol as a museum.
Oh no! Build new buildings?
I guess that's why California is such a dysfunctional electoral shitholes. 80 reps in 1880 with 800,000 peeps. 80 reps in 2022 with a fuckload more peeps. But hey. At least they can use the same legislative chamber
You underestimate how much money will be saved. You also underestimate how important it is for members of both houses to be in the same building
One quick fix is for all voters to join the favored party in their district and vote in their primaries and leadership elections. Then the election becomes effectively nonpartisan.
The open ("jungle") primary achieves that automatically, forwarding the two highest vote-getters (even if from the same party) to the November election, when voters are most likely to participate. At least one of the two run-off candidates will be paying attention to moderate voters and minority-party voters.
Parties, including third parties like the Libertarians, could hold conventions to decide which candidates (one or more) can carry their label on the open-primary ballot.
There is no answer that doesn't involve a Constitutional Amendment, but the very best is an option for at-large voting-- allow a voter to cast a vote in a district other than his/her own.
The most obvious answer would be an amendment requiring that districts have to be rectangular(ish) and regularly shaped to the greatest extent possible. Obviously there would have to be some deviation along the state borders, but the fundamental idea of doing away with the whacky irregular shapes should be a no-brainer for any honest person.
There is a concept used in real estate / property law call the "shape factor". I do not claim to understand the math, but the essence of it is to keep people from making subdivisions of inherently awkward shapes that present ongoing practical problems (too many bounds to be practical, extensive boundaries, area too small to be used or access, etc.). It would seem that applying this technique might be a simple improvement that would not require Constitutional amendment.
A Constitutional amendment setting the parameters for congressional districts is an idea that I suggested below.
Some other thoughts:
An accurate census that provides the number of US citizens and permanent residents for purposes of representation. If you are in the country illegally or on a visa you are not entitled to representation in the Congress.
Districts drawn in a compact and contiguous manner, without regard to party or race.
New York voters set up a promising bipartisan Redistricting commission in 2014, but when its first test came in 2021, the Democratic legislature could not keep their hands out of the cookie jar.
A tamper-proof reform would be "Let the voters decide."
If the major parties cannot agree on a map, set their two competing maps before the voters. The minority party would feel compelled to submit an honest and transparent map, since otherwise voters would ignore them. The majority party's map might contain some fiddling, but less so than now, lest they lose too many moderate voters.
Rectangles are not inherently efficient, Weigel. The metric you want is called 'compactness'. There are several mathematical ways of measuring it. One of the easiest (but still possible to game) is "lowest sum of all borders" - that is, the district map with the shortest total length to make all the necessary borders is best. Harder to calculate but a little harder to game is the Polsby-Popper test - the ratio of the area of the district to the area of a circle whose circumference is equal to the perimeter of the district. Unfortunately, no one measure of compactness is perfect - so even though virtually everyone agrees that compactness is an ideal, nothing gets implemented.
The best answer imo is sortition (random selection of critters rather than election of critters). Gerrymandering is almost impossible no matter how distorted the districts.
Second best answer is for third parties who care about the issue to draw fair district options before the DeRps present their corrupt options. Whichever is first will tend to define the agenda/narrative. And fair, competitive elections that maximize voter power rather than party power is a good narrative
Au contraire, the Tennessee Republicans gerrymandered Nashville into 3 separate districts, removing a safe D seat, but making 4 seats more competitive
Of course it will be up to individual states, and the urge to work the map to advantage will always be there, but how about a simple rule like 'no district can be more than twice as long as it is wide?' This will allow for a lot of map work, but still be a little limiting.
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Yeah sorry, but gerrymandering is extra low on my priorities. The only way to fix it is to abolish the districts altogether, which unavoidably means ending the House. Not that it would be the worst thing in the world.
And this ignores the real silver lining: Americans are sorting themselves into more like-minded communities than ever before. You know, free association in action. But that results in less diversity (of the shallow kind) and will be dutifully not mentioned.
Right, basically what I was saying. Heavily blue areas are very heavily blue because red voters often choose to leave those areas. They don't want to live in higher taxed, more regulated areas, in general. So Gerrymandering is really a way to spread out the influence of urban voting districts, even though it means people in the same district end up having disparate interests.
And that's where I don't see the value in arguing against all gerrymandering or for competitive districts. The root of most of our political conflicts is between urban and rural populations. The best way to divide it up is to set up different urban and rural districts as well as your moderate/competitive suburban districts. I don't have a clue how this is done fairly, but at least then we would have districts representing the interests of most of their population rather than a slim majority. It's interesting to me how people cry about gerrymandering when what i see in my region are districts set up like a wagon wheel around the major cities. It seems obvious that they are set up in this way to create a huge block of urban dominated representation by using their population advantage against rural voters lumped together with them
Oh come on, gerrymandering is only done for the purpose of keeping those in power to stay in power, nothing else.
It's a leftist bugaboo though, so high priority for Reason
Yep. As long as the Federal government continues to be hugely redistributionist, the geographic segmentation model fails in the face of the my-congresscritter-is-senior-to-your-congresscritter model. Squashing gerrymandering fixes nothing; it's a fundamental structural issue with Congress.
Oh, and, repeal the 17th.
Repeal the 17th indeed!
That was a major "progressive" attack on the very structure of the legislature.
>>repeal the 17th.
word. 16 too.
.....and the 18th. This time do it right.
"Of course, looking at the 2020 election and overlaying those results using [OK?] the new district lines is only one metric for scoring a district's competitiveness."
Is that a copy editor'a note that made it to publication? lol
I've seen that a few times this month. One of them was [something weird with the formatting of this paragraph and also an ad displaying incorrectly] on one of the round-ups.
And why is the editor so questioning.
Publications go through many, many changes on the way to print. This could have been as minor as a spelling issue or more substantive such as a poor choice words that someone fixed. Not necessarily a viewpoint change.
I think the most fair and practical system is one of geographic contiguity. But the thing is, people don't live in an area at random, they tend to live in areas that fit with their established values. The red/blue divide is largely along urban/rural lines, where the more urban the area, the more blue it is. So non-competitive districts are almost a natural result from the way people self-select because they live in heavily-blue or heavily-red areas.
So is the measure of "fairness" really the number of competitive districts? Or is the decreased competitiveness simply a result of voting with feet, as some areas get more concentrated toward one party as people gradually move to the area that suits their preferences?
Districts are contiguous, but they worm around all over the place to find the people they want.
Well, contiguous and compact is really what I meant. Basically taking Illinois and doing the exact opposite of what they're doing.
Compact favors urban centers which has higher density. Just asking for straight lines and least edges would be better.
I mean as compact as possible with the same population in each group, of course. No snake districts. You'd have some 99% Democrat districts as big cities contained within 2-4 districts and it would make Democrats unhappy, but you'd also have some 98% Republican rural districts to counter-balance.
As an IL resident, I can tell you that hate gerrymandering. But your idea of contiguity is spot on. I suggested this back in 2016, where every state legislature district & congressional district must be comprised of whole & contiguous counties & cities. The problem is in the IL constitution that states every district must be equal in population. We'd have to amend to allow for difference of up to 5% and it would work.
Some congressional districts will be comprised of one county, Cook & DuPage counties, others would be as low 2 counties Boone & Winnebago counties, or Will & Kankakee counties, and others could have as many 14 counties in central & southern parts of the state.
I had also suggested that we could eliminate the state legislature elections all together by making the county presidents serve as the state house representatives and the congressional representatives and the state's largest city mayors, (Chicago, Naperville, Aurora, Joliet, Peoria, Decatur, Rockford, Springfield, Bloomington {all over a 100K in population) would serve as the legislature's state senators. When you think about this, it is the BEST way to ensure TRUE representation in both the state & federal legislative bodies & it saves the state a lot of money!
What I like most about this is how it restricts lobbyists from manipulating legislators from voting against the wills of their constituents.
The assumption that having more competitive seats lead to better political outcomes is unsupported. Some other political systems deliberately grant safe seats to political parties to accomplish what the US accomplished through gerrymandering.
Right. And if you're trying to slice up things to be competitive, you end up having to grab a few urban voters and pulling some more rural voters to shove in the same district to try to balance the sheer number of votes, but the "district" makes little sense as the people supposedly represented in the district have disparate interests. This is how you end up with Representatives who are more loyal to the party than to their constituency, because their constituency is arbitrarily made up of voters with contrasting interests.
It is impossible to make any 10 year map be the same percentage of party voters. The quest for this false belief in fairness is ridiculous.
Leave it to the states legislatures as intended. Make some very minor rules on shapes to be convex and such. And leave it be.
People are acting like the system has been broken for 200 years. But entire states have changed colors even given past gerrymandering. It isnt the issue the left pretends it is.
Imposing term limits on members of Congress and state legislators is the only way to reduce gerrymandering, as the worst offenders of gerrymandering are selfish career politicians (both Democrat and GOP) who want to keep their power and control (and continue increasing their own campaign contributions).
^ This * 1000
Good comment. We have seen cases where politicians will buck their party, not because of the gerrymanders, but because the gerrymandering threatens their hold on a district.
Term limits won’t do anything, since there is still a revolving door between private industry and politics.
If we want to eliminate career politicians, we would need some form of sortition with either short terms or just per legislation powers.
Sorry but no. I watched my state go through an experiment with term limits. The promise was that term limits would eliminate career politicians and power would revert to the people.
What actually happened is that unelected bureaucrats stepped in to fill the power vacuum. We got no greater reduction in career politicians and no reversion of power to the people. Gerrymandering is a problem but term limits are not the solution.
How about a Constitutional amendment defining the parameters for Congressional districts?
Must be drawn along county and city boundries. For many of us, it is impossible to know what district you are in without looking at a map. A single subdivision may be in two or more districts.
How about a Constitution limiting the powers of the federal government?
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[Link]
Will it be too much to expect a similar signature rejection rate in the general election?
https://twitter.com/DavidGiglioCA/status/1559370578389192706?t=elVk0IqK0fo8tAEGcD_5bA&s=19
California rejected < 1% of mail in ballots during the 2020 election. In fact, the national rejection rate was .08%.
Yes, that's right. 0.08%!
However, when verifying signatures to remove far-left LA District Attorney George Gascón, 30% were rejected.
Wake up people.
Only 5% were rejected due to signatures, still way above 2020 and enough to throw enough signatures off. 5% is key because it is what is required for a full signature audit after the initial sampling showed Gascon losing.
The address rejection rate was amazing as it was ignored in 2020 almost completely.
https://twitter.com/timacheson/status/1559452864438738948?t=rvoE4YkBpyscwH3lLG6aoA&s=19
Liberal elections.
California rejected 30% of signatures for a vote to recall a far-left Soros DA, rejecting yes votes presumably, then said not enough votes.
In fhe 2020 election Cali rejected < 1% of mail in ballots. The national rejection rate was .08%
See how this works?
Rejecting signatures is a sport in my state (Illinois). Hell, it's how Obama actually got to the state legislature in the first place. He managed to get enough signatures from the incumbent rejected.
VOTER SUPPRESSION!!!!!
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Reads article....only mentions how it is the Democrat party making things less competitive.....BoTh SiDeS!
The worst of the worst for gerrymandering is Illinois. As much as Democrats love to whine about North Carolina or Texas, they have done much worse gerrymandering in Maryland and Illinois.
The worst of the worst is actually the Republican gerrymander in Wisconsin.
The lie is to be found in the fact that the 2010 Republican gerrymander was already so extreme that it was hard for them to improve upon it in 2020, so they made fewer "gains" than some expected with the most recent redistricting. 2020 was the year in which Democrats tried to push the limits, expecting a blowout in 2022.
The bigger problem of course that is ignored is the courts. Currently the constitution outlines who creates the maps, state legislatures. But courts now throw those maps out and submit their own in violation of the constitution. The courts can throw them out based on state laws, but creating their own is a violation.
Great example of the difference between courts doing their job and judicial activism. Many people think "judicial activism" means "they did something I didn't like." No, what it means is legislating from the bench. Creating policies. Or writing maps. Throwing out legislation and throwing out maps is doing their job. Good comment. Nice and pithy.
But that means many voters don't get a meaningful say in who represents them in Washington. Cynical single-party gerrymandering contributes to—and, circularly, is driven by—the hyperpartisanship that defines American politics right now.
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At least thank you for talking a bit about Illinois. This state has been gerrymandered to hell and back by the Democrats over the last few decades to the point it appears solid blue when it is in fact a very purple state. The gerrymandering drives people who otherwise would vote away from the polls and keeps the Democrats in this state in power, controlling it through an oligarchy in Chicago. These folks who would vote see no chance, no opportunity, and no change from a system built to keep Team Blue in power at the expense of everyone in the state.
Headline only.....isn't that the entire point of gerrymandering?
Beheadings are making heads less attached to bodies.
"decline in the overall number of competitive seats was more noticeable in states where Democrats controlled the mapmaking process."
I would suggest that while correct for 2020, this statement does not take into account the number of competitive seat Republicans removed in 2010. The fact is political gerrymandering has been going on for far too long.
Wisconsin Democrats wail about the political redistricting in the state and want a nonpartisan redistricting solution. The irony is that when Democrats controlled the Wisconsin legislature and governor's office they did nothing to change the process.
There was no need to do anything, as all previous redistrictings had been pretty balanced. It was the 2010 process that broke the pattern. And that redistricting was mostly done in secret; the Republican leaders would only show the proposed maps to Republican legislators behind closed doors until they had the final product to vote on.
This all assumes that there are meaningful differences between Republicans and Democrats.
The real action is at the primary level, which seems pretty competitive (at the headline news level). There's usually a whackjob versus a moderate. Real choices are made.
If you had "perfect" districts as defined by competitiveness, every one would be 52% dem and 48% republican. You'd have 435 Democrat representatives, with an average tenure of 6 years, being ruled by a Nancy Pelosi from a hyper safe Dem district.
So maybe we need to think more carefully about what problem we are actually trying to solve.
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Where has Republicans restricted voting rights to certain groups? That doesn't exist. A woman, hippie, "brown" and foreigner (after some time) can go out there and vote. Why do you lie?
I don't know about all that but I'd tend to be for anyone who held a position against hipSTERS.
I believe itd be more like 45% I, 28% D, 26% R.
But then still different if you count non voters.
What you're talking about would be extreme gerrymandering to match nationwide demographics. Which is a weird thing to suggest based on what everyone else is talking about.
Only 1 workable solution:
More Congressional Districts.
That makes gerrymandering much less effective, as small preference differences over a term are much harder to aggregate into 2 parties.
4500 congressional districts, and we'd have more regional / demographic candidates (rural/union/hunter/AFWL) where a very small advantage is all you ever have, and thus need to be much more responsive to your electorate. With so large districts, it is much more the representatives pick the citizens (particularly in redistricting years) than the citizens pick the representative.
Seriously are you proposing a make work project? Why not eliminate the house and have plebiscites in passing laws?
The answer to gerrymandering is not to increase the number of districts.
No, I am proposing have representatives actually responsive and accountable to the citizens they 'represent' We get much more turnover in local elections, because when things go wrong in the relatively small location, it is 'easier' to change.
In addition, freezing the house size as we did, means each representative covers more and more people, so they become beholden to 'movers and shakers' or influence as a matter of convivence. As well as having fewer people of legislative impact for those mover / shakers / influencers to focus on. Making politics LESS efficient is, in my mind, a feature, not a bug. Having the rep chase the Pottstown Mercury endorsement 65 mi from Philly 'cause you live in Upper Pottsgrove a 'suburb' of Pottsown) is much 'better' in my mind than chasing the Philly Enquirer because the district runs through most of Montgomery County.
Oddly, this would probably help local news organizations and STRENGTHEN the political process, as more people, more ideas engage.
Compact, contiguous districts in which only US citizens and permanent residents were counted for purposes of representation would be a better alternative.
Also, districts should be drawn without regard to party or race.
Would you like a free pony and a unicorn with that?
How about less virtue signaling and more practical suggestions, "Mr. Bumble"?
Gerrymandering?! How droll. The exact technical term is "market allocation agreements"
The market has nothing to do with the redistricting. The practice is only used to keep certain politicians in power. Gerrymandering it is.
There is no "market" involved.
Really, the "libertariantranslator" is obviously busted.
To all who want to increase the number of politicians representing us, while still allowing them to determine their own pay, I say “Are you crazy?” There will always be an endless supply of political hacks willing to toe the line over representing their district that the national parties will pay to get elected. I’m of the opinion that more contiguous and regularly shaped districts are a solution perhaps not the best solution but the most workable. Also I think the comments regarding courts drawing maps being against the separation of powers particularly astute. However, pause, our state representatives, amongst others have for so long abdicated doing their own jobs in pursuit of doing others jobs that no one is pushing back. Also, as with all time sensitive endeavors, if the committees doing the original drawing are so slack in their original drawings of the districts that after the inevitable challenges there is no time for them to be allowed another chance at redrawing the lines, so judges are roped into drawing maps to prevent ongoing violations. No perfect answers but maybe start out with a few good answers and build from there.
>>the vast majority of congressional races will have effectively been decided.
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No shit? I mean, the whole *point of why gerrymandering exists* is to make elections less competitive. That's the actual, no shit, reason it was done in the first place.
The whole point is that the politicians get to choose their represented residents rather than the residents getting to choose their representative.
All but one of Maryland’s US representatives are Democrats, yet the Governor is a Republican. If you wanna talk gerrymandering…
“the hyperpartisanship that defines American politics right now”
Do we think this is surprising? As limits on what the majority can decide have eroded badly in the past 90 years (see commerce clause), elections have become much more important as collective decisions greatly influence things for everyone. Just look what Biden and the Democrats have done with energy. The resulting much higher prices and lower reliability affect everyone, not just Democrats.
Of course politics has become a blood sport. How could it be otherwise when the impact of elections is so overwhelming? Arguing about process misses the point.
Removing more and more things from the set of issues that elected officials can decide, makes those elected officials (elections) more important. That's counterintuitive reasoning.
People have been saying that for years. It also make both parties more radical and further apart. Each party's candidates have to become farther left or right to win their primary, and then flip-flop back towards the center to get the independent voters. Let's not forget the cowardly and chickenshit Supreme Court justices on both sides that have refused to deal with gerrymandering for decades.
Good to see Reason waking up after about twenty years of slumber on this issue.
SCROTUS has little business getting involved in this issue. The Constitution dictates apportionment but districting is a state issue.
The Constitution is clear that the Congress can legislate on any question regarding election to Federal office, just as the states can.
The Constitution is clear that the Congress can legislate on any question regarding election to Federal office
Umm....no it isn't....
Gerrymandering is a real problem but there are bigger ones regarding the quality of democracy. Number one is the Senate, and 2 Senators per state making the votes of people in tiny states count FAR more than those of people in the states with the biggest populations. This is a HUGE problem. Republicans constantly lose the popular vote and lately by bigger and bigger margins, yet are very competitive in the Senate. That's not even counting the Jim Crow filibuster. The Electoral College is a joke, also built for slavery. 9 yrs ago, Supreme Court Republicans threw out most of MLK's greatest legacy, the Voting Rights Act of 1965. Since then the voting rights abuses have surged once again, starting with Confederate states closing polling stations in black neighborhoods.
It's not a problem at all for the way the US is intended to function, namely as a loose federation of self-governing states with a minimal federal government dedicated to defense and external trade.
It's a "huge problem" only if you dream of a totalitarian national government and a dictatorship of the proletariat.
Go to hell, you evil fascist.
You obviously know shit about how and why we have this fucked-up system of government. Go to hell, you evil fascist zombie.
All of the stormfront-adjacent commenters on this site resort to profanity & rage the fucking INSTANT they're challenged in any way. it's truly hilarious to watch
That's the point of the Senate. Smaller states wanted to ensure that they would not be dominated by the whims of the larger states. They would not have consented to the Constitution were it otherwise.
That's not even counting the Jim Crow filibuster. The Electoral College is a joke, also built for slavery.
This is a profoundly ignorant statement. I guess you get all your news from MSNBC.
Right. Throw out the checks on the majority. Let them run rampant over minorities. That'll make things better.
"Gerrymandering Is Making Elections Less Competitive"
Just the latest brilliant deduction by a Reason writer!
No it isn't. People move and political alliances shift. You're just parroting progressive MSM talking points. Democrats don't have a constitutional right to get elected to Congress.
You can get a better view of the Congressional district map illustrated (Looks like Illinois 4) at https://www2.census.gov/geo/maps/cong_dist/cd116/cd_based/ST17/CD116_IL04.pdf
Just some random thoughts.
Several big cities have what I will call ghettoes that often have voting results in individual districts reporting 100% for dems. In fact in some of the biggest cities a candidate like Maxine Waters makes the idea of a competitive race absurd; same goes for some of the Squad members. While some rural areas favor the pubs none have the population density of inner city ghettoes. Point is big cities by natural 'voting with your feet' create their own gerrymandering.
Not to mention the Constitution itself sorta creates it's own gerrymandering with the Senate using state borders to create the Senate membership. Say what you want about small states each getting two Senators but the fact of the matter is Trump got more votes in CA which he lost than in TX when he lost. So what do you say to the six million voters in CA that think they got no representation.
The bigger point is the US Constitution makes it clear the US is not a democracy it is a republic. I still am in favor of K-12 students saying the Pledge every day ("I pledge allegiance to the Flag of the United States of America, and to the Republic for which it stands, one Nation under God, indivisible, with liberty and justice for all.") if only to drive home the point that the US is a republic; even if the one Nation under God which was added in 1954 may have detractors.
You're right that the constitution is responsible for unequal representation and occasional minority rule. But not for good reasons.
Actually there are good reasons for why the Constitution contains unequal representation; without it only a few Northeastern states would have signed it and the rest of the states would have told NY and MA to blow it out your ass sideways.
They should have let them go then conquered them later.
Tony and his leftards are all about [WE] gangs RULE!!!
As they preach time and time again; They love the idea of ghetto politics -- Whoever tote's the most guns/gang-members wins! (i.e. "democracy".. A recipe for either a constant and unsettling state of war ( exactly as it has materialized to be; more-so everyday ) between [WE] gangs or a constant suppression by [WE] winner gang.
There theology is treasonous to the USA (i.e. They are out to conquer the USA for [WE] gangster initiated National Socialism/Nazism).... The USA *IS* defined by the U.S. Constitution NOT "democracy" and it's definition is 100% at odds of "democratic" Nazism.
And they like to play childish manipulative games like pretending ensuring everyone's Individual Liberty and Justice over their [WE] gang of treasonous Power-Mad dictation is some form of fascism like all childish criminals who pretend it's not fair they can't just go out and commit armed-robbery because there 'pal' got a bigger toy for Christmas than they did.
Majority rule is how you make any group decision except in shitholes like North Korea and corporations.
Do tell Tony... Exactly how is Majority Rules!!! suppose to ensure any Individual Liberty or Justice what-so-ever??? Like I said; completely treasonous to the USA.. You need to move your *ss out-a here.. You do not belong in the USA.
Maybe [WE] mobsters should use your ??perfect?? Governing ideology and everyone can take a vote to remove your silly *ss from Reason comments?
But why stop there... Let's take a vote on if you even get to exist or not? How many vote to get Tony's money, house, car and bank account? Average reward for voting to steal from Tony $5M/ea...
I hope you end up at the peril of [WE] mobster majority rules!!! ideology someday; just so you might learn something....
The majority isn't a mob. January 6th was a mob. You want mob rule.
What is your alternative to majority rule? Is it something that makes no logical sense or is it just Donald Trump as fuhrer?
Tony, "My gang has more members than yours; so my gang is Gods!".....
[WE] mobs RULE! /s
The B.S. treasonous preaching never ends.