So redistricting season is almost upon us and in light of the #WeThePeopleAct I thought maybe a primer on gerrymandering might be in order.
Unusually for me we're not gonna do a ton of history here, I just think it's important for folks to know some of the process.
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In a nutshell the Constitutionally mandated census is how we figure out how many seats each party gets in Congress, & the state houses.
This process used to be pretty anodyne until MA passed a law in 1812 that entrenched the Democratic-Republican party's power in the state.
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The governor of MA at the time, Elbridge Gerry, signed this bill into law against his wishes, yet he has been attached to this highly undemocratic process ever since. There was blame cast upon him in every East Coast paper at the time.
Perhaps you've seen this old cartoon? 3/
What this means to us though is that gerrymandering & redistricting are two completely different animals: one is partisan and one is not.
Some states have non partisan redistricting panels but most do not, which leaves the door open to much chicanery. 4/
Project Red State in 2010 is a perfect example of gerrymandering. The GOP capitalized on the racist backlash to a black president and gained control of an unprecedented amount of state houses.
These victories enabled the GOP tp pick their own voters...
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...which is about as undemocratic as it sounds.
See the census enables lawmakers to determine a huge amount of info about us, mostly for a good reason: apportionment of funds. But it also enables them to split us up into districts favorable to their parties.
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This happens in two primary ways: cracking and packing.
Cracking is splitting an opposing party's base into districts that are favorable to your party. For example, the GOP likes to split up urban districts into rural districts to dilute the voting power of dems in cities. 7/
So let's take a state like WI. Like most urban areas Milwaukee votes democratic. Cracking splits the city's districts up and inserts them into suburban areas, traditionally (until 2020) GOP strongholds. For instance, instead of five districts in the city you might get three. 8/
Packing on the other hand is cramming all of the opposing party's voters into as few districts as possible. Again WI provides a great example for this. As we see in this map even when WI voters overwhelmingly vote for dems they still end up with a GOP run state. 9/
The reason this chicanery works is because how many districts there are is actually more important than how many voters there are. It's a bug in the system of representative democracy. And when states lose seats another state has to pick up the slack. 10/
What's the solution here?
Quite frankly it's the #WeThePeopleAct. In my humble opinion one of its most important provisions is the mandating of nonpartisan redistricting panels nationwide, in every state, full stop. 11/
Not only does it make the system more fair for all of us and reduce the minority rule we suffer from, it will drastically reduce the white supremacy inherent in the current way we do things. Because reducing urban votes is just legalized Jim Crow, and that's not hyperbole. 12/
So call your reps & senators and make your will known. We desperately need the #WeThePeopleAct or the authoritarian personality death cult that is the GOP will succeed in entrenching themselves not just for another ten years, but indefinitely.
Let's save America.
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As much as I hate asking this, if y'all like my words and ideas here, we sure could use a little help surviving while my disability process is going. If anybody out there has a few bucks to help us keep the lights on it would be much appreciated. ❤️❤️ gf.me/u/zd7kuu
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I had a complex relationship with my mother, who's name was Retha btw. She was a terrible angry drunk, and was drunk by 10AM daily.
I hated her and loved her. I crashed a car getting to her when I thought she was hurt once, yet haven't called her in years.
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She was a southern girl through and through. She dolled out advice both good and bad, as all parents do. About sex she told me "Do for her what you think would feel good," but about race it was "Don't bring a black girl home."
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This gerrymandering is a huge deal yes, but I'd also point out that the people of Ohio voted on a Constitutional Amendment that would have prevented this, and the GOP just ignored it.
Ignored the will of the people. If that's not already authoritarian I don't know what is. 1/
Same thing happened in Wisconsin. The people of that state voted to participate in the Affordable Care Act and their government just ignored that too, as they AGAIN are gerrymandering themselves into a very lopsided and undeserved majority.
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Look at Texas, now an arguably purple state. The policies coming out of that legislative body and executive office are authoritarian to the core. Telling businesses what to do, private citizens what to do.
From the "smaller, less intrusive government" people no less.
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Let's talk about passing the two infrastructure bills and the #VotingRightsAct for a bit okay? I know the process isn't exactly what you'd like and I know you've got donors who aren't too keen on some of the proposals, like prescription drug prices for instance.
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You should know that your recalcitrance is making a lot of folks nervous, and for a myriad of reasons. But polls are showing there's one thing most Americans DON'T care about: the price.
The only people out here that care about the price aren't your voters.
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I'm seeing over and over the pandemic has (re)taught us something VERY important: work to live, don't live to work.
I thought maybe I'd thread my thoughts on that, so here we go. #HowToHuman
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Y'all, the work habits of Americans have driven me crazy for years now. I've lost count of how many 60-80 hour a week workers I've talked into toning it down.
"If you're always working how can you enjoy the fruits of your labor?" 2/
And the worst part about it is we've been brainwashed into overworking. Corps have told us since the invention of TV that we're less than if we don't have an extra car, or a too big house. All this enriches THEM, not us.
The Virginia GOP just nominated for governor the hedge fund billionaire ex CEO of The Carlyle Group, who personally hosted Osama Bin Laden's brother at a gala dinner on September 11, 2001.
Because they're the party of "patriots" & the "working class."
The best part about it? They had a train wreck of a primary designed to weed out the trumpies so this guy could win. He played on about "election integrity," but that's the old white supremacist dog whistle party line anyway.
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They had a "drive through" primary and required all sorts of numbers and signatures from their primary voters, information which the actual base refused to give, basically en masse.