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Democrats only have so many gerrymandering options because they’ve mostly gerrymandered their states to the max. One example is Maryland, where there were enough voters to elect a Republican governor, but which is already so heavily gerrymandered that there’s only one Republican congressman out of eight.
And now they’re trying to get rid of him.
Lunatic House Majority Leader David Moon is on board. So is Gov. Wes Moore. But Senate President Bill Ferguson is trying to be the voice of sanity, and explaining to the howling ‘resistance’ mob why trying to eliminate the one GOP congressman is a bad idea on all fronts.
Ferguson noted that the state is a third Republican and the current Congressional map already disenfranchises most of them (1 out of 8 is a long way from a third) and hasn’t even been reviewed by the courts. Which is a good thing because gerrymandering is actually illegal under Maryland’s Constitution and bill of rights. If they go ahead and try to unrepresent 34% of the state, the courts can get involved and roll back their gerrymandering further.
Section 4 of the Maryland Constitution states that “each legislative district shall consist of adjoining territory, be compact in form, and of substantially equal population. Due regard shall be given to natural boundaries and the boundaries of political subdivisions ”
If we had to modify the federal constitution, this doesn’t sound like such a bad addition.
More to the point, gerrymandering is literally illegal and is being flouted. In past lawsuits, it was also noted that Article 7 of the Declaration of Rights states that “the right of the People to participate in the Legislature is the best security of liberty and the foundation of all free Government; for this purpose, elections ought to be free and frequent; and every citizen having the qualifications prescribed by the Constitution, ought to have the right of suffrage.”
So, a literal attack on democracy. And it’s enough of a basis for sending much of Maryland’s existing gerrymandered congressional map rolling into oblivion if it gets into a courtroom.
Then Ferguson states two things that are more provocative. One that gerrymandering is a MAD race that Republicans are more likely to win.
As several national news outlets have noted, many states face limitations on their ability to engage in mid-cycle redistricting, either due to the absence of a supermajority in both legislative chambers and executive control, or a lack of available seats to flip. But for those states that are categorized as able to redistrict, Republican states are able to possibly redistrict 20 more seats to be Republican congressional seats than Democratic states: “Republican state legislative majorities oversee 55 Democratic congressional seats while Democratic state legislative majorities oversee only 35 Republican districts”
I have spoken with my counterparts in other states. One theme has echoed throughout all these conversations that I do not think is being captured in national discussions regarding redistricting – several Republican states are resisting pressure to redistrict and are mostly able to do so because Maryland and other Democratic states are not redistricting either. In short – if Maryland redistricts, Republican-led states that were not planning to do so, will. That means that Maryland’s potential gain of one seat is immediately eliminated, and, in fact, worsens the national outlook.
And then Ferguson really set off a bomb by writing that…”It is hypocritical to say that it is abhorrent to tactically shift voters based on race, but not to do so based on party affiliation”
You can imagine how that one went over.
Ferguson is obviously right on all points, but much of his party and its increasingly lunatic base wants a fight, not an explanation of why they can’t just ban the political opposition. And Ferguson’s thought about racial and political gerrymandering really rubs them the wrong way.
State Sen. Clarence Lam complained, “He’s saying that he feels like this would be the equivalent of racial gerrymandering, that if we did this. That seems very ironic and rich, given that the Supreme Court is about to kill section two of the [Voting Rights Act]. He’s basically making the argument that the Republicans on the Supreme Court are making.”
I don’t think Lam knows the definition of ‘ironic’, but never mind that.
But what’s the fundamental difference between depriving millions of people of suffrage based on their beliefs or based on their race? One is obviously bigoted while the other cynical, but racial gerrymandering hasn’t been about bigotry in a long time. It’s about using race as a proxy for political gerrymandering. Segregation is long dead. Nobody is really expanding or shrinking minority districts because they hate or love black people or any other group and want to give them or deprive them of rights, but because it builds or shrinks their political power. Racial gerrymandering is political gerrymandering and everyone knows this. And these days it’s wrong for the same reasons.

Probably could come up with some mathematical formula using population density and radius from center..
Yes, like a toilet bowl swirling down. Lefties are like turds, aren’t they?
I figured it out! You’re the guy who wrote the “Deep Thoughts with Jack Handey” short clips on SNL! Here’s one of my favorites:
“Maybe in order to understand mankind, we have to look at the word itself. Basically, it’s made up of two separate words — ‘mank’ and ‘ind.’ What do these words mean? It’s a mystery, and that’s why so is mankind.”
I read about such an algorithm about a decade ago. Prioritizing compactness (smallest district circumferences).
The problem is that the party in charge of a state is the party that makes the rules. Regardless of party (that is not to say both sides use it equally.) It benefits them to gerrymander.
There was a day when boundaries for voting districts considered natural barriers, proximity to government centers, and community of interest. Then the lobbyists and the lawyers saw opportunity for gain.
“each legislative district shall consist of adjoining territory, be compact in form, and of substantially equal population. Due regard shall be given to natural boundaries and the boundaries of political subdivisions ”
That still leaves room for shenanigans.
If two distant areas are connected by a band the width of a road, are they truly adjoining?
How does one balance goals of compactness and recognizing natural and political boundaries?
How equal is a “substantially equal population”?
Every judge will answer those questions differently.
The Democratic Party has become a Mire full of Quicksand and swamp monsters
Plenty of ways to be ‘fair’ … if one assumes ‘honesty.’
But the whole system is dishonest.
Not the least of which are the Rinos
Which are better described as Demokkkrats(R) than as Americans.
Hence: Precedent should be ignored – openly, overtly, and obviously –
as a condition of the political ‘war.’
If Demokkkrats want to gerrymander to disenfranchise Americans,
Americans have a DUTY – not a ‘right’ – to gerrymander their districts to resist the ACTUAL fascists.
I would not be so hyperventilated,
but they want to kill us,
AND I DON’T WANT MY KIDS GOING TO A DEMOKKKRAT CONCENTRATION CAMP!
When – if it’s even possible – the Demokkkrats jettison their ‘far-left’ forces such as DSA, CPUSA, etc. etc. etc., …
THEN we can discuss reasonable measures for districting.
But for those of us watching these lying, criminal traitors cosying up to terrorists (to use the most polite term I can think of) …
the thought of losing the nation back into their hands
keeps me awake at night.
And the only reason I’m not terrified … is that I’m 99% sure I’m on the Lord’s good side today.
they should not allow them to gerrymander a state to allow a city like baltimore to control the districts and only people from the city allowed to represent the state, thats what they would love to do, most of your cities are minorities in the demoncrap party. this is not fair to the rural areas. break the cities into districts and dont push cities for a hundred miles or more into rural areas. that means people in rural areas would be represented by city people that could really care less about the rural areas.