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Republicans In States Hold Overwhelming Control In Post-2020 Congressional Redistricting

Republicans In States Hold Overwhelming Control In Post-2020 Congressional Redistricting

“Republicans are set to control the redistricting of… 43% of the entire U.S. House. Democrats will control the redistricting of, at most, 73 seats, or 17%”

https://twitter.com/FiveThirtyEight/status/1329042795156402177

As the Democratic Party engages in a highly amusing circular firing squad over their shock loss of so many House seats, the impact of Republican gains at the state level doesn’t seem to have fully dawned on them.  Or if it has, they are doing what they do best, kicking that particular can down the road, a decade down the road.

Over at FiveThirtyEight, where they appear of late to be better at Monday morning quarterbacking than at analyzing polls and predicting election outcomes, they have an interesting follow-up on the enormous gains Republicans made at the state level and how that will impact redistricting.

These numbers are quite different than those predicted by FiveThirtyEight on October 27th:  “Our analysis found that 117 congressional districts (27 percent of the entire House) are likely to be drawn by Republicans, while 47 (11 percent) are likely to be drawn by Democrats.”

Here are the key 2020 races noted by FiveThirtyEight post-election:

Every 10 years, after the census, congressional and state legislature districts are redrawn to account for population changes. This gives whoever is drawing the maps the power to maximize the number of districts that favor their party — a tactic known as gerrymandering. And as we wrote last month, the 2020 election represented the last chance for voters to weigh in on who would draw those maps. Both parties went into the election with a chance to draw more congressional districts than the other, but the end result was just about the best-case scenario for Republicans. As the map below shows, Republicans are set to control the redistricting of 188 congressional seats — or 43 percent of the entire House of Representatives. By contrast, Democrats will control the redistricting of, at most, 73 seats, or 17 percent.

How did Republicans pull that off? By winning almost every 2020 election in which control of redistricting was at stake:

  • The GOP kept control of the redistricting process in Texas by holding the state House. Given that Election Data Services estimates Texas will have 39 congressional seats for the next decade, this was arguably Republicans’ single biggest win of the 2020 election.
  • Republicans successfully defended the Pennsylvania legislature from a Democratic takeover, although they’ll still need to share redistricting power over its projected 17 congressional districts, as Democratic Gov. Tom Wolf has veto power.
  • Republicans held the majority in both chambers of the North Carolina legislature, which will enable them to draw an expected 14 congressional districts all by themselves.
  • Amendment 1 passed in Virginia, taking the power to draw the state’s 11 congressional districts out of the hands of the all-Democratic state government and investing it in a bipartisan commission made up of a mix of citizens and legislators.
  • In Missouri (home to eight congressional districts), Gov. Mike Parson was elected to a second term, keeping redistricting control in Republican hands.
    In an upset, Republicans managed to keep their majority in the Minnesota state Senate, thus ensuring Democrats wouldn’t have the unfettered ability to draw the state’s projected seven congressional districts. The parties will share redistricting responsibilities there.
  • The GOP kept control of the state House in Iowa, with its four congressional districts.
  • Republicans maintained their supermajorities in the Kansas Legislature, enabling them to pass a new congressional map (worth four districts) over Democratic Gov. Laura Kelly’s veto.
  • Finally, Republicans surprisingly flipped both the state Senate and state House in New Hampshire (worth two congressional districts), seizing full control of both the state government and the redistricting process.

 

Democrats are apparently preparing to fight and are (suddenly) interested in “fair maps” and “an actual battle of ideas.”

NBC News reports (archive link):

Democrats may have won the presidency, but they failed to fulfill one of their biggest hopes of this election cycle: taking control of state legislatures and the power to draw electoral districts.

Now, organizers and party officials said, they will be forced to bank on litigation, friendly state courts, Democratic governors, recent state reforms and a growing grassroots movement to hold the line against their fears of Republican gerrymandering — embedding a political advantage in the drawing of electoral maps.

“Let’s have fair maps. Let’s have an actual battle of ideas,” said Patrick Rodenbush, communications director of the National Democratic Redistricting Committee. “Republicans are afraid of the voters they say they want to represent, and they are cheating the American people out of representation by doing this.”

If President Trump is unsuccessful in demonstrating his victory in this year’s presidential election, it will be interesting to watch how the GOP responds to this absolute garbage from Democrats.

Democrats interested in “an actual battle of ideas”? The same Democrats who are actively engaged in cancel culture, in the suppression of conservative ideas (and speech), and in the general shutuppery they and their social/media comrades employ when it comes to anyone who disagrees with their increasingly radical worldview and agenda?  Absolutely laughable.

Will Republicans remember what has happened for the past four years: how Democrats behaved going after the president relentlessly, showing their true colors in their treatment of now-Justice Kavanaugh, and actively planning to pack the Supreme Court, add new states, and eliminate the Senate filibuster to force through their horrific agenda? Or will they take a knee to Democrats’ transparently phony pleas for “fairness” and “an actual battle of ideas”?

One thing seems certain, President Trump’s more than 73 million voters will not accept the latter course . . . whether he’s in the White House or not.

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Comments

Which means sweat fuck all.

If these spineless amoeba aren’t prepared to fight for the Presidency then you can guarantee your left flap these nutless ballsacks won’t do fuck all when Democrats start redistricting as they see fit.

Just being able to redistrict doesn’t give them Dominion over future elections. If the election starts going the wrong way, it will just be corrected regardless.

Connivin Caniff | November 19, 2020 at 11:08 am

Right. Unless the Republicans really start fighting for voting integrity it won’t matter. But they won’t. They knew for years that there was a serious problem. Why didn’t they start filing lawsuits years ago, or as soon as the deleterious changes occurred, and not too late, AFTER the Presidential election? They really left Trump hanging. Maybe that was the strategy of the lazy, duplicitous Republican bums. They always talk a good game, but leave it at that. They could have been after the crooked D’Rats for years, but they did nothing. They tolerated their Never-Trumper colleagues, never censuring or punishing them. In short, they betrayed Trump – And Us.

    At the least, Republicans should’ve sued over executive and judicial rewriting of election laws this season. Roberts even voted to let some of the challenges prevail.

Will it be hard to form a new political party when you have 70 million members?

    txvet2 in reply to stevespac. | November 19, 2020 at 3:30 pm

    No, but it’ll be hard to win anything, mainly because there aren’t 70 million people who will follow Trump if he leaves the Republican Party. The main result will be similar to that with Ross Perot – guarantee the election of Democrat presidents, with somewhat less effect down-ballot. That’s assuming we have anything resembling an honest election, which is, of course, no longer likely.

SCOTUS won’t let Republicans redistrict unhindered; that’s reserved for Democrats and “independent commissions.”