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CHAPTER 1 What’s the Problem?
ОглавлениеIn the 2012 US elections, a majority of voters who went to the polls in Pennsylvania cast a ballot for the Democratic candidate for Congress in their district. Yet, of the 18 seats from Pennsylvania in the US House of Representatives, the Republican Party won 13 of them. In other words, though they garnered a bit more than 50 percent of the congressional vote, Democrats won only a little over 25 percent of the seats. In four other states that year, the party that won a majority of the votes in congressional races got fewer than half the seats.1 In North Carolina in 2016, Republican House candidates received 53 percent of the vote but 10 of 13, or 77 percent, of North Carolina’s House seats.2 How can these results have happened? Perhaps more importantly, is there any way in which these outcomes can be considered democratic?
This book addresses both of those questions. The short answer to the first of them is that the congressional district boundaries in Pennsylvania, like legislative district lines in many states, were gerrymandered. Gerrymandering is the process of drawing legislative district boundaries to give one party (or group of voters) an electoral advantage over others.
Gerrymandering in the United States is quite unpopular with the public. According to a bipartisan poll conducted in December 2018, 63 percent of all likely 2020 presidential voters had an unfavorable view of partisan gerrymandering. Another 32 percent had no opinion while just 5 percent had a favorable view.3 Those views were shared, with only slight variation in the percentages, by Democrats, Independents, and Republicans alike. When respondents were asked if they would prefer districts with no partisan bias, even if it meant fewer seats for their own party, or districts with partisan bias, assuming that their own party would win more seats, only 15 percent chose biased districts while 65 percent preferred unbiased districts.4
Nevertheless, when legislators have the opportunity to gerrymander district lines, many – perhaps most – of them will seize the opportunity. Voters are unlikely to punish their own party for doing so (despite their stated preference for unbiased districts) and legislators can enhance their party’s power by creating additional districts in which they have an electoral edge. With little downside and the potential for gaining seats in the state legislature or in Congress, gerrymandering is hard for politicians to resist.
The second of our questions is the more difficult one. How one answers it will depend on what one means by ‘democracy’ and whether one thinks the redistricting process should be a normal part of politics. Though democratic elections are expected to be free and fair, it’s not immediately clear what would constitute a violation of this expectation.
The rest of this chapter will introduce gerrymandering by explaining, in a bit more detail, what it is and why it occurs. Gerrymandering is not unique to the United States but its practice here is in many ways exceptional. The chapter will then address the reasons that gerrymandering stirs so much controversy. Beyond the obvious power struggle that gerrymandering initiates, there are competing visions of how democracy ought to operate that are at play.