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US government and civics
Course: US government and civics > Unit 2
Lesson 3: Congressional behaviorGerrymandering
Gerrymandering involves shaping congressional districts to benefit one political party over another. Originating from Governor Elbridge Gerry's 1812 redistricting in Massachusetts, gerrymandering tactics include splitting votes, forcing incumbents to compete, and collecting specific constituencies. This manipulation of district boundaries impacts the political landscape and raises questions about fair representation.
Want to join the conversation?
- Aren't there some positives from gerrymandering too? It is still a democratic process that helps make the congressional districts representative of the people. When the redrawing of the districts is an open and transparent process, the odd shape shouldn't matter, should it?(2 votes)
- No, gerrymandering forms districts that are heavily imbalanced to give whomever is drawing the districts control of who is most likely to win each district.
For example, if a population is ideologically split fairly evenly and there are 4 districts, someone from one ideology could draw the districts so that one district contains a vast majority of the total population of opposite ideology, ensuring the remaining three districts then easily go for his own ideology. So, even though the population is split nearly 50/50, the elected representation will be 25/75.(13 votes)
- What specific agreement would these groups have that relate to a higher form of action(0 votes)
Video transcript
- [Instructor] What we
see here are two maps of congressional districts. On the left we see some
congressional districts in and around Austin, Texas. This black line shows us Travis County where Austin, Texas is. And on this right map we see
the congressional districts in and around Chicago, Illinois. What I'd like you to
do is pause this video and see if you see anything interesting about the shapes of these
congressional districts. Well some things might
immediately jump out at you. Here in Chicago, Illinois,
this fourth district in particular seems kind of fishy. It's often known as the earmuff district. It has this northern part
and this southern part, and then it's actually
connected just by an interstate, not by the things on either
side of that interstate. So that doesn't seem like a natural shape for a congressional district. And then here in Austin, Texas, you see that the votes in Travis County are split amongst many
congressional districts. And so the question
that should be surfacing in your brain is, why are these districts shaped that way? And the answer that many
people will give you is it's because of a gerrymandering. Gerrymandering, which is the idea of shaping districts to benefit one political party or another. Every 10 years there's a U.S. Census, and based on that census,
different states will might get a few more representatives or a few less representatives, and so state legislatures
will often have to redistrict. And so that's when this occurs. And so the first question
you might ask is, well that's a very strange word, where does it come from? And that goes all the way back to 1812 when the then governor of Massachusetts, Elbridge Gerry, Gerry was
how you pronounced his name although now it's gerrymandering. He decided to sign the
bill that would reapportion the state senate districts. And you have this one really
strangely shaped district right over here that
people said hey that looks like a salamander. And so they created a
portmanteau which is really just a combination of
words around Elbridge Gerry and the back half of salamander. So you have gerrymander, which is creating these
districts to advantage one party or the other. Elbridge Gerry did it for the
Democratic Republican party against the Federalist, but now it's Republicans versus Democrats. So now let's go back to the two districts that we looked at and think about what are the implications of it? Who will, who does the
gerrymandering benefit? So in the case of Austin, Texas, Austin, Texas is an urban area. Urban areas tend to lean more left. And it does lean more Democratic. It's actually more liberal
than most urban areas in Texas. But it's surrounded by more rural areas that lean right. And so it would be advantageous
and it is advantageous for Republicans to split
those Democratic votes amongst these Republican districts. In the case of Chicago, it's
a little bit less obvious. This type of gerrymandering was done by a Democratic legislature, but it's a little bit less
obvious what's going on here with the fourth district because it is actually
surrounded by districts represented by Democrats. What you need to appreciate
is when this gerrymandering is done it's often done by
sophisticated computer algorithms and there's all sorts of implications of stretching one district or another. This is just one tactic that you see here is taking a bunch of Democratic votes and diluting them amongst a
bunch of Republican districts. You might see it the other way. You could have situations
where you redistrict so that an incumbent no
longer lives in their district and so they wouldn't be
the incumbent anymore. You might see redistricting
to force two incumbents to go against each other. You might see redistricting
where you're collecting pockets from certain
constituencies so that you can make a district so that they would have representation and that's the one that's often cited for the
district four right over here. Because these are heavily Hispanic areas around or in Chicago. Now I'll leave you with
a newspaper article from the Salem Gazette in 1813 that talks about at least
how the Federalists felt about that first official gerrymandering. This is in response to Elbridge
Gerry's signing of the bill to allow for that
salamander shaped district that advantaged the Democratic Republicans against the Federalists. Federalists, followers of Washington. Again behold and shudder at the exhibition of this terrific dragon, brought forth to swallow
and devour your liberties and equal rights. You can see in the
picture it actually does look like a dragon, they put wings on it. Unholy party spirit and
inordinate love of power gave it birth. Your patriotism and hatred of tyranny must by one vigorous struggle strangle it in its infancy. The iniquitous law
which cut up and severed this Commonwealth into
districts is kindred to the arbitrary deeds of Napoleon when he partitioned the
territories of innocent nations to suit his sovereign will. You gotta remember this
is right around the time of Napoleon conquering much of Europe. This law inflicted a grievous
wound on the Constitution. It in fact subverts and
changes our form of government, which ceases to be Republican
as long as an aristocratic House of Lords under the form of a Senate tyrannizes over the people
and silences and stifles the voice of the majority. And then it goes on to say, will you then permit a party
to disfranchise the people, to convert the Senate
chamber into a fortress in which ambitious office-seekers
may entrench themselves and set at defiance the
frowns of the people? No, this usurping
faction must be dislodged from its stronghold.