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Gerrymander Math

by Dana Blankenhorn
October 3, 2006
in crime, Current Affairs, politics, Scandal
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Gerrymander
Political pros are fond of repeating, almost like a protective prayer, the idea that incumbents are always safe. They have all that money. And then there’s the gerrymandering.

These people don’t know math. The money advantage disappears in a "wave" election. George Nethercutt was out-spent 10-1 by House Speaker Tom Foley (funny how that name keeps coming up) in 1994, and he won.

More important is the issue of gerrymandering. This is the process of redistricting to help the majority party. Simple math shows you the fallacy.

Let’s say you live in a 51-49 state. The majority will gerrymander so its side wins its seats 60-40 while the other side wins theirs 80-20. Thus it gets more seats every time.

In an election that goes 55-45 the other way there may be one upset or near-upset, but little change. However, what happens when you get a 60-40 "wave" election, like the one that’s heading the Republicans’ way this time?

Everyone is at risk.

Mark_foley_1
Folks who don’t even know they have a race suddenly go down, or go down
to the wire on Election Night. That’s because the average margin is
right at the edge of the gerrymander. Had the state not been
gerrymandered, the new majority would have picked up a few seats, but
in a 60-40 "wave" they can practically sweep the board.

This is what happened in Georgia during 1994. People woke up to find
nearly all the state’s congressional seats — except for a few drawn
specifically for black Democrats — in the hands of conservative
Republicans. And over time the Republicans retained something like
those majorities. They became quite entrenched. It’s very unlikely that
a national wave will dislodge them, because this may be the most
Republican part of the country right now — deep red Dixie. But in
other nearby states — North Carolina, Tennessee, Virginia, Kentucky —
they should be bracing for a storm. And outside the South this could be
a Cat 4-5 storm.

Put it this way. Gerrymandering builds levees around incumbents. In a
wave election the levees break. Republicans may wake up on November 8
to find themselves in the political equivalent of the Ninth Ward.

My point is the Republican Party’s prospects wouldn’t look this bad
without gerrymandering. Were all seats narrowly drawn a 60-40 result
would result in a 60-40 House. In a gerrymandered environment it
creates an 80-20 House.


Which is why we need to get rid of gerrymandering.

Tags: 2006 electionelection mathFoleygategerrymanderingLa Cage Aux Foleylandslide electionMark FoleyU.S. House electionwave election
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Dana Blankenhorn

Dana Blankenhorn

Dana Blankenhorn began his career as a financial journalist in 1978, began covering technology in 1982, and the Internet in 1985. He started one of the first Internet daily newsletters, the Interactive Age Daily, in 1994. He recently retired from InvestorPlace and lives in Atlanta, GA, preparing for his next great adventure. He's a graduate of Rice University (1977) and Northwestern's Medill School of Journalism (MSJ 1978). He's a native of Massapequa, NY.

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