Interesting People mailing list archives

IP: How to rig an election


From: Dave Farber <dave () farber net>
Date: Tue, 30 Apr 2002 15:00:27 -0400


------ Forwarded Message
From: "Dr Mohammad Al-Ubaydli" <mo () idiopathic com>

Dear Dave,
I wondered if fellow IP's would be interested in this article from the
economist about redistricting in the USA:
 
http://www.economist.com/world/na/displayStory.cfm?story_id=1099030
 
Here's the first part:
How to rig an election
Apr 25th 2002 | WASHINGTON, DC
From The Economist print edition
In a normal democracy, voters choose their representatives. In America, it
is rapidly becoming the other way around

IMAGINE a state with five congressional seats and only 25 voters in each.
That makes 125 voters. Sixty-five are Republicans, 60 are Democrats. You
might think a fair election in such a state would produce, say, three
Republican representatives and two Democrats.
 
Now imagine you can draw the district boundaries any way you like. The only
condition is that you must keep 25 voters in each one. If you were a
Republican, you could carve up the state so there were 13 Republicans and 12
Democrats per district. Your party would win every seat narrowly.
Republicans, five-nil.
 
Now imagine you were a Democrat. If you put 15 Republicans in one district,
you could then divide the rest of the state so that each district had 13
Democrats and 12 Republicans. Democrats, four-one. Same state, same number
of districts, same party affiliation: completely different results. All you
need is the power to draw district lines. And that is what America provides:
a process, called redistricting, which, through back-room negotiations too
boring for most voters to think about, can distort the democratic system
itself.
<snip>
 
mo
Dr Mohammad Al-Ubaydli
e mo () idiopathic com
w www.idiopathic.com/mo <http://www.idiopathic.com/mo>
w www.handheldsfordoctors.com <http://www.handheldsfordoctors.com>
w www.medicalapproaches.com <http://www.medicalapproaches.com> 


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