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Hold Your Horses: SCOTUS Considers Bigger Gerrymandering Case than North Carolina

Hold Your Horses: SCOTUS Considers Bigger Gerrymandering Case than North Carolina
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Progressive politicians and pundits are collectively celebrating the Supreme Court's ruling that North Carolina illegally used racial gerrymandering to draw its congressional districts. But even author and journalist Greg Palast says those celebrating need to pump the brakes a little.

He first prefaced his statement.

"It was a good decision one way in that it defeated the idea of dumping every black person into a single congressional district," said Palast. The bad news, Palast believes, is that the ruling is not going to last.

He later added that we do need to consider racial gerrymandering when drawing electoral districts, but there is also a broader issue that violates the legal precedent of "one person, one vote" that the Supreme Court has been reluctant to weigh in on: partisan gerrymandering.

ALSO READ: ‘Two Parties, One Winner’ Shouldn’t Override ‘One Person, One Vote’

"We are hoping that Justice Kennedy might be open to arguments that vicious partisan gerrymandering really violates the 'one person, one vote' rule of the constitution. We're hoping he may see the light on that one," said Palast.

What Palast did not specifically mention is that the Supreme Court justices will consider whether or not to take up a case in Wisconsin dealing specifically with this issue, Gill v. Whitford.

Here is what you need to know:

Partisan gerrymandering is not solely a Republican problem nor solely a Democratic problem. It is commonly talked about in the media as a scheme by the Republican Party (Palast doesn't even acknowledge the Democratic side of it), but the electoral lines in Democratic-controlled Maryland are just as bad as Republican-controlled Wisconsin.

It's a scheme by both parties to keep their majorities, maintain control of elections, and pick their voters. Both major parties don't want to get rid of partisan gerrymandering.

Thomas A Hawk

Joins the national political dialogue while balancing realism and sarcasm. Thomas aims to bring more readers into the discussion by commenting on under-reported stories.

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