Gerrymandering How drawing jagged lines can impact an election Christina Greer

Transcriber: tom carter
Reviewer: Bedirhan Cinar

Most people have heard the word “gerrymandering” once or twice,

probably during a presidential election.

What exactly is gerrymandering?

Essentially, it’s the process of giving one political party an advantage over another political party

by redrawing district lines.

It’s like Democrats trying to gain an advantage over Republicans,

or Republicans trying to gain an advantage over Democrats.

You see, each party wants to gain as many districts as possible

so they can do things like control the state budget,

or set themselves up to win even more districts in the future.

So to understand how this process began, and how it continues today,

we must go back to 1812 in Massachusetts.

Elbridge Gerry, the governor of Massachusetts, supported and signed a bill to allow redistricting.

That is, redrawing the boundaries that separate districts.

The catch? The new lines would favor Gerry’s own political party,

the Democratic-Republican party, which no longer exists.

You see, Gerry wanted his party to win as many state Senate seats as possible.

The more members of your party who vote, the more likely you are to win an election.

The new lines were drawn to include loads of areas that would help Governor Gerry in the future.

They were so strange looking that someone said the new districts looked like a salamander.

The Boston Gazette added Gerry’s name to the word salamander,

and voilà! Gerrymandering,

the process of dividing up and redrawing districts to give your political party an advantage.

So how exactly does someone go about protecting their own political party,

and actually gerrymandering a district?

There are two successful practices.

Packing a district,

and cracking a district.

Packing is the process of drawing district lines and packing in your opponents like cattle,

into as few districts as possible.

If more districts equals more votes, the fewer the districts there are,

the fewer votes the opposition party will get.

Packing, then, decreases the opponent’s voter strength and influence.

Cracking is the opposite:

taking one district and cracking it into several pieces.

This is usually done in districts where your opponent has many supporters.

Cracking spreads these supporters out among many districts,

denying your opponent a lot of votes.

When you have a large number of people who would generally vote for one type of party,

those folks are known as a voting bloc.

Cracking is a way to break that all up.

So when would a party choose to pack their opponent’s districts rather than crack them?

Well, that really depends on what the party needs.

To dilute your opponent’s voters, you could pack them into one district

and leave the surrounding districts filled with voters of your own party.

Or, if you and your party are in power when it’s time to redraw district lines,

you could redraw districts and crack up a powerful district

and spread your opponent’s voters out across several neighboring districts.

So, Governor Gerry in 1812 wanted to gain an advantage for his party,

and redrew district lines in his state in such a crazy way we have a whole new word

and way of thinking about how political parties can gain advantages over their opponents.

Politicians think of creative ways to draw districts every few years.

So the next time an election comes around,

and politicians ask people to vote,

be sure to look up the shape of your district and the districts that surround it.

How wide does your district stretch across your state?

Are all of the districts in your state relatively the same shape?

How many other districts does your district touch?

But always be sure to ask yourself,

does my district look like a salamander?

抄写员:tom carter
审稿人:Bedirhan Cinar

大多数人都听说过“gerrymandering”这个词一两次,

可能是在总统选举期间。

究竟什么是乱码?

从本质上讲,这是通过重新划定选区界限,使一个政党相对于另一个政党具有优势的过程

这就像民主党人试图获得对共和党人的优势,

或者共和党人试图获得对民主党人的优势。

你看,每一方都希望获得尽可能多的选区,

这样他们就可以做一些事情,比如控制国家预算,

或者让自己在未来赢得更多选区。

因此,要了解这个过程是如何开始的,以及它如何持续到今天,

我们必须回到马萨诸塞州的 1812 年。

马萨诸塞州州长埃尔布里奇·格里支持并签署了一项允许重新选区的法案。

即,重新划定划分区域的边界。

捕获? 新路线将有利于格里自己的

政党民主共和党,该政党已不复存在。

你看,格里希望他的政党赢得尽可能多的州参议院席位。

The more members of your party who vote, the more likely you are to win an election.

新线路的绘制包括了未来将帮助格里州长的大量领域。

他们长得很奇怪,有人说新区看起来像一只蝾螈。

波士顿公报将格里的名字添加到蝾螈这个词上

,瞧! Gerrymandering

,划分和重划选区以使您的政党具有优势的过程。

那么,某人究竟是如何保护自己的政党,

并实际上对一个地区进行划分的呢?

有两种成功的做法。

打包一个区

,破解一个区。

打包是绘制区域线并将您的对手像牛一样打包

到尽可能少的区域的过程。

如果更多的选区等于更多的选票,那么选区

越少,反对党获得的选票就越少。

因此,打包会降低对手的选民实力和影响力。

破解则相反:

将一个区域分成几块。

这通常在你的对手有很多支持者的地区进行。

裂变将这些支持者分散到许多地区,

剥夺了你的对手很多选票。

当您有大量的人通常会投票支持一种政党时,

这些人被称为投票集团。

破解是打破这一切的一种方式。

那么,一个政党什么时候会选择打包对手的地区而不是破解他们呢?

嗯,这真的取决于党的需要。

为了稀释对手的选民,你可以把他们挤进一个选区

,让周围的选区挤满你自己政党的选民。

或者,如果您和您的政党在重新划分选区界限时掌权,

您可以重新划分选区并分裂一个强大的选区

,并将对手的选民分散到几个相邻的选区。

因此,格里州长在 1812 年想为他的政党赢得优势,

并以如此疯狂的方式重新划定了他所在州的选区界线,我们对

政党如何从对手中获得优势有了全新的认识和思考方式。

政客每隔几年就会想出一些创造性的方法来划定选区。

因此,下次选举临近时

,政客们要求人们投票时,

一定要查看您所在地区及其周围地区的形状。

您所在的地区在您所在的州有多大?

您所在州的所有区的形状都相对相同吗?

您所在的地区还涉及多少其他地区?

但一定要问自己

,我所在的地区看起来像蝾螈吗?