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A More Perfect Union: Redistricting Reform

In Political Entrenchment the Washington Post editorializes about noncompetitive congressional districts. And I agree that along with Campaign Finance Reform this is the central obstacle to a more rational government.

“members of Congress are “worried about taking a rational position” because they fear being punished in primaries by challengers questioning their ideological purity. “So you see the tendency is for these congressmen to head to the flanks to fend off the primary [challenge.] They have no worry about the general election.”"

The surprising thing in this statement is not the content but the speaker: the president of the United States. In a meeting with The Washington Post editorial board yesterday, President Bush touched on topics from free trade to immigration, but one of his most illuminating answers came when we asked why he had not been more successful in finding the common ground he talked about as a presidential candidate and whether he thought his successor, whoever he or she may be, would be able to do better. Mr. Bush’s analysis of the structural problems that have interfered with his ability to accomplish things is correct — and it points, unhappily, to problems that are likely to plague the next president as well. Certainly the president didn’t cite this as the only factor inhibiting bipartisanship. We don’t think it is, either, but it is one that is real and fixable.

We have long warned about the pernicious consequences of entrenched incumbency and gerrymandered congressional districts. Such districts, as the president noted, produce a Congress more ideologically polarized than the electorate it represents. A House of Representatives in which members need only tend to their bases may be good for those reelected to the majority of seats year after year, but it is bad for the country when moderates in both parties are increasingly squeezed out of the process. Politicians forced to the ideological fringes produce bad legislation or, more often, partisan gridlock that results in no legislation at all on the crucial issues facing the country. Enormous sums are devoted to the scant handful of truly competitive races. A more vibrant process would not provide a panacea for all that ails the modern politics, but it would remove one roadblock to the ability to find common legislative ground and forge common-sense solutions.

The temptation for Mr. Bush’s critics will be to dismiss his observations as too little, too late, from a tainted source. After all, Mr. Bush’s party benefited enormously from the outrageous mid-cycle redistricting engineered in Mr. Bush’s home state of Texas and with the help of his political architect, Karl Rove. The Texas redistricting took an existing problem and helped raise it to a disturbing new level by promoting the notion of having legislatures redraw lines between censuses, whenever one side or another seized the majority, however fleetingly. The president wasn’t exactly lamenting the absence of competitive districts or calling for structural reform then. Fair enough, but the president’s point remains an important one. There are various ways to address this situation, whether on a national or state-by-state level, and introduce rationality and nonpartisanship into what threatens to become an even uglier process. Mr. Bush’s point may come late in his presidency, but it is nonetheless an important one.”

  • GeorgeSorwell
    Thanks for highlighting this.

    Gerrymandering means incumbents can protect themselves by designing their own districts.

    It means parties can create safe seats.

    A few states have done away with gerrymandering. I favor the Iowa model, as described by Centrists.org.
  • Don Quijote
    ROTFLMAO...

    Now that the Democrats look like they are going to ba a majority for quite a while this is an issue...

    Where was the concern when Delay was redistricting Texas to give an advantage to Republicans?
  • but it is one that is real and fixable.

    Actually it is not. It is no more fixable then is term limits.

    Because you are asking the fox to oversee the security of the hen house. Campaign refinance. Term Limits. Anything that affects congress or the senate is unfixable as long as those doing the voting are the ones who stand to lose the most.

    It is also precisely why the government has instituted a unique approach to government. Its called finger pointing. Each party purposely blocks the other parties legislation and so they can both point fingers at each other........relieve themselves of blame and get reelected.

    While you and I are screaming at each other in anger over policy. They are laughing at us and our stupidity for being so ignorant of the process and what it is they are doing while they go hang out with each other on their PAC's expense accounts and wine and dine each other.

    Example. Nancy Pelosi and Harry Reid have faded from the spotlight. Why is that you suppose? It is simple. The Democrats are winning. They are going to win in November and consequentially they no longer want to do anything to jeopardize their parties chances in November.
  • DLS
    The districts should be composed logically, such as of contiguous ZIP code areas or US Census tracts, and follow county lines and natural as well as political kinds of boundaries.

    Note that districts can be avoided if there are enough seats at stake (five or more is reasonable) and they are made at-large seats and are allocated to parties on a proportional basis.
  • domajot
    This may be a problem like immigration. Everyone agrees that there is a problem, but there is zero agreement on how to fix it.

    I think we need some champioons in Congress to talk it up, to highligh it so that people will be familiar with the issue in a broad sense, not just how it impacts their local politics.

    t's a dilemma, though. Should the federal govermrnent get involved or should each state decide strictly on its own? It seems to me that the states would want to do iit on thir own, but it would be a help if members of Congress chimed in with broad guidelines or advisories..

    If Iowa, and a few other states could do it, then it's certianly possible. Where is the will?
  • DLS
    "Should the federal govermrnent get involved or should each state decide strictly on its own?"

    For federal offices, most would agree the federal government should do it.
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