One reads much about Republican gerrymandering of congressional districts, yet if one compares the Republican-gerrymandered congressional districts of North Carolina with the Democrat-gerrymandered districts of Maryland, one realizes neither party has any moral authority to accuse the other. Talking about gerrymandering is thus much like talking about fairness in taxation: invoking the concept of fairness is invariably about making somebody else pay more.
The fact that neither major party has any moral authority to talk about gerrymandering gives a movement like Stand Up Republic opportunities across most of the 50 states, excepting states with only one congressional representative, like Wyoming. Stand Up Republic can push for legal standards in perimeter-to-area ratios for congressional districts, and advocate for particular algorithms that reduce the possibility of a member of Congress having a safe general election, the condition that allows the representative the luxury of feeding the ideologues the red meat necessary to avoid being "primaried." —Stephen J. Pennsylvania
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