You're missing the point, General: Because of gerrymandering, the Republicans kept technical control of the House despite losing the popular vote for the House. Again, the American people cast 1 million more votes for Democrats than for Republicans in the House.
And the problem exists in individual States as well as in the country at large:
In North Carolina, Republican candidates garnered a total of 2.14 million votes in the 13 districts, winning nine. Democrats gained a total of 2.22 million votes, winning three districts and leading in a fourth.
In Pennsylvania, Republicans won 13 of the 18 districts even as they lost the aggregate vote by 2.7 million to 2.6 million.
In Pennsylvania, the Democrats won 51% of the votes for Representatives. By rights, the Democrats should have ended up with at least 9 of Pennsylvania's 18 Representatives. But they ended up with only 5. They won 51% of the votes, but they ended up with only 28% of Pennsylvania's Representatives.
Likewise, in North Carolina, the Democrats won 51% of the votes for Representatives. By rights, the Democrats should have ended up with 7 of North Carolina's 13 Representatives. But they ended up with only 4. They won 51% of the votes, but they ended up with only 31% of North Carolina's Representatives.
Those skewed outcomes do not result from people's splitting their votes between Obama for President and Republicans for Representatives. Indeed, that appears not to be a significant factor at all:
But in states that weren't very gerrymandered, like Iowa and Colorado and New Hampshire, you ddin't [sic] see a huge divergence between the presidential vote and the House votes.
Those outrageously skewed outcomes result from gerrymandering. In Pennsylvania, for example:
Democrats have been packed into three uncompetitive seats around Philadelphia, an uncompetitive seat in the Lehigh Valley, and a safe seat in Pittsburgh. The state's suburbs, exurbs, and rural areas have been rigged to be just outside the range where Democrats might win them.
In Ohio, for another example:
Democrats have been packed into four deep blue districts. Republicans have given themselves the other 12. They controlled the process in North Carolina and Michigan, and gave themselves similar maps.
I recognize that the Democrats like to do the same thing. And so do linked articles:
To be perfectly fair, Democrats played the same game in Illinois and Maryland, squeezing out suburban Republicans by packing just enough of Cook County and Montgomery County, respectively, into their districts.
The Dems would have done the same thing, of course, had they won control of these crucial states in 2010.
But it has been Republican gerrymandering that has caused the party that lost the vote to hold the technical majority in the House. And not just this time:
It’s the first time since 1996 that one party won more House seats while winning fewer votes, according to data compiled by the House Clerk’s office.
And who "won" the 1996 House election? You guessed it: the Republicans.
Reason is valuable only when it performs against the wordless physical background of the universe.