Lord Jim wrote:Why not simply get rid of the opportunity to gerrymander, by handing it over to some non-partisan group?
Or a bi-partisan independent commission made up of respected former politicos from both parties, or even a computer program...
Anything but having it in the hands of the very people most directly affected by the way the districts are drawn....(the state legislators, interested in having their own districts protected and "safe" congressional districts available to move up to)
Gerrymandering has always been a problem, but the level of sophistication that modern analysis tools make available has refined it to the point that it has become extremely corrosive to our form of government and nearly caused the decision making process of the federal government to grind completely to a halt...
This is how bad it's gotten:
The number of ‘turnover’ or ‘split’ districts has hit a low point compared to recent elections at 26: 17 Republicans in the House are in districts carried by Obama and 9 Democrats are in districts carried by Romney.
http://cookpolitical.com/story/5606
Think about those numbers for a moment...
What this means is that out of 435 members of the House of Representatives, only a small hand full on both sides of the aisle have to be more concerned about losing a general election then they do about being knocked off in a low turnout primary by an opponent who makes a successful pitch to the party base. (Those voters who are
most likely to be motivated by ideology and single issues, and
least likely to support compromise)
What this does of course, is electorally incentiveize ideological intransigence, and dis-incentivize the sort of horse trading compromising that is
essential for a government like ours to function...
The gerrymandering process has placed
way too much power in the hands of a minority of ideological voters on both sides of the political divide, at the expense of both the vast majority of the citizenry, (poll after poll after poll shows that by wide margins, Republicans, Democrats and Independents
all want their elected representatives to work together to get things done) and the ability of the legislative process to work in even a minimally functional way.
This situation
must be fixed.