• PugJesus
    link
    fedilink
    721 year ago

    Yeah, Texas is a reliable GOP vote. Which means losing it would be a massive blow to GOP electoral chances.

    • netburnr
      link
      English
      41 year ago

      Not all of us, just need more of y’all to move here and water down their vote. Problem is the germandering makes populated places less impacting than the uneducated rural areas.

      • Baron Von J
        link
        271 year ago

        There’s enough of us here to do it already, we just need to actually go out and vote and we can win the state-wide and presidential elections here. In 2020 Biden received more votes in Texas than in New York. The metro area populations of Houston, Austin, Dallas, and San Antonio are more than half the state population. If Harris County’s efforts to expand mail-in voting (by sending mail-in ballots to all ~2.4M registered voters in the county) Biden may have won the state, as he only lost by ~620k.

        • netburnr
          link
          English
          61 year ago

          I vote every time and post in the Austin community as much as I dare to encourage others. That’s about all I can do.

          • @SCB
            link
            11 year ago

            You can volunteer on campaigns! There are roles for people less socially inclined - stuffing mailers and such. Every little bit of help will be welcome.

      • PugJesus
        link
        fedilink
        101 year ago

        Gerrymandering has a very limited effect on presidential elections, which is what was mentioned.

        • squiblet
          link
          fedilink
          121 year ago

          Voter suppression and other unequal access to voting make a big difference. For instance, the “one drop off box per county” bs they schemed up, inadequate in-person facilities in urban areas leading to long lines, and how people don’t get voting day off work. Not to mention the fascist chuds planning to stand around with guns at voting facilities to “monitor”.

        • zkfcfbzr
          link
          English
          101 year ago

          It still has a big indirect impact. People are less likely to vote if they feel like their vote doesn’t matter as much, and someone in a heavily gerrymandered state does in fact have their vote matter less, at least locally. Turnout would probably be measurably higher if the districts were fair or competitive.

          There are other indirect effects too - there are plenty of states where Republicans are only able to pass voter-suppressing policies because of the legislative edge they hold thanks to gerrymandering.