• ALQ
      link
      321 year ago

      I’ll take that bet and raise. $15 says they don’t comply and they do this

      • @shalafi
        link
        English
        51 year ago

        Nope. Supreme Court just told Alabama to fuck off for these same shenanigans.

        • @HeyThisIsntTheYMCA
          link
          English
          91 year ago

          And Alabama will draw worse maps, then when those are thrown out for being obviously worse they’ll say they have to use the original maps because there’s no time to draw new ones. This ain’t our first rodeo.

          • @assassin_aragorn
            link
            121 year ago

            I think someone saw this coming, because an independent group was commissioned by the judge to make a new, equitable map, not the legislature.

          • @shalafi
            link
            English
            21 year ago

            I had thought along those lines. Fuck it up for now, win the election, go from there.

            Liberals have a bad habit of thinking like themselves. “What would be fair?” Nah. Think like the opposition, “How can we fuck this up in our favor?”

    • @BrianTheeBiscuiteer
      link
      71 year ago

      They’ve reached the “You’ve made your decision now let’s see you enforce it” phase of fascism. If non-compliance doesn’t lead to arrests or expulsion they’ll ignore every deadline and court order.

    • @assassin_aragorn
      link
      01 year ago

      I’m not sure about Kemp. He’s pretty much the only Republican that’s managed to be unscathed by angry voters, and I think it’s because he refused Trump’s demands. His brand depends on being more moderate. Still very conservative, but not so crazy as to not comply.

      • @[email protected]
        link
        fedilink
        01 year ago

        I am not so sure that being moderate is going to be a winning strategy for him. GA lost two Republican senate seats to Democrats because MAGA “Republicans” thought that the election was rigged and stayed home. (And I’m mostly fine with Ossof and Warnock; they’re not making news, which works for me.) If not kissing Trump’s ass means that the MAGAts don’t vote for him, then Dems can end up taking the governors office as long as they don’t try to run Stacey Abrams again. (Seriously, WTF was the state Dem party thinking? She lost against him once, you don’t keep running the same candidate thinking that you’re going to get a different result this time. So fucking stupid.)

  • @Misspelledusernme
    link
    411 year ago

    This business of partisan redistricting and the judiciary telling states how many majority-minority district states need to have is unsustainable. We need a total overhaul. I think a single statewide multimember district with ranked choice voting would be ideal, and solve all of these issues in one swoop. A handful of multimember districts per state, like the Fair Representation Act proposes, would be acceptable too.

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      71 year ago

      We need a constitutional convention and to dissolve Congress and form a parliament. Only then can this country progress.

      • @assassin_aragorn
        link
        101 year ago

        It’s way too early. We need to make sure Republicans can’t hijack the process and make everything worse. Within the next decade or two, there should be enough of a shift to the left with Zoomers that Democrats have enough states and enough popularity to fix the Constitution without Republicans fucking it up.

        • deweydecibel
          link
          English
          5
          edit-2
          1 year ago

          Within the next decade or two, there should be enough of a shift to the left with Zoomers that Democrats have enough states and enough popularity to fix the Constitution without Republicans fucking it up.

          Only if two things have not happened by this point:

          1. Republicans have not fucked the system up so bad and broken all the safeguards to effectively render our democracy permanently dysfunctional without their approval.

          2. The trend of educated young people congregating in the same large population states stops.

          We are already the majority. We should not be struggling this much to get very basic things done. The problem isn’t getting enough people to get this shit done, it’s getting enough people in enough districts in enough states to get it done.

          This system is so utterly broken that fixing it may not be possible given the current trends. The structure of Congress was not designed for 50 states and all the educated people fleeing the majority of them to congregate in a few of them. You want to talk about tyranny of the majority, how about we start talking about tyranny of the fucking zip code. What we frankly need is a democracy that forgets about borders and starts caring about what people want, not land.

          Let’s also keep in mind Zoomers will need help from the generation that comes after them, and at this point, it’s safe to say a fair number of those kids will have been indoctrinated into Republican ideology by the gutted school systems, conservative censorship, and rampant, uncheck right wing propaganda being funneled into their brains. Make no mistake: Republicans are playing a long game in many of these states, and the next generation is in very big trouble.

        • @ChickenLadyLovesLife
          link
          English
          11 year ago

          Within the next decade or two

          Pundits have been talking for the last thirty years about the coming decline of the GOP thanks to shifting demographics, and yet they’re still here and going strong. Demographics do not matter to a party that views true representational democracy as an obstacle to their acquisition and maintenance of power.

          • @assassin_aragorn
            link
            11 year ago

            I’d argue we’re already seeing that decline. They lost Georgia. The best they could do in the midterms, where they had the perfect environment, was effectively tie.

      • @agent_flounder
        link
        English
        21 year ago

        The only outcome from that, which by the way is being pushed for by billionaires, is proverbially putting a bullet in democracy’s head and leaving it to rot in the desert.

        What prevents all the corrupt, bad actors currently doing their best to fuck the system and all of us peons from doing the same but an order of magnitude worse once they get to rip up the constitution and start over?

        What we really need is decent people to get together and agree on a general vision and goals of what needs unfucking.

        We need a long game plan to fix things. Stuff like fixing broken congressional representation (Expand the House and bin the Senate), undo citizens united, break up oligopolies and monopolies, reform campaign finance and eliminate lobbying, do some form of ranked choice voting, no more electoral college, establish congressional term limits, and things along those lines.

        The whole Senate thing needs to just fuck off. We need to re-architect checks and balances. Impeachment doesn’t work. Voters should be able to recall any elected official.

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      English
      31 year ago

      Ideally but an easy fix would be to repeal the house apportionment act of 1929 and up the number of reps. Harder to gerrymander it all if there are far more reps to begin with. That and it doesn’t need to touch voting methods, etc.

      Your idea is far better. This one is just far more attainable in the short term.

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      English
      11 year ago

      I absolutely agree that we need a better system of running this country and am fully on board with all the listed policies.

      However, It’s only unsustainable if the American people have the balls to challenge it. I’m not exactly convinced of that when we as a country can barely say no to a blatant villain(Trump). Good change only happens when the people stubbornly demand it. I honestly can’t remember a time in my lifetime where that has happened.

      Instead, we get tiny morsels of change that are carefully doled out to keep us voting the 'right’TM way.

      We are all just checked out escaping reality in our little bubbles expecting things to magically change. Oh, how I wish change worked like that. But sadly, It does not. If you want change, it takes the stubborn, unyielding willpower of forcing your position onto others continually.

      And that is something we as a people have gradually forgotten. Unfortunately, the haters among us have not. They continually push their values onto others. They have worked to undermine abortion for 50+ years. And it worked and continues to work.

      We have to out organize them to have any hope of things actually changing for the better. And it’s a Hell of a lot easier to tear things apart than to improve them.

  • SuiXi3D
    link
    fedilink
    251 year ago

    And yet you never hear about this happening in Texas, where the districts absolutely need to be redrawn to be more inclusive.

    • @[email protected]OP
      link
      fedilink
      41 year ago

      GA-14 is already getting more and more diverse in the part that’s in the Atlanta suburbs (Paulding and Cobb counties). But it definitely could get a whole lot more competitive next year.

  • AutoTL;DRB
    link
    fedilink
    English
    81 year ago

    This is the best summary I could come up with:


    Jones ordered Georgia’s Republican majority General Assembly and governor to take action before Dec. 8, saying he wouldn’t permit 2024 elections to go forward under the current maps.

    The Georgia case is part of a wave of litigation after the U.S. Supreme Court earlier this year stood behind its interpretation of the Voting Rights Act, rejecting a challenge to the law by Alabama.

    Courts in Alabama and Florida ruled recently that Republican-led legislatures had unfairly diluted the voting power of Black residents.

    Legal challenges to congressional districts are also ongoing in Arkansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, New Mexico, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas and Utah.

    Jones wrote that he conducted a “thorough and sifting review” of the evidence in the case before concluding that Georgia violated the Voting Rights Act in enacting the current congressional and legislative maps.

    He wrote that he “commends Georgia for the great strides that it has made to increase the political opportunities of Black voters in the 58 years” since that law was passed in 1965.


    The original article contains 470 words, the summary contains 168 words. Saved 64%. I’m a bot and I’m open source!

      • @Bernie_Sandals
        link
        51 year ago

        Yeah, pretty much the entirety of the South has been gerrymandered to hell by the Republicans. Doesn’t really matter where it is at this point, any effort against it is worth it.