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9.3.10: Electoral Politics- Boundary Drawing

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    212737
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    Electoral Politics -Boundary Drawing

    In a democracy, most governments draw up functional regions called electoral districts (or voting districts) to determine who may vote for whom, which areas are represented by a specific government office (mayor, senator, governor, etc.) and which laws govern the actions of which regions. The smallest American electoral region is the precinct, which, at least in urban areas, is approximately the equivalent of a “neighborhood”, consisting usually of a few city blocks. You may vote only in the precinct assigned to your home address, and this precinct is typically part of multiple, larger, nested electoral districts, including wards, townships, counties, congressional districts, and states.

    By law, electoral districts must have roughly the same number of people in each equivalent district. So, for example, in 2011, each of California’s 80 State Assembly Districts had between 461,000 and 470,000 people. Over time, however, people move into or out of districts. In order to ensure that each district has nearly the same population, district boundaries must be regularly redrawn to ensure even representation and avoid over or underrepresentation called malapportionment. The US Constitution (and other state constitutions, etc.) require district boundaries to be redrawn after each decennial US Census Is completed.

    This process, known as political redistricting, involves a great deal of geographic strategizing, and the outcome of this process fundamentally shapes American politics. In most US states, the state legislature controls the redistricting process, and this fact opens the process to a whole number of unfair political shenanigans. The reason why the political redistricting process is so important is that elections are heavily influenced by the way the boundaries of electoral districts are drawn. Political groups that control the placement of boundaries are far more likely to control who gets elected, and therefore which laws get passed and how tax money is collected and spent.


    9.3.10: Electoral Politics- Boundary Drawing is shared under a CC BY-NC 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by LibreTexts.

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