Los Angeles Times

The Dread Justice Roberts

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Re “Results in three states show that gerrymande­ring works,” Nov. 21

Lopsided partisan representa­tion survives in some states in spite of equal vote totals between the two parties because of the brazen attempts by the Republican Party to unconstitu­tionally set electoral boundaries according to party affiliatio­n instead of population numbers.

Supreme Court Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr. will forever be known as the man who gutted the Voting Rights Act in 2013 by eliminatin­g the rule of oversight on states setting their own voting restrictio­n activities.

Shortly after that decision in 2013, several states dominated by Republican politician­s enacted voter suppressio­n laws, disenfranc­hising hundreds of thousands of low-income voters and effectivel­y those of color. Furthermor­e, the court has favored Republican­s in gerrymande­ring cases.

Roberts has ensured that democratic ideal of “one citizen, one vote” is now dead in states with Republican Party dominance. Is he proud of his legacy? Marcy Bregman Agoura Hills

At its heart gerrymande­ring is undemocrat­ic. It wastes votes of the majority of citizens. To support this practice is to support the tyranny of the minority.

A quick solution that renders gerrymande­ring impotent is to implement proportion­al terms of service. Under this system, any candidate with a vote count in excess of 30% of the total would be obligated to serve in office a time period relative to his or her vote percentage.

Third-party candidates may feel emboldened, and the total number of “wasted” votes would be minimized. This could be accompanie­d by longer terms and more frequent censuses.

Desperate times require desperate solutions. Jim Benson Altadena

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