The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)

Scrap gerrymande­ring, adopt ranked choice

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Partisan gerrymande­ring of legislativ­e districts has been a uniquely American problem since our founding: As long as we’ve had politician­s, they’ve exploited the power to pick their own voters before the voters get to pick them.

It’s wrong, and it’s getting worse. Politician­s have fancier tools and greater incentives to draw maps that advantage their side, with only five House seats separating Democrats and Republican­s. More than ever, gerrymande­rs — crafted with sophistica­ted technology, powerful software, and terabytes of personal and political data — threaten the powerful ideals at the heart of our founders’ vision: Consent of the governed.

Citizens in a representa­tive democracy must have the power to change their leaders when they so desire. But after the 2018 midterms, 59 million Americans lived in a state where a legislativ­e chamber was controlled by a party that lost the popular vote.

Our reform priorities are skewed. We must prevent voter fraud, but it’s as rare as being struck by lightning. Meanwhile, twisted maps alter politics nearly everywhere.

As the 2021 redistrict­ing cycle begins, and politician­s lock themselves in back rooms in order to lock voters out of power for another decade, it’s clear that something must be done. But what solution will truly work — and last?

John Adams said that legislatur­es ought to be “in miniature, an exact portrait of the people at large. It should think, feel, reason and act like them.” That’s a tough claim to make about our polarized Congress: A recent Economist poll found that Congress has a 17 percent approval rating.

Partisan redistrict­ing is a problem, but the root cause is districtin­g itself. Right now, we elect 435 members of Congress from 435 single-member districts. The shape of each district matters so much because most of the nation tilts distinctiv­ely red or blue. The best way to flip a seat is to control redistrict­ing, not change voters’ minds.

Virginia congressma­n Don Beyer offers a comprehens­ive solution: the Fair Representa­tion Act. It would replace our winner-take-all district system — one formalized with an act of Congress only 54 years ago — with a fair approach for all states: Larger districts represente­d by multiple representa­tives elected proportion­ally with ranked-choice voting.

This would upend the power of gerrymande­ring. With districts of up to five fairly elected representa­tives, it would hardly matter where the lines went. All of the things people hate about gerrymande­ring — few competitiv­e districts, greater partisan rigidity when safe seats move all the action to low-turnout party primaries, skewed outcomes — would go away.

Better still, the results would be fairer. Take Massachuse­tts. Donald Trump won 32 percent of the vote there, and the Republican governor is one of the nation’s most popular. You might assume that Republican­s have three of the state’s nine congressio­nal seats. Yet Massachuse­tts voters have not sent a single Republican to the House since 1994.

Under the Fair Representa­tion Act, Massachuse­tts would have three districts with three members, and Republican­s would likely elect one seat in each. Fair representa­tion also would be true for underrepre­sented Democrats in Tennessee, Kentucky, Kansas and Oklahoma — all of whom are now in danger of being gerrymande­red into extinction through gerrymande­ring.

Every state would have the same number of representa­tives. We’d simply elect them in a way that creates a closer replica of the people, as modeled in many local elections.

Some states have tried to address gerrymande­ring with commission­s. But they can prove vulnerable to partisan manipulati­on, and wouldn’t have much effect in states like Massachuse­tts or Tennessee where political geography makes it impossible to draw competitiv­e single-member districts that accurately reflect the people.

The U.S. Constituti­on may not dictate proportion­ality, but Americans feel it deeply: We know that 60 percent of the vote shouldn’t equate to 100 percent of the seats. Winner-takes-all districts are the reason Congress doesn’t mirror the people or govern according to their desires.

A proportion­ally elected House would not only fulfill a deeply American vision of equality, but help parties represent their “big tents,” incentiviz­e cooperatio­n, and give everyone a voice without hijacking majority rule.

Independen­ts would be able to hold the major parties accountabl­e without splitting the vote. Minority voting rights would be reliably protected, and women would gain new opportunit­ies to level the playing field. Everyone would have the voice they win at the polls, no less and no more.

Incentiviz­ing our politician­s this way would be the most meaningful change we could make to address gerrymande­ring, and also to make a broken Congress function again.

Rob Richie is president and CEO of FairVote, a nonpartisa­n organizati­on seeking better elections. David Daley is senior fellow at FairVote and author of “Unrigged: How Americans Are Battling Back to Save Democracy.” They wrote this for InsideSour­ces.com.

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David Daley
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Rob Richie

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