The redistricting debate is the most important reform issue in the United States right now.
Jonathan D. Aronson, a professor and political scientist at USC, is a little exasperated that Americans sometimes worry about the potential for voting-machine tampering when there may be a more fundamental -- though, perhaps, drier and harder-to-explain -- problem in how districts are drawn.The game is more fun than you might think: it's actually tricky to make the districts as partisan as your party bosses require. In case you don't think this is a problem, check out the two districts I live (alternately) in: New York's 28th and Massachusetts' 4th.
"My question was, why would you need to rig the voting machines if you'd already rigged the election by making seats safe?" he said.
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nice
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