Just a place to keep track of everything. The proposed congressional maps were released today.http://www.ncleg.net/gis/RandR07/District_Plans/DB_2011/Congress/Rucho-Lewis_Congress_1/Maps/mapSimple.pdf
7/1/2011 1:34:57 PM
What's going on with district 12?Is there a population density overlay with this map...
7/1/2011 1:53:14 PM
District 12 should be known as the Mel Watt, the Democrats Gerrymandered that district back in the 90's
7/1/2011 2:09:52 PM
District 12 has been like that since it's inception in 1993. Home of one of the worst congressman in my mind (and certainly the biggest shill for the banks), Mel Watt.The one that changes the most in here is the 4th district, as it loses most of Wake County (the portion that was heavily Republican, and always cancelled out by Durham/Chapel hill). That went to district 2, which was typically Democrat-leaning, previously being held by Bob "Who are you" Etheridge, until he got kicked out by Renee Ellmers, an equally dimwitted moron.Also, Wake County will now likely have 4 congressional districts. That will make early voting real fun .[Edited on July 1, 2011 at 2:10 PM. Reason : -]
7/1/2011 2:10:09 PM
I thought they were going to eliminate the one super squiggly-line district, not create another.
7/1/2011 3:55:37 PM
It's all for naught. After 2013 I'll be relegated to putting up with Virginia Foxx into perpetuity.
7/1/2011 4:56:49 PM
That is kind of the one bright side of this for me. While it sucks to see that Brad Miller will lose district 13 now that they've wiped out the urban parts (some of North Greensboro & Raleigh), at least they added in Surry County to counter balance the population. Which means my old home county will belong to whatever new GOP runs for congress, not Foxx. http://www.charlotteobserver.com/2011/07/01/2421920/new-nc-congressional-map-boosts.html#ixzz1Qt2Zq9z6
7/1/2011 5:18:00 PM
7/1/2011 6:38:15 PM
Not even commenting on this particular map...but people should realize that the Democrats have been in power/gerrymandered for so long, that even if everyone could agree that the Republicans objectively drew the fairest districts, the map would be in their favor, and would thus get claims of gerrymandering thrown their way.
7/1/2011 7:06:42 PM
No, if the GOP drew the fairest districts, each one would have voted for Obama in '08 by a slim majorityor if they wanted to stay on the good side of the courts, they would have kept that much-litigated 12th district pretty much as it is, made a similarly strongly GOP-packed district, and made all of the others competitive.We need more systems out there like Iowa's, which uses a nonpartisan commission to draw districts that are fairly compact and follow as closely as possible the rivers and county boundaries.
7/2/2011 2:41:30 AM
7/2/2011 10:55:13 AM
Yeah, that was too flippantProbably the most important things are keeping them relatively compact, following natural and permanent political boundaries, and not splitting up major metro areas whose populations don't exceed (state pop.)/(num. reps.)
7/3/2011 2:01:48 AM
knowing the Gerrymandering under Brad Miller, it's hard not to understand Republicans wanting some payback
7/3/2011 11:13:06 AM
7/3/2011 2:31:43 PM
If this map holds, Lawson will be in the 2nd.Also, why would you be surprised about them keeping Price? He's strongly pro-war, pro-drug war, and pro-handouts to corporations. They've been waiting to redraw the 4th in to a solidly democratic district, because the Democrats had been negating all of the Republicans in the R-heavy Wake County portion of the 4th district.
7/3/2011 3:13:08 PM
7/3/2011 3:30:20 PM
When someone loses twice, don't you think the party would rather run someone new in their place? Seems sort of arrogant in the same way that moving to a new district to keep running for office does. "They need ME in DC! I'm going to run over and over again/move districts/draw myself a district". Or does that rule not apply if you're on the Ron Paul Team (because obviously you do have superior beliefs, duh).The biggest travesty is Patrick McHenry's blatant neutering of Asheville by putting it in his district where it is outweighed by conservative cities. If communities of interest have ANYTHING to do with redistricting and the VRA, then that's unconstitutional. Asheville has nothing to do with Gastonia and he just drew that thing to keep Democrats out of Western NC. And if Pantano gets in due to this new district, I'm disowning NC. He's fucking Patrick Bateman with a funny name.Watch to see what happens in Virginia. If Roanoke and Salem get split between districts and the 9th (SW Va., deep Appalachia) takes in Martinsville (like an even more depressing Greensboro), then "communities of interest" no longer matter in this.I can understand majority-minority districts due to the ability of line-drawers to chop up disenfranchised groups into powerlessness (ex: SC has about 35% African American population, but w/o the VRA, they could be divided to the point where their vote is always outweighed by white populations), but dividing up smaller cities like Asheville or Fayetteville is just partisan BS.[Edited on July 6, 2011 at 4:41 PM. Reason : s]
7/6/2011 4:40:44 PM
i just love looking at the map of the 12th district. Anyone who knows ANYTHING about Greensboro can look at that map and see exactly what happened there. I wish there were some legitimate way to prevent such fraud, but, alas, I think any measure suitably powerful enough to do so would just be abused by those in power anyway.
7/6/2011 4:45:58 PM
^ Read the Voting Rights Act. It applies to the counties in question and you can't balkanize the black vote or any minority vote to render them powerless.Well, do you trust judges or elected representatives or political scientists?Answer: only trust Ron Paul.[Edited on July 6, 2011 at 4:49 PM. Reason : x]
7/6/2011 4:48:07 PM
7/6/2011 4:48:52 PM
When they're on you're team, they're "new blood intellectuals".Whatever, yall have at it. I don't live here now. This is a bad map.[Edited on July 6, 2011 at 4:51 PM. Reason : x]
7/6/2011 4:50:32 PM
7/6/2011 4:52:42 PM
That's how the law is written. Can you give me some numbers on the "everyone else" vote in those areas? I think it's more than likely still around 50/50 or a slight Dem advantage. The 1st might be different, but it's more contiguous.
7/6/2011 4:56:37 PM
so, I guess if the law said "no darkies in town after 5pm," then that'd be A-OK with you. you are spineless
7/6/2011 4:57:18 PM
7/6/2011 5:01:19 PM
I think Lawson could easily beat Ellmers in the primary.
7/6/2011 5:06:29 PM
He probably could, but I doubt he will [run].[Edited on July 6, 2011 at 5:18 PM. Reason : ...]
7/6/2011 5:18:27 PM
^^And with numbers like these, where the GOP will get a 12 to 30 point advantage before the race even starts in the new district 2, if Lawson wins the primary, then he's won.I always got the feeling that he was running a message campaign, not a real campaign. I don't think that he will run now that he has a good chance of winning.[Edited on July 6, 2011 at 5:23 PM. Reason : .]
7/6/2011 5:22:01 PM
No, he was definitely running a real campaign. He wasn't that far from beating Price, either, but obviously the 4th district presented major problems.
7/6/2011 5:40:36 PM
7/7/2011 1:54:33 PM
http://www.ncleg.net/gis/DMV/V23/default.htmHere is a more interactive map. You can zoom in and figure out exactly where the 4 districts in Wake land, or where Greenville is cut in half at, etc.http://www.wral.com/news/state/nccapitol/blogpost/9834610/
7/8/2011 2:19:26 AM
My voice in District 1 has never been heard and will be heard even less with this redistricting. I demand District 3 encompass Scotland Neck so my voice can better be heard.
7/8/2011 9:23:54 AM
My hope is that District 1 (Ohio) will become even more Cincinnati-based, so that there will be a greater chance of electing a Democrat.Then again, because the Rethugnicans hold all of the levers of power, I predict Cincy will be split up even more, to entrench Steve Shabutt and "Mean Jean" Schmidt further.
7/9/2011 4:21:53 PM
I'm pretty sure that the NC House/Senate maps come out this week. Paul Stam's district is going to be sliced in two, since it's currently at like 160% or something ridiculous like that. That mean's I'll likely be in a house district with no incumbent.
7/10/2011 5:11:53 PM
Update for State House/Senate proposals:
7/12/2011 7:59:39 PM
7/16/2011 5:21:15 AM
Round 2! Fight!
7/20/2011 1:05:35 AM
These changes don't make a lot of sense.On a partisan level, these changes cram even more dems into the 3 safe districts, giving even larger GOP advantages in many of the other 10 districts. And this new map starts double-bunking Dems, so now, not only do the GOP candidates start out with around 10 point advantages, but they also get to run against newbie Dems instead of incumbents in a couple of districts.On a nonpartisan level, this map looks even more snake-like and seems to break up more counties and communities than the first map did with more tentacles being added onto districts.I know the first version of their map got a lot of criticism, but I can't imagine any of the criticism was "this map isn't snaky or partisan enough"
7/20/2011 11:40:17 AM
7/20/2011 12:44:40 PM
Would this new map pit Lawson against Coble or Ellmers?When it was the first map, I think he could beat a relative newbie social conservative like Ellmers with a lot of wake county in his district. But if this new one puts him trying to win Trinity, Asheboro, Siler City, and Southern Pines against a republican incumbent who has been there since before many tdubbers were born, he doesn't stand a chance.I noticed this new map puts NCSU's campus and much of Raleigh squarely in Price's district, which guarantees we'll be represented by him for a decade.I'm kind of surprised that they decided to extract Durham from the triangle and put them in with a sort of coastal town like Elizabeth City. And we've got part of Raleigh sharing a district with Mt. Airy on the western side of the state. And there is no stronger community bond than that shared between Chapel Hill and Fayetteville. Yes, this is indeed a sensible map.
7/20/2011 1:29:33 PM
Okay, I just read that you don't legally have to live in the district you're running in, so the people who have been drawn out of their districts can still run in them, they'll just risk taking a hit for running for office somewhere they don't live.http://www.wral.com/news/state/nccapitol/blogpost/9877665/
7/20/2011 2:09:02 PM
http://www.wral.com/news/state/nccapitol/blogpost/9892961/
7/22/2011 12:43:50 PM
7/22/2011 12:46:55 PM
They should just redistrict based on long and lat lines, not this tentacle porn bs.
7/25/2011 5:33:46 PM
but that (along with my old favorite, shortest-splitline) tends to split up major citiesit also ends up packing Dems in so that the GOP gets an advantagea much better idea involves making compact districts that as much as possible follow county lines and natural boundaries, preserve communities of interest, and nest together (so that most State Senate districts lie completely within Congressional districts, and most State House districts lie completely within State Senate districts)
7/25/2011 8:50:46 PM
The real answer is state-wide elections. The district lines are always going to be somewhat subjective, so there's no silver bullet for that.
7/25/2011 9:06:15 PM
only with some provision for proportional representationotherwise you can easily have situations where minorities are permanently disenfranchised
7/25/2011 9:12:59 PM
That's what it would be...proportional representation. You'd work it out so anyone that reached a certain percentage of the vote ("quota") gets a spot.
7/25/2011 9:14:55 PM
k, see I thought you were going to call for the return of "at-large" districts, which currently only exist in states with a single Representative
7/25/2011 9:15:50 PM
http://www.wral.com/news/state/nccapitol/blogpost/9903070/
7/25/2011 10:18:58 PM