General Discussion
In reply to the discussion: How Republicans Plan To Rig The Next Presidential Election, In Six Pictures [View all]Blanks
(4,835 posts)Part of the problem in the last election was the big joke that both candidates were in Ohio constantly.
If all of these districts have been gerrymandered republican; they need democrats to go in there and fight for votes to flip them blue.
The way it is now; entire districts get no attention from any democratic candidate because they are either too red or too blue.
I agree with the dam analogy up-thread; the republican dam is crumbling. Something like this might push democrats to campaign out into rural areas to tip some of these districts from red to blue causing the dam to crumble either more quickly, or more catastrophically.
This method is a more fairly distributed representation than the current system anyway (I've argued for it for years). Eventually the gerrymandering wont make any difference with the way demographics shift over time anyway. If the republicans are lucky; they might squeak out one presidential election, but they'd probably do that anyway. People vote for change occasionally; that's the one thing that doesn't change.