GOP Looks To Redistrict Itself Back Into Power

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First Posted: 07- 7-08 08:51 AM   |   Updated: 07-15-08 05:12 AM

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For months, a sense of dread has been percolating within Republican circles over potentially massive congressional losses in 2008. Facing the possibility of a more pronounced minority status in the House and more than a couple seats lost in the Senate, the GOP has begun setting its sights on a contingency plan: redistricting.

Republican officials now believe that the party's best hope for retaking seats in Congress may come during gubernatorial elections in 2010. Should the GOP win back the majority of these seats (Democrats currently occupy 28 state capitols), they would be extremely well positioned to influence the redistricting of the political map that will come after the 2010 census.

"The 2010 elections are almost as important or equally important as the elections this year. After redistricting in 2011, the governors are going to have a huge influence in determining the political makeup of this country," said Chris Schrimpf, a spokesman for the Republican Governors Association. "We could feasibly see 25 to 30 congressional seats swing as the result of redistricting. And the state legislatures and governor could determine that swing. Can the National Republican Congressional Committee make a statement like that with a straight face? It would be harder for them."

The suggestion that the elections of 2010 could be as important as those in 2008 may seem like hyperbole or distraction from a Republican Party bracing for big losses. But Democratic officials are also smarting to the premise. One insider, who described the idea as a "pretty sad reflection of the Republican Party's state of affairs," nevertheless conceded that it was on everyone's radar.

Brian Namey, spokesman for the Democratic Governors Association described Democratic governors as "a formidable line of defense against Republicans who would like to Tom DeLay us out of congressional seats."

An abundance of seats are in play. There will be 36 gubernatorial races in 2010, compared to 11 such elections this cycle. Of those 36, 19 are for state houses currently held by Democrats. And of those 19, ten will involve Democratic governors who won't be running for reelection (either because of term limits or retirement).

Because redistricting follows the 2010 census, each state will be reevaluating its congressional map in 2011. And in almost every one of these states, a tremendous amount of authority for this endeavor is placed in the governor's hands.

In 28 states, the governor has the authority to veto any redistricting plan. In eight separate states, the governor can veto only a congressional plan. In another five states, the governor is responsible for appointing members to the redistricting board. And in three states -- not separate -- the governor is directly involved in redrawing the district him or herself. In only eight states does the executive body actually not play a role. As both Democratic and Republican officials readily acknowledge, the partisan makeup of a newly shaped congressional district will almost certainly reflect the politics of the sitting governor.

"The odds are, if it is a Republican in the governor's chair, the seat will end up in GOP hands," said Schrimpf.

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So what, exactly, are the stakes at play? Namey calculates that of the 36 gubernatorial races in 2010, 32 will involve governors who will impact their state's redistricting in some way or another.

Meanwhile, because of shifting populations, there is likely to be one more congressional seat added in Georgia, California, Nevada and Utah; possibly two more added in Florida and Arizona; and the chance of four more seats added in Texas. Every state on this list, except for Arizona, currently has a Republican governor. All but Utah will hold a gubernatorial election in 2010. If Republicans hold their power they will be well positioned.

Conversely, Illinois, Iowa, Louisiana, Massachusetts, Michigan, Missouri, and Pennsylvania all seem likely to lose a congressional seat as a result of diminishing populations. New York and Ohio could lose two. Every state on this list, except Missouri and Louisiana, is both run by a Democrat and will have a gubernatorial election in 2010.

Of course, in almost every state, the legislative chambers will have a say into how the congressional districts are re-drawn. And in this regard the governor's power is limited. Oftentimes, in fact, redistricting plans get sent to state courts to adjudicate disagreements.

In 2010, there will be more than 1,150 state senate races and more than 4,950 state house races held nationwide. Here, too, Democrats and Republicans are cognizant of any edge.

"A flip of 50 state seats in key chambers could mean a gain -- or a loss -- of 15 Democratic Congressional seats in the next round of redistricting," said Michael Sargeant, executive director of the Democratic Legislative Campaign Committee. "We need to continue winning statehouses so that we can be at the table when these district lines are drawn."

With all these elections coming at once, Republicans are clearly looking to the states as a golden opportunity to make national advances. And with a political brand that is, by their own accounts, poisonous, and with the odds currently favoring the possibility of a Democratic White House, the gubernatorial races of 2010 could very end up representing the GOP's lifeline.

"In the worst case scenario, 2010 would be the first, most important evidence that there is life in the Republican Party," said Craig Shirley, a longtime Republican strategist. "The elections that year will be vitally important because it will put on stage the worst creative skills of ever politician... Members of Congress aren't bright about handling Social Security, Medicare and the budget but they are astonishing bright at self-preservation... and drawing favorable [political] districts."

For months, a sense of dread has been percolating within Republican circles over potentially massive congressional losses in 2008. Facing the possibility of a more pronounced minority status in the Ho...
For months, a sense of dread has been percolating within Republican circles over potentially massive congressional losses in 2008. Facing the possibility of a more pronounced minority status in the Ho...
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This is depressing. The uniform gerrymandering is recognized by many, many observers as depressing voting and diminishing the actual democracy of our system. It is perhaps the most virulent disease in our body politic (yes, including campaign financing), and no one in the democratic party seems to give a damn. All we do is wait for our chance to game the system when it's our turn. This is why people turn away from politics, and this is why people cease to believe that our system is anything but a sham.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:22 PM on 07/07/2008
- olivia I'm a Fan of olivia 96 fans permalink

All the hand-wringing by the GOP over their November losses is fake, imho. They're not only resigned, this is part of their plan.

They already stole everything.

They're happy to pass the blame onto the Democrats, which they will do - just as the economy implodes. Now they get to blame it on the Dems, and their stupid sheep will buy it.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:21 PM on 07/07/2008
- derekc06 I'm a Fan of derekc06 25 fans permalink
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gerrymandering FTW

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:18 PM on 07/07/2008

A party that is fully vested in disenfranchising as many voters as often as possible will do anything necessary to gain power. At no time has the GOP considered what is best for America over and above what is best for the GOP. If a few million poor people must suffer so as to allow the GOP to keep hold of power then so be it. If the middle class must lose any of its gains, the GOP will be glad to shove it over the edge.

Anyone who can provide any documentary evidence to the contrary will receive a respect hearing from me. I fully expect a thundering silence followed by accusations that I am somehow unAmerican for suggesting that the GOP is anything like exactly what it I have observed it to be.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:14 PM on 07/07/2008
- badtimes I'm a Fan of badtimes 11 fans permalink

Single party dominance is the expressed goal of Rovian politics.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:22 PM on 07/07/2008
- zann I'm a Fan of zann 11 fans permalink

First off, governor Kulongoski of Oregon is a Democrat.

Second, redistricting wants to make every Republican vote count double and every other vote count half. Why isn't this a suffrage issue?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:12 PM on 07/07/2008
- Meggie I'm a Fan of Meggie 100 fans permalink
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Dems must fight this with all they've got. And when Dems are in power, as much as it isn't nice, maybe there should be some redistricting the other way.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:11 PM on 07/07/2008
- Bluedanube I'm a Fan of Bluedanube 47 fans permalink

Republicans win only when they game the system. When Republicans win America loses. Only until the Republican Party goes the way of the Whigs will America be safe from their version of creeping fascism.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:07 PM on 07/07/2008
- RTIII I'm a Fan of RTIII 89 fans permalink

...They'll just try and take over the D party. We have to beat them to it: Progressives! INFILTRATE the Democratic Party like the Religious Nuts did the Rs!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:11 PM on 07/07/2008
- PATina I'm a Fan of PATina 251 fans permalink
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The Dems could learn something from this. Whether you like their politics or not... the Republicans have always used a long-term approach... willing to concede small losses in order to get the big picture in view. And when they lose... it just gives them that much more reason to try to win the next time.

The Dems on the other hand... never seem to have a strategic plan. Even having the upper hand in the House/Senate and w/ Obama leading the polls... they still seem too scared to really take on the Republicans. I dont' get it. There was an article on here about cutting the democratic convention short... and a lot of people agreed they should. Why not use the convention to come up w/ some short and long term goals for the Democratic party at large... Like keeping the 50 state strategy for electing Obama in place to help down ballot races in 2010, 2012, etc., etc. Not to mention get to their members at large a set of their platforms and rules. You could send out volunteers to find out just what things the people (particularly those in your party... but even the American populace at large) really want from their government and respond positively to those concerns. You could whip the Republican party every time... but you have to prepare for victory and be willing to stand up to what you believe.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:02 PM on 07/07/2008
- gladys46 I'm a Fan of gladys46 242 fans permalink

The pomp of a convention is usually just that. However, remember the DNC's committee members who sat to decide Michican & FL's near fatal elections ... well those committee members are on the ball, they make the rules and indeed they are working hard for dems this election!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:29 PM on 07/07/2008
- AdLib I'm a Fan of AdLib 277 fans permalink
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Now on the flip side of this, if in two years a President 0bama completes troop withdrawals in Iraq, lowers gas prices between 25%-50% by having his SEC restrict speculators on oil and implementing a national conservation/alternate energies program, institutes Universal Health Care, hammers back the Taliban in Afghanistan, closes Guantanamo and ends US sponsored torture and improves the standing and respect of the US in the world...

...many of those 2010 governorships may go to Dems and their undoing the GOP gerrymandering will give the Dems and even stronger majority in the House.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:49 PM on 07/07/2008
- Ides I'm a Fan of Ides 21 fans permalink

Do Democrats even gerrymander like that? I thought we were the ones always giving up ground.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:03 PM on 07/07/2008
- AdLib I'm a Fan of AdLib 277 fans permalink
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Of course Dems gerrymander but being the extremists that they are, the GOP (especially the TX GOP) have squeezed it to such an outrageous height of ridiculousness (check out the redistricting map DeLay oversaw in TX) that even if they gerrymander, the Dems could only pull back from what the GOP has done.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:11 PM on 07/07/2008
- gladys46 I'm a Fan of gladys46 242 fans permalink

Why not ... populations change, some drastically! ReThugs use of the Census is not just gifted to them!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:16 PM on 07/07/2008
- mouselion I'm a Fan of mouselion 123 fans permalink
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I like your thinking on this. Hope it does work out that way. However, if it does, expect the dirtiest tricks ever by the neo-cons.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:36 PM on 07/07/2008
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Does this mean the Republicans have given up on the Senate in 2010?

Sounds a little bit like a hail Mary pass.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:45 PM on 07/07/2008
- PATina I'm a Fan of PATina 251 fans permalink
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Yes... they have. But in the mean time... they will be planning and refining their plans to whip on the Democrats in the next four years. Dems need to start working if they plan on keeping any gains they make this election.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:06 PM on 07/07/2008
- TrevorAlan I'm a Fan of TrevorAlan 4 fans permalink

And they will use voter caging, intimidation and purging this year. While Dems high-five each other on how they are going to win by landslides, the Repub machine is quietly working on ways to make the voters who want Dems... disappear.

As hopeful as I am for the new spirit in the nation and the party, I am worried these tricks are not really being given their due at the top levels.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:59 PM on 07/07/2008
- danoj I'm a Fan of danoj 17 fans permalink

voters are going to speak with there pocket books; economy isn't so hot Dems win. Simple as that. However, the Dems will screw stuff up royal; you think money is tight now wait till Obama and a Dem congress raid everyones wallet. Enjoy your single term Pres and Dem congress while you can.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:28 PM on 07/07/2008
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If the Repedophiles steal yet another national election, this independent voter is strongly suspecting that We The People may just retaliate against anything GOP in a manner and scope not seen in a generation.

If you sow the wind, you reap the whirlwind. From where I'm sitting, the "Gang of Pedophiles" have been sowing the seeds of their own destruction for over 20 years now, and things have already begun to sprout...

Leland R. Erickson

Citizen

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:29 PM on 07/07/2008

The American people will do nothing. They are apathetic sheep. To quote George Carlin they've been bought off with materialism, as long as they have their Ipods that make pancakes and scratch their balls they will remain compliant!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:32 PM on 07/07/2008
- esquire07 I'm a Fan of esquire07 25 fans permalink

You are right about that !!! The Republican Criminal Machine will do whatever it takes - regardless of the law - to win power for power sakes. Democratic cowards will as usual do nothing to stop them.

The Elections in the US are as corrupt, if not more, than any third world country run by a military dictator. And the brain dead cable fed news US populace won't even know what hit them.

What a joke the Nation has become.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:34 PM on 07/07/2008
- mimsnpips I'm a Fan of mimsnpips 13 fans permalink
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"The Elections in the US are as corrupt, if not more, than any third world country run by a military dictator."

Pretty strong statement. Have any facts to back it up?

Don't make it worse than it is. This is the best country in the world even with all the problems.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:17 PM on 07/07/2008
- gladys46 I'm a Fan of gladys46 242 fans permalink

They'll do whatever they think it takes to keep power of a government they say ought to be "small" ... wonder why!!?

You'd think Tom Delay's tricks jerrymandering, reapportionments, etc. $$$ laundering and, thus his indictment (still no trial) would speak volumes even if the American people don't/won't!!?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:46 PM on 07/07/2008
- peterg76 I'm a Fan of peterg76 34 fans permalink
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Well, you didn't think they would do anything radical like, say, pay attention to what voters want.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:54 PM on 07/07/2008
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I must confess...Yes! LOL

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:57 PM on 07/07/2008
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That's all they want. Power, preserve the power. Retake the power, the privileges. The republican capitalistic money making machine, became the worst mafia type of subtle criminal enterprise in the last decade. The war, the N.R.A, the F.D.A, Oil companies, Faith, voting machine, corruptions you name it, you name them.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:53 PM on 07/07/2008

Just because the Republican Party is the Devil doesn't mean that the Democratic Party is Jesus Christ. Dick Cheney's Haliburton (KBR) has surely profited off the Iraq War; and so has "Mr Dianne Feinstein" Richard Blum's Perini Corp.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:25 PM on 07/07/2008
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I never talked about individuals. I'm talking about a whole political party.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:52 PM on 07/07/2008
- olivia I'm a Fan of olivia 96 fans permalink

The Democratic party is, however, the only alternative - and they are less evil than the GOP.

There are a few DINOs like Feinstein and many, many Dems who are completely spineless. We need to clean house in our party. Ours is still the better party for America.

(I say "our" but I am not registered with any party. I tried to register as a Dem just so I could caucus for O but turnout was so huge I never got into any caucus site. So I'm still independent.)

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:26 PM on 07/07/2008
- lisakaz2 I'm a Fan of lisakaz2 109 fans permalink
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Didn't the GOP lose 3 supposedly "safe" districts in the last year or so? What makes 'em think yet another redraw will help?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:47 PM on 07/07/2008
- TrevorAlan I'm a Fan of TrevorAlan 4 fans permalink

True, but why let them have any advantage. Unfortunately, by 2010 some of Bush's final disasters might have fully flowered during the new Obama administration giving Repubs unfair talking points. Redistricting could help them consolodate a few bad apples the rest of the state would otherwise discard.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:10 PM on 07/07/2008
- PATina I'm a Fan of PATina 251 fans permalink
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Because they will make it work. Put it like this... the mess we are in now... the plans were being formed during the Johnson administration. The plans for the Iraq wars (both the first and this one) go back to the seventies. Reagan began the supply side/ trickle down economics that are ruining us. The Republicans are master strategists.... and they play dirty. While I wouldn't want the Dems or another party to fight dirty... they sure could learn strategy and tactics from the Republicans.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:10 PM on 07/07/2008
- headstrong I'm a Fan of headstrong 3 fans permalink

This is the same old shell game shuffle they used to get in power last time. Surely the citizens won't let them pull this crap again?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:40 PM on 07/07/2008
- lisakaz2 I'm a Fan of lisakaz2 109 fans permalink
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It's probably the courts more than the citizens, but the citizens have to vote these criminals in, don't they?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:51 PM on 07/07/2008
- TrevorAlan I'm a Fan of TrevorAlan 4 fans permalink

This is very wonky stuff. If people don't totally understand how tax cuts cause budget deficits, do you really thnk they all have a clear idea of redistricting. I'm not sure I do and read this stuff every day.

Its something those of us with more interest in the mechanics have to get very loud about. And I hate to say it, but it might mean the need to vote for unexiting Dems to hold power.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:02 PM on 07/07/2008
- PATina I'm a Fan of PATina 251 fans permalink
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The funny thing... the Republicans were the ones calling redistricting unfair when it was used to create large numbers of Democratic districts in the late sevenites/early eighties. But they will try and use it to their advantage this time around . The best thing for the Democrats to do is use this information and try to use it (redistricting) for their own advantage.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:12 PM on 07/07/2008
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