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Louisiana packed African Americans into a single, racially gerrymandered congressional district that stretches from below New Orleans to above Baton Rouge, voters claim in court.
Maytee Buckley et al., residents of District 2, sued the state in Federal Court.
Louisiana had to redraw its congressional districts in 2011, after its slow population growth from 2000 to 2010 reduced its U.S. House delegation from seven members to six.
Source
The plaintiffs claim Congressional District 2, which includes parts of New Orleans and western and northern neighborhoods of Baton Rouge, violates redistricting guidelines and does not respect political and geographical boundaries.
The district connects western New Orleans to eastern and northern Baton Rouge, leaving out parts of both cities. It includes parts of 10 parishes and portions of four congressional districts that were drawn in 2001, according to the complaint.
crazyewok
When I learnt about this the other month I was shocked. How can you have a working republic with methods like this? It renders voteing almost useless.
Rockpuck
crazyewok
When I learnt about this the other month I was shocked. How can you have a working republic with methods like this? It renders voteing almost useless.
No it doesn't. If it were not for gerrymandering city centers would dominate state politics. Gerrymandering, for all it's flaws, does protect the interest of small town, rural, and in many cases suburban middle income families. In the case of New Orleans they put the majority of the black population in one district because they always vote for the same party, thus they gave them a guaranteed district to represent their interest, while not over influencing the entire state from a concentrated population of people who only vote for one party.