+1 Did you campaign hard against the unfair gerrymandering in the Red States, PP? |
You missed the point. An abuse of power would be pushing this through without a vote at all, which as PP pointed out was what was done in Texas, Missouri, Ohio, and North Carolina. And Utah voters passed a statewide resolution against gerrymandering, then the legislature threw it out, and the Supreme Court had to restore the normal nonpartisan map favored by the voters. |
The odds of what? I don't even understand what you are implying. In any case, this breakdown is predictable and exactly the dynamic anyone who who has looked at elections before would expect. |
Because you expected FFX County to come out in full force for Trump?? |
The PP also has never watched election results come in before apparently. |
Sure. That makes a ton of sense. You're switching to the side that gerrymandered five states in 2025 because the President asked them to because you're mad that Virginia is playing by their rules? |
Wait... you were a Democrat until a few years ago? So you are an Always Trumper? |
Louise remembers |
sick in the head |
Y’all just don’t like it when the shoe is on the other foot. |
| There will definitely be an investigation if they rig the maps like that |
there is no other foot, this is not the way its straight up corruption, i can understand moving a little bit but the vote should mimic the no/yes, this is crazy no other state has done this and its going to be a major problem for the entire country. |
She's on fire. |
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i think you all need to read what happened in texas it was 65% republican similar to the voting block the thing that happened in virginia is nothing reflective of the breakdown of the population, virgnia in not 90% democrat; No U.S. state has 90% of its voters registered as Democratic or gives 90% of its vote to Democratic candidates. The highest concentration of Democratic voters is in Washington, D.C. (~75.6%) and states like Maryland (~51.7% registered), while the most Democratic-leaning states in presidential elections, including Vermont and Maryland, typically see margins of 20-30+ percentage points, not over 90%. |