JTsyo
Lifer
- Nov 18, 2007
- 12,031
- 1,131
- 126
I do not think you understand how house apportionment works, so you might not want to wonder too much about what liberals think@#@# The entire point is to make representation equal for X number of citizens@#@# Whether they reside in a heavily populated state or not doesn't matter@#@#
The only time it matters at all is when states have such a small population that due to rounding you end up with a modest disparity@#@# That is not at all the cause of this problem, however@#@#
Go look at a map of PA's congressional races and tell me if you think that accurately represents a state that Obama won by 6 points@#@# Remember that every district is approximately equal in population@#@# Then @#@#@#e back and try to argue big state small state@#@#
EDIT: Here is the map of Pennsylvania, a state Obama won by actually a bit less than 6 points@#@# If the HOR apportionment were working as intended you would see about a 50/50 district split, maybe 1 or 2 extra for the Democrats@#@# Instead you see this:
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But hey guys, big states small states, amirite?
So how does that work? They divide the democratic districts into larger republican ones to favor them?