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Party Lines - Competition, Partisanship, and Congressional Redistricting (Paperback)
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Party Lines - Competition, Partisanship, and Congressional Redistricting (Paperback)
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"The legitimacy of the American electoral system depends on
sustaining reasonable levels of fairness, accountability,
responsiveness, and common sense. Recent Congressional elections
fly in the face of those requirements, however, with a startling
lack of competition, growing ideological polarization, and a fierce
struggle between the parties to manipulate the electoral rules of
the game. Party Lines addresses these problems head on in an
authoritative and timely analysis of redistricting in the United
States. The practice of state legislatures redrawing district lines
after the decennial census has long been a controversial aspect of
our governing system. Recent developments have added new urgency to
earlier debates. The sorry spectacle of mid-decade partisan
gerrymandering in Texas renewed public attention to the potential
problems of redistricting, reinforcing the view that it is unfairly
dominated by self-serving elected officials and parties. The
perfunctory character of Congressional elections is another growing
problem-in 2002, only four House incumbents were defeated in the
general election, the lowest in American history. Despite a hotly
contested presidential contest in 2004, that number increased by
only three. In Pa rty Lines, eminent political analysts explain the
legal and political history of redistricting since the one
person-one vote revolution in the 1960s and place it in the larger
context of American politics. The authors document the impact of
redistricting on competition, polarization, and partisan fairness,
and they assess the role technology played in the redistricting
process. The final chapter analyzes options for reform, including
most importantly the use of independent redistricting commissions
as an alternative to the normal state legislative process.
Redistricting reform is no panacea but it is a start toward
ensuring that American voters still have the largest say in who
will represent them. Contributors include Micah Altman (Harvard
Universtity), Bruce Cain and Karin MacDonald (University of
California, Berkeley),Cherie Maestas (Texas Tech), Sandy Maisel
(Colby College), Thomas Mann (Brookings), Michael McDonald (George
Mason University), Nathaniel Persily (University of Pennsylvania ),
and Walter Stone (University of California, Davis). "
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