Republicans caught unfairly altering electoral districts thanks to computer algorithm

Bourbon

In Yo Face!
Mathematicians are no longer devices for turning coffee into theorems, as the Hungarian mathematics researcher (and caffeine addict) Alfréd Rényi is said to have claimed. They seem pretty useful for preserving democracy, too. In striking down the way that officials in North Carolina unfairly partitioned the state into electoral districts, a US federal court last week conspicuously cited the work of mathematicians including Jonathan Mattingly, an expert in mathematical modelling.

In a 200-page decision released on 9 January, the three-judge court in Richmond, Virginia, said that the districting had unfairly favoured the Republican Party. Maths played a key part in helping the court to reach that decision, by demonstrating the unlawful use of partisan gerrymandering — fiddling with district boundaries to include or exclude certain voters and steer the results of an election. Those apportioning districts might draw borders that pack large numbers of voters for an opposition party into a small number of districts, for example, limiting the number of seats that the opposition can win. The process has been likened to allowing lawmakers to choose their voters, rather than the other way around.

Mattingly, a researcher at Duke University in Durham, North Carolina, used his expertise to argue that the state districts were drawn up to give Republicans an unfair advantage. To do so, he used an algorithm that produced around 24,000 maps of marginally different district configurations that were randomly drawn on the basis of geographic criteria. The Republican-drawn boundaries, which had delivered 9 Republicans to the state’s 13 seats in the House of Representatives in Washington DC in 2012, were more gerrymandered than practically every single one of Mattingly’s algorithm-derived maps. Using the same voting data, his maps nearly all gave a larger number of wins to the Democratic Party and, in many cases, gave it the majority.

Mattingly had taken an interest in the process after the 2012 elections and was called to testify after two advocacy organizations sued the state in federal court following the 2016 elections. In October, they asked Mattingly to take the stand and explain his work and its implications. He was ready: by then, he and his collaborators had done more-recent studies of the state’s current redistricting, engineered in 2016 by the Republican majority in the North Carolina General Assembly.

Some of the modelling is preliminary, but it has had a historic impact: last week’s ruling was the first time that a US federal court has struck down electoral districting for favouring one political party over another.

https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-018-00661-x
 
Yeah the Repubs figured out how to draw districts that allow them to gather more political power. Gerrymandering is a century old, but computers make it far more efficient. Dems can still vote, assuming they are not minorities, but their vote will not have as much power. Between Gerrymandering and voter suppression, the Repubs are cheating their way through history. It is census time again. If the Dems win back states, will they reverse the gerrymandering in their favor, or fix it to make it fair. We may see.
 
Nobody is "unfairly" drawing districts unless the Supreme Court strikes down partisan gerrymandering which has been a practice since the beginning of the republic by both Democrats and Republicans.
 
Unfairly = democrats think only they should win elections

I wonder if bourbon has the intellectual honesty to admit the ways the democrat party has tried to tilt elections their way?

Doubt it
 
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