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Ronda Ross's avatar

Gerrymandering is the current hot button, but likely to burn out quickly. Like the phrase "due process" constantly regurgitated regarding deportation, with little understanding of actual immigration law, Gerrymandering is the new word of the summer. Many screaming have no idea, gerrymandering has existed for centuries. Nor do they realize, SCOTUS has already ruled the subject must be left to the States. Moreover, many Blue States are already as nearly heavily gerrymandered, as possible.

The real drama will arrive after the 2030 Census when 10-12 House seats leave Blue States for Red ones. While certainly a long shot, if SCOTUS should decide the number of people dwelling illegally in the US has reached such critical mass, they dilute the votes of US citizens, Blue States will really come unglued. If those dwelling illegally no longer count for apportionment purposes, Blue States would likely lose up to another 6 or more House seats, on top of the dozen lost due to declining Blue State populations. At that point, SCOTUS packing by Dems, becomes far more likely.

Ironically, such a ruling would likely end immigration as an issue. Those dwelling in the US illegally cost State's billions of dollars annually in healthcare and other local and State subsidies. If migrants are no longer counted for apportionment, many Blue States will quietly decide they have more important priorities than fighting deportations.

Packing the Court is comical to those old enough to recall the Warren Court. Under Warren, for nearly a decade and a half, SCOTUS spit out one ultra liberal ruling after another. The thought of packing SCOTUS was never even considered. Reps set about winning elections.

Packing SCOTUS is the real nuclear option. At that point, all bets are off. Certainly no violent Civil War, but a mess, to say the least.

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Norm Fox's avatar

While partisans are becoming more partisan the country is becoming more pox on both your houses independent/unaffiliated.

Starting the gerrymandering clock at 2010 is exceedingly disingenuous. The Democrats were masters at gerrymandering for much of the 20th century due to their legislative dominance. Once Republicans started gaining legislative seats/power they happily joined in. Non-partisans don’t particularly like gerrymandering which is why referendums to eliminate it do well, but view partisan complaints about the other party doing it as rank hypocrisy.

The idea that Fed-Soc SCOTUS justices are inserting their beliefs into their rulings is pure projection. If that were remotely true the Dobbs decision would have found an imaginary right to life in the Constitution rather than eliminating the imaginary right to abortion and returning the question to the voters. Also to that point the problem isn’t that SCOTUS is to deferential to Trump, it’s that Congress has ceded too much of its power to the Executive. This worked fine for Democrats when GOP presidents were small government guys who didn’t want to use it, while Democratic presidents took full advantage. It’s only become an issue for the left now that the GOP has been taken over by blue dog/Reagan Democrats who are more than happy to use it.

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