Starting with our serial soap opera:
Three posts on DailyKos today about our two Democratic members of the U.S. house who can’t figure out a good reason to publicly support three fine Democrats who are challenging the three Republicans who misrepresent Miami-Dade County along with chunks of Broward, Collier and all of Monroe.
Starting with the last, by DavidNYC. It hit the Kos front page about 10 p.m. Short and pithy, bound to make Debbie Wasserman Schultz mad: it declares she has to "buck up" and heartily endorse our three candidates.
Way back in the early morning DavidNYC was on the front page of Kos with a view of how the top of the Democratic Party in Washington would view the situation.
And down in the diaries we had a Florida perspective on it, in which Tally wrote in a Kos Diary how it all was related to gerrymandering. Tally advised all of us to work on the petition to amend the state constitution to ban gerrymandering.
Tally's diary drew a commenter who remarked a little unbelievingly that Joe Garcia says in his campaign speeches that Mario Diaz-Balart designed Congressional District 25 for himself while in the state House. I had to chime in with the comment:
Yes, indeed, Joe Garcia often says that FL-25 was drawn up by the Republican incumbent, Mario Diaz-Balart (whom I happened to see on C-span in the House today fumbling for fulminating words during the budget debate). It's true. I will try to get Joe to start carrying those petitions to end gerrymandering.
Fine diary. It takes the story steps further along into the reason we're in this pickle where Republicans with fewer registered voters than Democrats in Florida have 16 house seats and the Democrats have 9. Gerrymandering. Americans won't stand for this, will they?
Well, then I thought I ought to look up the figures to be sure that there are more registered Democrats than Republicans. Sure enough, over at the Florida Secretary of State, Division of Elections, there are PDF files with very small print that reveal a total of 10,203,122 registered voters in Florida as of the Jan. 29 presidential primary. Of them:
4,137,067 were Democrats
3,825,727 were Republicans
1,911,510 were Non-Party Affiliated
Lots more were in minor parties.
Perhaps not all Democrats vote for D candidates for Congress. And perhaps not all Republicans will vote for their local R. But let’s just say it out loud: there’s no way that such a party breakdown can fairly lead to a 16-9 advantage by the smaller party. So I want to applaud and declare heroic those who are working that petition to make gerrymandering plainly unconstitutional in Florida. Let’s do it!
3 comments:
Nice article. Here's a link to the Tally diary that works: Tally diary
It's not just that Mario Diaz-Balart drew his own district: he CHAIRED the committee, meaning he had more control over the process than anybody.
Still more on Kos homepage this morning, with universal outrage. This isn't going away.
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