18 мин.

What Is Gerrymandering‪?‬ Everything Explained

    • Юмор

Electoral districts ebb and flow. The ever-changing population in different areas across the country creates the challenge of drawing the districts as close to accurately representative as possible. When drawing, the lines can get a little blurry, communities can become divided, and the way the edges of the districts are formed can determine the outcome of an election. At least, this is what legal teams across the country are trying to prove. The process of making the districts is called Gerrymandering. And today, we have an expert on the pod, to help us breakdown the fundamentals of the practice.
https://wamcpodcasts.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/12/gerrymandering_ee.mp3
Ruth Greenwood, a senior counsel at the Campaign Legal Center, litigates a variety of redistricting cases. Along with co-counsel, she represents the plaintiffs in two high-profile partisan gerrymandering cases (Gill v. Whitford and LWVNC v. Rucho). On a federal level, not every state has to deal with this issue, some smaller states, like Vermont for example, only have one U.S. Rep. seat for the entire state. Which makes the issues more centered around medium to larger sized states, like Wisconsin, North Carolina, Texas, California, and New York. So Ruth, to start off the conversation on an broad note, what is gerrymandering?
Credits:
Everything Explained is produced by WAMC Northeast Public Radio with assistance from Kristin Gilbert and Ashleigh Kinsey. Also we’d like to give a special thanks to Ruth Greenwood. I’m your host Patrick Garrett. As always we want to remind you to subscribe and leave a review because like everyone else in the “pod-realm” will tell you, it helps us to make more podcasts like this one.The post What Is Gerrymandering? appeared first on WAMC Podcasts.

Electoral districts ebb and flow. The ever-changing population in different areas across the country creates the challenge of drawing the districts as close to accurately representative as possible. When drawing, the lines can get a little blurry, communities can become divided, and the way the edges of the districts are formed can determine the outcome of an election. At least, this is what legal teams across the country are trying to prove. The process of making the districts is called Gerrymandering. And today, we have an expert on the pod, to help us breakdown the fundamentals of the practice.
https://wamcpodcasts.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/12/gerrymandering_ee.mp3
Ruth Greenwood, a senior counsel at the Campaign Legal Center, litigates a variety of redistricting cases. Along with co-counsel, she represents the plaintiffs in two high-profile partisan gerrymandering cases (Gill v. Whitford and LWVNC v. Rucho). On a federal level, not every state has to deal with this issue, some smaller states, like Vermont for example, only have one U.S. Rep. seat for the entire state. Which makes the issues more centered around medium to larger sized states, like Wisconsin, North Carolina, Texas, California, and New York. So Ruth, to start off the conversation on an broad note, what is gerrymandering?
Credits:
Everything Explained is produced by WAMC Northeast Public Radio with assistance from Kristin Gilbert and Ashleigh Kinsey. Also we’d like to give a special thanks to Ruth Greenwood. I’m your host Patrick Garrett. As always we want to remind you to subscribe and leave a review because like everyone else in the “pod-realm” will tell you, it helps us to make more podcasts like this one.The post What Is Gerrymandering? appeared first on WAMC Podcasts.

18 мин.

Топ подкастов в категории «Юмор»

Два по цене одного
libo/libo
kuji podcast
kuji podcast
The Joe Rogan Experience
Joe Rogan
ГАДЗИЛЫ
Расул Чабдаров, Артем Винокур, Павел Дедищев, Гурам Амарян
Женский Форум
Женский Форум
НАДКАСТ
LABELSMART

Еще от: WAMC Northeast Public Radio

A New York Minute In History
WAMC
Postcards From The Road
Liz Hill
Any Questions?
Ian Pickus
The Creative Process
WAMC Northeast Public Radio
WAMC's In Conversation With...
Alan Chartock
The Media Project
Rex Smith & Ira Fusfeld