The loud "splat" heard from out west Tuesday wasn't Wile E. Coyote
doing a head-on with a Mack truck. It was strongman California Gov.
Arnold Schwarzenegger getting flattened by a horde of angry voters, who
shouted a resounding "no" to eight ballot measures, including four
enthusiastically backed by the governor.
Most of the initiatives were strictly California matters, and their rejection had as much to do with Schwarzenegger's war with state labor unions as anything. There was one ballot measure, Proposition 77, that deserved a closer look because it speaks to a national issue that threatens democracy as we know it.
It is congressional redistricting and partisan gerrymandering, a problem with which New Jersey voters are all too well aware.
It's made mincemeat of competitive congressional and legislative districts, carving them along purely political lines. It's the reason that 90 percent of incumbent U.S. House members always win re-election, and it's why there were only a handful of competitive General Assembly seats contested in New Jersey Tuesday.
A recent essay by nonprofit advocacy group FairVote.org described unfair redistricting as "a blood sport that both parties have exploited." To see just how ugly it can get, cast an eye south toward Texas and watch the cutthroat goings-on surrounding the indictment of House Majority Leader Tom DeLay. Sadly, it's not just a Texas problem, and DeLay's not the only bad guy.
"By gerrymandering the districts," writes FairVote, "legislators and their political cronies have used redistricting to choose their voters, before voters have had the opportunity to choose them."
Incumbents expect to have some advantage when it comes to campaigning. Still, we have gone far afield from what the framers of the Constitution intended in representative government. More and more, voters are being served by the self-served.
California's Proposition 77 might not have taken politics out of the equation entirely, but handing redistricting duties over to a panel of retired judges would have been at least an attempt at reform. A similar measure, Issue 4, which called for a more independent redistricting panel in Ohio, also failed by a huge margin on Tuesday.
It's an issue that deserves more attention, nationally and statewide. Legislators will be more likely to govern responsibly if they know constituents are watching, and know they hold the power to toss them out.
Politicians like to talk about accountability; redistricting reform would be a good place to start.
Most of the initiatives were strictly California matters, and their rejection had as much to do with Schwarzenegger's war with state labor unions as anything. There was one ballot measure, Proposition 77, that deserved a closer look because it speaks to a national issue that threatens democracy as we know it.
It is congressional redistricting and partisan gerrymandering, a problem with which New Jersey voters are all too well aware.
It's made mincemeat of competitive congressional and legislative districts, carving them along purely political lines. It's the reason that 90 percent of incumbent U.S. House members always win re-election, and it's why there were only a handful of competitive General Assembly seats contested in New Jersey Tuesday.
A recent essay by nonprofit advocacy group FairVote.org described unfair redistricting as "a blood sport that both parties have exploited." To see just how ugly it can get, cast an eye south toward Texas and watch the cutthroat goings-on surrounding the indictment of House Majority Leader Tom DeLay. Sadly, it's not just a Texas problem, and DeLay's not the only bad guy.
"By gerrymandering the districts," writes FairVote, "legislators and their political cronies have used redistricting to choose their voters, before voters have had the opportunity to choose them."
Incumbents expect to have some advantage when it comes to campaigning. Still, we have gone far afield from what the framers of the Constitution intended in representative government. More and more, voters are being served by the self-served.
California's Proposition 77 might not have taken politics out of the equation entirely, but handing redistricting duties over to a panel of retired judges would have been at least an attempt at reform. A similar measure, Issue 4, which called for a more independent redistricting panel in Ohio, also failed by a huge margin on Tuesday.
It's an issue that deserves more attention, nationally and statewide. Legislators will be more likely to govern responsibly if they know constituents are watching, and know they hold the power to toss them out.
Politicians like to talk about accountability; redistricting reform would be a good place to start.
Election Day '09 was a roller-coaster for election reformers. Instant runoff voting had a great night in Minnesota, where St. Paul voters chose to implement IRV for its city elections, and Minneapolis voters used IRV for the first time—with local media touting it as a big success. As the Star-Tribune noted in endorsing IRV for St. Paul, Tuesday’s elections give the Twin Cities a chance to show the whole state of Minnesota the benefits of adopting IRV. There were disappointments in Lowell and Pierce County too, but high-profile multi-candidate races in New Jersey and New York keep policymakers focused on ways to reform elections; the Baltimore Sun and Miami Herald were among many newspapers publishing commentary from FairVote board member and former presidential candidate John Anderson on how IRV can mitigate the problems of plurality elections.