gerrymandering in A Sentence

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    Gerrymandering appears LESS than before.

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    Partisan Gerrymandering has also been a hot topic in Pennsylvania.

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    But here's the rub: Gerrymandering in itself is not unconstitutional.

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    Information Gerrymandering occurs when there is asymmetry in how bubbles collide.

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    Massachusetts governor, Elbridge Gerry, is accused of"Gerrymandering" for the first time.

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    Gerrymandering allows officials to more effectively represent the interests of their constituency.

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    No, Gerrymandering allows officials to more effectively represent the interests of their constituency.

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    Gerrymandering in America: the House of Representatives, the Supreme Court, and the future of popular sovereignty.

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    In other words, technological advances would probably exacerbate the Gerrymandering problem, but they could also provide a solution.

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    Critics of Gerrymandering say these practices allow incumbent representatives to choose their voters instead of voters choosing them.

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    Critics of Gerrymandering say these quizzes allow incumbent representatives to choose their voters party of voters choosing them.

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    A local Federalist paper published a political cartoon with a map of Gerry's“reworked” districts depicted as a salamander- hence the term“Gerrymandering.”.

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    Moreover, this approach has already been shown to work smoothly in Gerrymandering cases as well, such as in one from Pennsylvania.

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    Right now, those institutions can seem impervious to public opinion and decision, whether it's because of Gerrymandering, campaign contributions or party discipline.

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    Clearly, Gerrymandering is offensive, but it is almost as old as the republic- the term was first used in the Boston Gazette in 1812.

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    The problem is not Gerrymandering but a system that has created“reinforcing advantages” driven by money, incumbency, and low voter turnout(which tends to accentuate partisanship).

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    What we show in our study, mathematically and empirically, is that a party's influence on a social network can be broken up, in a way analogous to electoral Gerrymandering of congressional districts.

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    Individuals have shared with me that they have not voted because they do not trust a nation that they feel has lied and perpetuated systemic abuse against minorities, aggravated further by widespread Gerrymandering and for presidential elections, by an Electoral College system that doesn't weigh each vote the same.

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