The "Both Sides" Argument on Gerrymandering Doesn't Hold Up. The Vote Count Proves It.
If Republican policies are genuinely popular with the American electorate, why does the party's institutional survival depend on controlling who draws the maps?
Here's the issue. And I want to be precise about this, because this is one of those moments where the political media — and I'll include myself in this critique — has done the public a disservice by reflexively applying a both-sides frame to something the actual legislative record does not support.
Let me put some numbers and votes around this.
In 2021, the House passed H.R. 1 — the For the People Act. It included a provision that would have established independent redistricting commissions nationally, taking partisan map-drawing out of the hands of state legislatures. It passed the House. Every Democrat voted yes. Every Republican voted no. Not most. Not almost all. Every single one.
Now. The next time someone says "both parties gerrymander" — and that argument is not wrong historically — you have to ask the next question: which party, when given the majority and the opportunity to end the practice, actually tried to end it? And which party voted unanimously to preserve it?
That is not a both-sides story. That is a one-sides story with a documented vote count.
The Stress Test
The political challenge for Republicans here is significant. Because the "both sides do it" argument is a messaging strategy, not a factual defense. It's designed to create enough confusion in the public mind that voters don't assign accountability clearly. In a low-information environment, it works. But stress-test it for thirty seconds and it collapses.
If Republican policy positions are genuinely popular with the American electorate, why is the party's institutional survival dependent on controlling who draws the maps?
That's not a rhetorical question. It's an electoral one. Popular policies don't require structural protection. You don't gerrymander your way to a majority if your majority is organic.
What the data actually shows — and this is the part that doesn't get enough analytical attention — is that in states where Republicans controlled the post-2020 redistricting process, they drew maps that produced Republican majorities even in cycles where Republican candidates received fewer total votes statewide than Democratic candidates. That is not competitive democracy. That is engineered outcome.
What This Means for Black Voter Registration and Turnout
This is where the Lehigh Valley, Northampton County, and every competitive district in Pennsylvania becomes the argument in real time.
Gerrymandering is most effective when turnout is predictable and manageable. What it cannot easily contain is a registration surge that changes the underlying math of a district before the map can be redrawn. The next redistricting cycle begins after the 2030 census. Between now and then, the most effective counter to a gerrymandered map is a registration and turnout operation large enough that even a distorted district can't absorb it.
That's not idealism. That's electoral arithmetic.
The political reality for organizers is that you don't fight the map by complaining about the map. You fight the map by making the map irrelevant. And the only tool that does that is voters. Specifically, voters who weren't in the model when the map was drawn.
If Black voter registration in targeted competitive districts reaches the levels that voter file data suggests are achievable, the gerrymandered map becomes a miscalculation. The architects built their maps on turnout assumptions. Change the assumptions, and the math fails.
The architects of these maps built them on turnout assumptions. Change the turnout assumptions, and the math they built on starts to fail. That's where the organizing opportunity lives. Not in the courtroom — in the canvassing operation. Not in the brief — in the registration drive.
The both-sides framing on gerrymandering is not a neutral observation. It is a deliberate political strategy to diffuse accountability — and the legislative record makes that plain. One party voted unanimously to end it. One party voted unanimously to preserve it. Voters deserve to know which is which.
And that's really the political story moving forward — because if organizing at the precinct level matches what the data says is achievable, the map becomes the miscalculation. Campaigns are watching it very closely.
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