Define gerrymandering and describe its origins. Use examples to explain how it works

Answer:


An ideal response will:
1. Define gerrymandering as the redrawing of district lines to benefit a party, group, or incumbent.
2. Gerrymandering dates back to the early 1800s, when Massachusetts governor Elbridge Gerry signed off on a salamander-shaped district to help his party win an extra seat.
3. Cracking and packing are two ways to manipulate redistricting. Cracking involves the breakup of a strong minority party district into pieces that then go into other districts. Packing merges pieces of the majority party from its weak districts into a single strong district.

Political Science

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Which topic is on the agenda of the Doha Round of WTO trade negotiations?

A) forestry B) industrial products C) electronics D) maritime treaties.

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This question aligns with Chapter 2 of 2018 Congressional Elections.Should there be a federal law requiring special elections when seats in the U.S. House, U.S. Senate, state House, or state Senate become available before the seats are up for reelection? Should governors be allowed to avoid scheduling a special election if it would be likely to disadvantage their own party?

What will be an ideal response?

Political Science

A group in Boston calling themselves the Sons of Liberty protested taxation by

A) hanging the tax collector in effigy. B) looting the home of the lieutenant governor. C) looting the home of the tax collector. D) enforcing the Stamp Act Congress resolutions. E) all of the above

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The governor's staff helps fill in the gaps of developing programs and decide on specific proposal measures that the governor does not have time to consider

Indicate whether the statement is true or false.

Political Science