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5 October, 04:06

Would you expect the borders of a gerrymandered district to appear on a map as a rectangle or a circle or some other recognizable shape?

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  1. 5 October, 04:08
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    No, I would not expect the borders of a gerrymandered district to appear on a map as a rectangle of circle or some other recognizable shape because first of all, geographic shapes cannot be compared to simple geometric shapes and a "gerrymandered" district would have an odd and bizarre shape, just like what happened when Gov. Elbridge Gerry redrew the Senate districts map - it looked like a salamander.
  2. 5 October, 04:13
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    No, I would not expect the borders of a gerrymandered district to apper on a map as a rectangle or a circle or some other recognizable shape.

    Explanation:

    Since gerrymandering is a political practice that manipulates and re-draws district boundaries for the political advantage of a given group or party, the resulting borders will have a weird shape, different from a rectangle or a circle.

    The origin of the term goes back to Elbridge Gerry, who as a governor of Massachusetts in 1812 created a partisan district in Boston with a shape that resembled a salamander. Thus, mockingly, his colleagues named it a gerrymander.
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