© 2023 90.5 WESA
Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
Available On Air Stations
Contact 90.5 WESA with a story idea or news tip: news@wesa.fm

Measures Of Gerrymandering — Real Or Bogus?

gerrymandering.JPG
screengrab via youtube
/
A law professor and election lawyer debate the standards used to determine gerrymanding in the country's congressional maps.

As courts in Pennsylvania and around the country consider cases charging partisan political gerrymandering, the National Constitution Center in Philadelphia recently assembled prominent experts and participants in the battles to talk about the political and constitutional issues.

Courts have long acknowledged gerrymandering exists, but they have lacked a reliable standard for measuring just how much of a political edge a particular legislative map gives to one party.

In the case that’s captured the most national attention, a federal court struck down boundaries drawn by the Wisconsin state legislature as biased in favor of Republicans, and the U.S. Supreme Court has heard arguments on the appeal.

In the Wisconsin case, a new mathematical formula for measuring gerrymandering made a difference.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?time_continue=1434&v=VY1o_5lvf7w

It considers election results and measures how “efficient” each party is with its votes while running in the boundaries at issue. If Democrats are packed into a few districts they won by big margins — while Republicans are strategically spread to capture many districts by narrow spreads — the resulting “efficiency gap” measures the bias of the political boundaries. At least, that’s the idea.

Among the panelists at the Dec. 11 Constitution Center event were Nicholas Stephanopoulos, a University of Chicago law professor who helped develop the efficiency gap measurement, and Erin Murphy, an election lawyer who defended the Wisconsin map before the Supreme Court.

The audio here captures a portion of their debate. You can see a video of their discussion, and a separate panel of three experts on the political dimensions of the issue, moderated by National Constitution Center President Jeffrey Rosen on YouTube.

Find this report and others at the site of our partner, WHYY. 

To make informed decisions, the public must receive unbiased truth.

As Southwestern Pennsylvania’s only independent public radio news and information station, we give voice to provocative ideas that foster a vibrant, informed, diverse and caring community.

WESA is primarily funded by listener contributions. Your financial support comes with no strings attached. It is free from commercial or political influence…that’s what makes WESA a free vital community resource. Your support funds important local journalism by WESA and NPR national reporters.

You give what you can, and you get news you can trust.
Please give now to continue providing fact-based journalism — a monthly gift of just $5 or $10 makes a big difference.