Tuesday, January 22, 2013

Joe Scarborough: Republicans Only Kept House Majority Because Of Gerrymandering

While John Boehner and other House Republicans are disingenuously pretending that they have some type of mandate to derail virtually everything Barack Obama and the Democrats might propose to do, former GOP congressman and television personality Joe Scarborough is admitting the truth:the only reason that the Republicans retained control of the House of Representatives was by scurrilous gerrymandering.  That's today's GOP.  When you can longer win by having programs and policies supported by as majority of voters, you rig the system.  Think Progress looks at Scarborough's admission of the truth.  Here are highlights:

MSNBC host and former Republican Congressman Joe Scarborough admitted on Sunday that Republicans only kept their majority in the House of Representatives as a result of gerrymandering, noting that the GOP received less votes than Democrats in the 2012 election. Scarborough argued that Republicans must prevent radical ultra-conservative voices from dominating the party’s message and pointed out that the GOP is already losing electoral ground among voters who view it as too extreme and out of touch with middle class Americans:
SCARBOROUGH: William F. Buckley in the 1960s at some point had to start defining the boundaries of conservatism. He went after the John Birch Society, Ayn Rand, George Wallace. That has to happen again with this party because it’s getting smaller and smaller. In this debate, we actually have conservative thinkers, talking about Ronald Reagan being a RINO — a Republican in name only, because he supported an assault weapons ban. They keep pushing themselves closer and closer to the cliff. But I just have to say one other really important point, because I made a mistake over the past month talking about how Republicans have also won a majority in the House. As this article I was referencing mentioned, we actually got a minority of votes nationwide in House races. It was just gerrymandering from 2010 that gave us the majority.
Indeed, a recent Republican State Leadership Committee report boasted that the only reason the GOP controls the House of Representatives is because state legislatures gerrymandered congressional districts in blue states. “Controlling the redistricting process in these states would have the greatest impact on determining how both state legislative and congressional district boundaries would be drawn,” the report reads. 



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