The October 2013 government shutdown
has generated a lot of talk about the seemingly hopeless political divisions
within Congress. Political pundits, politicians, and citizens alike have all
been seeking to understand and explain just why Washington is unable to reach
any semblance of consensus on so many of the most difficult issues before us,
ranging from entitlement spending to healthcare policy to immigration reform.
We hear a number of explanations offered, ranging from the highly ideological
nature of the Tea Party movement within the Republican Party to the intense disagreement
and division
surrounding the Affordable Care Act, which some argue has carried over to other
policy matters. While the recent budget agreement, passed by Congress and signed
by President Obama at the end of December, along with a recent vote to raise
the debt ceiling without
another government shutdown, provided a welcome respite from the utter dysfunction
of the past several years, the specter of crippling political division still
looms large over Capitol Hill.
One frequently cited
explanation for both Republican control of the House of Representatives, as
well as the discord in that body, is gerrymandering; that is, the drawing of
Congressional districts to be exceptionally favorable to members of a
particular party. In an early 2013 interview
with The New Republic, President
Obama argued that many House Republicans hailed from “sharply gerrymandered
district that are very safely Republican”, and so many House members felt little
obligation to pay heed to “broad-based public opinion.” Meanwhile, prominent
commentators like constitutional scholar Sanford
Levinson to Slate political analyst David
Weigel have argued that gerrymandering is the primary reason for the
fractious nature of national politics, and a major factor in how Republicans
managed to retain control of Congress in the 2012 elections, in spite of Democratic
House candidates winning more
total votes than Republican candidates did . At the state and local level,
concerns that gerrymandering unfairly favors Republicans has driven activists
in Florida
and elsewhere to propose state Constitutional amendments to mandate a nonpartisan redistricting processes.
While it is certainly true that gerrymandering affects the
electoral makeup of the House, it’s role is significantly overstated in much of
today’s political discourse. Rather, the composition of the House, and it’s
political leanings, are largely a product of the existing geographic
distribution of voters within the nation, as well as the electoral advantages
enjoyed by incumbent members of Congress. Additionally, the degree of ideological
difference between moderate, versus liberal or conservative House members of
the same party, is not as sharp as commonly thought, while differences between
Democrats and Republicans as a whole, are highly pronounced. Both of these
dynamics contribute to the political clashes within Congress.
In an analysis of the 2012 presidential election,
statistician Nate Silver found
that while President Obama defeated Governor Mitt Romney by 4 points in the
popular vote, there were significantly more Congressional districts that were
carried by large margins by President Obama, than by Mitt Romney. Specifically,
while there were 44 Congressional districts which President Obama carried by 50
points or more (meaning that Obama carried at least staggering 75% of the vote
or more in these districts) , there were just 8 such districts which were so
highly skewed in favor of Governor Romney. Since the portion of votes cast for
a particular presidential candidate within a district is a strong predictor
of which party’s House candidate will win that seat, a high concentration of
Democratic votes suggests a district where Democrats will win Congressional
seats by large margins. Chris Cilizza of
the Washington Post followed
up on these findings, noting that in 2012, while 51% of House Democrats won
their districts with 67% or more of total votes cast, just 29% of GOP members
of the House won their districts by the same margin.
Districts which vote so heavily in favor of one party are
essentially “wasted votes,” from a standpoint of winning seats in Congress. After
all, if a party’s presidential candidate wins elections in a given district with
75% of the vote, it is highly improbable that any member of Congress from the
opposite party will be elected. Yet, a district with a significantly smaller
margin of victory for a presidential candidate, perhaps say 60% of the vote,
would still be a safe seat for a Congressional candidate of the same party, while
dispersing votes for the party amongst a greater number of districts, and thus
making other seats more competitive.
A recent study by Jowei Chen
of the University of Michigan and Jonathan Rodden of Stanford University
demonstrates exactly how Democrats are inherently disadvantaged by electoral
geography. Using data from the 2000 presidential elections, and focusing on
Florida as a case study, Chen and Rodden showed that Democratic voters tend to
be packed into densely populated city centers, while Republican votes are more
widely dispersed throughout less tightly packed suburban areas. Additionally,
heavily Democratic precincts tend to be located in close proximity to other
heavily Democratic precincts, much more often than Republican districts are
located close to other heavily Republican districts. It is important to
remember that in Florida, like many other states, Congressional districts are
drawn by members of the state Legislature, who propose and vote on potential
district layouts.
As a result, Chen and Rodden found, even a completely non-political
process of drawing Congressional districts is likely to result in Congressional
districts that are overwhelmingly Democratic, usually well beyond the threshold
required for a district to safely remain in Democratic hands. Meanwhile,
Republican-leaning Congressional districts generally contain enough Republicans
to remain safely in the hands of GOP Congressmen, without concentrating
Republican voting strength to the same overwhelming extent as for Democrats.
Using a series of computer-generated scenarios, Rodden and
Chen discovered that if Democrats won 50% of the total votes for House candidates
within a state (that is, 50% of all votes cast for Congressional candidates,
across every district in Florida), Democrats always end up with less than 50%
of the House seats. In fact, examining the redistricting proposals submitted by
Democratic members of the Florida legislature (the GOP controlled the state
legislature in 2002, but Democrats were allowed to propose potential Congressional
districts for the record), not one of the proposals introduced by Florida
Democrats would have resulted in Florida’s congressional delegation being 50%
Democratic, in cases where Democrats won 50% of House votes in the state. The
districts that were eventually implemented by the Republican-controlled legislature
fell within the range of options envisioned in Chen and Rodden’s
experiments.
Chen and Rodden extended this type of analysis to a number
of other states, and found that the concentration of Democratic votes in urban
and high-density areas consistently applied in these states as well, and tended
to reduce Democratic representation in the House. Comparing redistricting
scenarios with actual districts (as was done in their Florida analysis), Chen
and Rodden also found that in all cases, actual districts in a given state fell
within the range of scenarios predicted by the electoral geography of that
state. This suggests that while there may be partisan bias in the district
creation process, depending on who controls the state legislature, such bias is
largely dwarfed by the existing electoral geography of a state.
Incumbency, specifically, the financial and organizational
advantages of being a current member of the House, as opposed to running for the
first time, also plays a major role electoral advantages currently enjoyed by
Republicans. John Sides of George Washington University and Eric McGhee of the
Public Policy Institute of California sought to test
the effects of incumbency on the 2012 House results. Incumbency typically
carries significant advantages in terms of visibility, fundraising, and
political experience, which led to incumbents winning reelection 90% of the time,
in 2012 House and Senate races.
In 2010, when
Republicans retook control of the House by winning 63 seats
formerly held by Democrats (in large part, thanks to Democrats who retired
from office in 2010), numerous Republican candidates were running for office
for the first time. In 2012, these candidates were running as incumbents. Statistically
accounting for this incumbency advantage, Sides and McGhee found that any
advantages of gerrymandering were markedly reduced; that is, as Sides and
McGhee put it: “...the ability of Republicans to retain
the House majority may have been due to incumbency advantage, not new and more
favorable districts. “
Sides and McGhee
acknowledge that the effects of gerrymandering cannot be completely dismissed
or overlooked, but since most arguments about gerrymandering don’t fully take
incumbency advantages into account, they believe that gerrymandering is
overstated as a factor in the party composition of Congress.
So how many seats did gerrymandering actually cost House
Democrats in 2012? Estimates vary. Sam Wang of Princeton University has argued that Democrats would
have won 15
more seats in the absence of gerrymandering, while Nicholas Goedert of
Washington University in St. Louis found that gerrymandering cost Democrats 9
House seats, and Sides and McGhee believes it cost
Democrats 7 seats. What all these estimates have in common is that in each
scenario, even if gerrymandering were nonexistent, Democrats would have been unable to retake the House. Additionally, in each of these hypotheticals, the number of
seats lost to gerrymandering is significantly smaller than those lost to inherent
Republican advantages like electoral geography and incumbency.
As noted earlier, President Obama and other observers have
contended that gerrymandering results in districts which are heavily skewed
towards Republican House members. Obama, and others who share his reasoning,
seem to believe that Republicans who represent these overwhelmingly Republican
districts don’t fear defeat at the hands of Democrats, and so are significantly
less responsive to wider public opinion, which often holds an unfavorable
view of actions like the 2013 government shutdown. Those who subscribe to this line of reasoning often
believe, as President Obama stated
in a press conference held during the recent debt ceiling stalemate
that shuttered the federal government, that
Republicans in “gerrymandered districts” were “more worried about a Tea
Party challenger than they are about a general election where they’ve got to
compete with a Democrat or go after independent votes.” As a result,
Republicans in such districts, it is believed, are reluctant to compromise with
Democrats.
As we now know, it is untrue that most of
Republican advantage in terms of winning House seats stems from gerrymandering. Still, is it accurate to say that House members from
heavily Republican districts are more ideological and inflexible than those
from less overwhelmingly Republican districts?
Boris Shor of the University of Chicago studied
this question by comparing the liberalism or conservatism of 2012 House
candidates, with the share of the 2008 vote that was received by President
Obama in a particular House district. Shor found that while there was some
correlation between the ideology of a particular House candidate, and the
portion of the
vote that Obama received in their district in 2008, this correlation was much
smaller than the substantial ideological differences between members of the two
major parties. That is, while there are differences between moderates and
ideologues (that is, between moderate and liberal Democrats, or moderate and
conservative Republicans) within a given party, these differences are
significantly smaller than the wide chasm between Democrats and Republicans
running in the same types of districts (that is, districts where Obama won a
particular share of the 2008 presidential votes).
This reality weakens President Obama’s argument that the
unwillingness of many House Republicans to compromise on issues like the debt
ceiling or the Affordable Care Act, is in large measure a product of the high portion
of Republican voters in some gerrymandered Congressional districts. If that
were the case, we would expect to see more pronounced differences on these
matters amongst Republicans, depending on the share of votes won by President
Obama in their district. However, that isn’t what is actually happening. A
breakdown of the ideological leanings of candidates from both parties, measured
against the partisanship of the districts that they were running in, can be
found here.
Shor also found that the most highly conservative
Republicans, unlike moderate Republicans, and both liberal and moderate
Democrats, are largely unresponsive to the electoral makeup of the districts
they run in. These very conservative Republicans can be found as candidates (and sometimes win seats)
in districts where President Obama won over 50% of the 2008 vote, and also in
districts where he was soundly defeated with less than 25% of votes cast. Regardless of how many Obama voters live in their district, these
representatives remain steadfastly to the right in their political beliefs. Thus,
while gerrymandering can certainly play some secondary role in the composition
of a particular House district, the primary role of gerrymandering in the fierce
partisan divide in the House still remains largely unproven.
Why does it matter that gerrymandering is a far less
significant issue than so many analysts, politicians, and even voters
believe it to be? In medicine, the misdiagnosis of an ailment will often lead
to ineffective, and perhaps even harmful, approaches to treatment, while
ignoring the real causes of sickness or poor health. The same is true in
politics. After all, how can a major challenge like making the House more
functional and cooperative be effectively addressed, when the underlying causes
of current political divisions are misunderstood? By focusing on gerrymandering
as a major cause of the party makeup of, and partisanship within the House,
activists, politicians, and analysts are attempting to provide an incorrect,
simplistic solution to a complex challenge, and thus wasting valuable time in
the process.
Those worried about partisanship in Congress might try
focusing on various ways to reform campaign finance spending, where incumbents
generally enjoy a
substantial advantage. They could also attempt to bolster third parties. Such an approach might allow these parties to win more seats in Congress, which could break the stranglehold
the two major parties hold over American politics, and possibly force members
of the House to be less recalcitrant, as they would face a loss of power, if voters chose alternative leadership.Whatever
the solutions to the gridlock that ails us today, gerrymandering is a small
part of the problem, and we would all do well to not make it a bigger issue
than warrants it’s size and scope.
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