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HOLY FUCK YES LETS GOOOOO
232 upvotes, 54 comments. Sidechat image post by Anonymous in US Politics. "HOLY FUCK YES LETS GOOOOO"
Virginia democrats could overturn the supreme court’s decision by passing a law to lower judges retirement age, forcing the judges who voted against redistricting to retire, and then have a rehearing with favorable justices. Time to play ball
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Anonymous 1d

I get lowering it from 75 but 54 is super low 😭

upvote 23 downvote
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Anonymous 1d
post
upvote 13 downvote
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Anonymous 1d

How about lowering all of congress’ age?

upvote 12 downvote
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Anonymous 1d

Rigging the courts to get outcomes favorable to your short term goals? Hell yeah! Democracy!!

upvote -4 downvote
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Anonymous 1d

whining babies. Rather than redesigning the map so that it actually is lawful, they want to force it through with new laws. Now it would be hilarious if they went through all this trouble to then have their “favorable judges” rule in favor of the law

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Anonymous replying to -> #6 1d

Anything to get new blood in at this point 🙌

upvote 37 downvote
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Anonymous replying to -> #7 1d

Isnt that what republicans started with gerrymandering

upvote 27 downvote
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Anonymous replying to -> #10 23h

The reason it was struck down wasn’t gerrymandering, but rather the way they attempted to go about it was against the Virginia state constitution

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Anonymous replying to -> #13 22h

They only struck it down after the vote succeeded though

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Anonymous replying to -> OP 22h

That doesn’t matter, you can’t go against the state constitution and expect it not to get struck down, they put the issue on the ballot like 2 weeks before the voting date, if I’m not mistaken. This also prevented early voters from casting their votes for or against said motion

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Anonymous replying to -> #13 22h

Then they should have struck it down before voting started when they had the chance

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Anonymous replying to -> #13 22h

You’re referring to them voting on it after early voting started in 2025. Yeah I’m not all that happy about it, but I understand the legal reasoning

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Anonymous replying to -> #1 22h

I will say it’s a little dumb to me b/c when you early vote, you run the risk of things happening between then and November that would’ve changed your mind. That’s why I vote in mid-to-late Oct

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Anonymous replying to -> OP 22h

Again, it had like 2 weeks before the voting due date, the court system in general is very bureaucratic and backed up, the fact it was voted on is irrelevant to the fact the way they went about it is against the state constitution

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Anonymous replying to -> OP 22h

If I’m not mistaken the Dems convinced SCOVA to let the vote proceed

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Anonymous replying to -> #1 22h

Proceed and be valid are different things though

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Anonymous replying to -> #13 22h

I’m on your side kinda. Just b/c SCOVA let the vote proceed (even tho they might’ve felt forced to) doesn’t mean it was valid. Sucks but is what it is. On to hopefully reaching 8-3 the old-fashioned way

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Anonymous replying to -> #1 22h

I feel like this midterm is going to be decided more on who can redistrict better, which is unfortunate as it won’t give a true picture of how people feel

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Anonymous replying to -> #13 22h

I mean GOP will have an edge due to gerrymandering, but public opinion should be blue enough to overcome it

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Anonymous replying to -> #13 22h

So before the vote, even though the same procedural issues had taken place the referendum was fine to vote on. After the referendum passed, all of a sudden those procedural issues invalidate the whole thing?

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Anonymous replying to -> OP 22h

Not exactly, think of it more as a continuance, where the government produced enough of an argument to have merit for a case which they ended up losing later on

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Anonymous replying to -> #1 22h

The way the redistricting I don’t think there will be nearly as many purple districts as you think

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Anonymous replying to -> #13 22h

Also, the “violations” are bullshit anyway. Virginia law says it has to get passed by the legislature before and after an election. They passed it on October 31 and January 16, Election Day was November 4th

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Anonymous replying to -> OP 22h

See the issue was that by October 31, lots of people already voted early (EV started in September)

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Anonymous replying to -> OP 22h

If I’m not mistaken, the way a state constitutional amendment in Virginia must be passed is that it is proposed and then wait 2+ years before being ratified so as to prevent 1 party from coming in, changing the constitution and not giving anyone else a chance to vote against these politicians and change it

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Anonymous replying to -> #1 22h

Fwiw *I* don’t think it should’ve mattered b/c when you vote early, you assume the risk of decision-altering things happening after you vote

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Anonymous replying to -> #13 22h

There’s no two year requirement, just that two different legislatures have to vote on it

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Anonymous replying to -> #1 22h

And the whole early voting thing is duplicitous. Nationwide, republicans are trying to limit early voting to benefit them, but in this case Virginia was perfectly happy to use the fact that early voting existed to benefit them. Reps never have to play by the rules or be consistent, Dems always lose

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Anonymous replying to -> #13 21h

Florida just completely ignored an anti gerrymandering constitutional amendment in their CONSTITUTION yet democrats ade the problem? Yeah ok lil bro

upvote 6 downvote
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Anonymous replying to -> #10 21h

I never said that wasn’t a problem, personally I think there should be a nationwide gerrymandering ban and it should be done by an independent 3rd party/bi party commission

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Anonymous replying to -> #13 21h

Well we’re never gonna get there if republicans keep bending the rules in their favor while Dems try to take the “high road“

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Anonymous replying to -> OP 21h

You see it on both sides, trying to pin the all the bad of this political system on one side is simply illogical

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Anonymous replying to -> #10 21h

If there is a constitutional rule blocking it then a judge will prevent it from happening

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Anonymous replying to -> #2 21h

You really don’t think the Florida Republican Supreme Court won’t twist any legal definitions they can to make the gerrymandering A OK?

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Anonymous replying to -> #13 21h

There is very clearly one side that thinks gerrymandering is good and one that very clearly wants to get rid of gerrymandering nationwide. There’s no both-sides-ing this one

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Anonymous replying to -> OP 21h

That’s definitely not true, whats happening is the gov officials like it despite the populus not liking it. It’s like lobbying in that sense

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Anonymous replying to -> #13 21h

Except that Gov officials on one side are gleefully gerrymandering everywhere they can with no resistance and gov officials on the other side are trying to ban gerrymandering nationwide, banning gerrymandering in their states, refusing to gerrymander even when they can, or California and Virginia who put gerrymandering up for a vote

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Anonymous replying to -> OP 21h

California was the first state to start this trend of gerrymandering

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Anonymous replying to -> #13 21h

That’s a load of bullshit lol. California only did it in response to Texas, and let their constituents vote on it

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Anonymous replying to -> OP 21h

Mb you right on that one

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Anonymous replying to -> OP 21h

But it still has been happening on both sides and def shouldn’t

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Anonymous replying to -> #13 21h

Let’s dig into that both sides claim. On the Republican side you have Texas, Florida, Tennessee, Ohio, North Carolina, South Carolina, Missouri, Louisiana, Alabama, and Mississippi all gerrymandering their maps through the legislature, no votes. Utah tried to but their Supreme Court overruled it so now their packing their court

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Anonymous replying to -> #13 21h

On the democratic side you have California and Virginia, who both had their citizens vote on it to temporarily roll back their independent redistricting commissions. You have Maryland that didn’t go through with it. New York maybe considering a not so aggressive gerrymander. Illinois maybe going to ask their voters. All of this purely in response to Republicans

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Anonymous replying to -> OP 21h

California, New York, Virginia and Wisconsin all attempted also. This also doesn’t take into account 2 things, the fact that there are more red states initially and the fact that many states are already gerrymandered, like Massachusetts who despite having a 61/36 split last election has a 9-0 split in the house

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Anonymous replying to -> OP 21h

Colorado might vote on it, Washington is considering

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Anonymous replying to -> #13 21h

There’s practically no way to draw a red district in Massachusetts

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Anonymous replying to -> #13 21h

Uhh… no they werent. Gerrymandering is a notoriously republican tactic and the minute democrats do it and MAKE SURE THE PEOPLE SIGN FOR IT, its their intention?

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Anonymous replying to -> OP 21h

It was more of an example and there def is, also you leave out the fact that Utah and Ohio were court ordered and also you falsely claim that Louisiana Alabama and Mississippi have tried to

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Anonymous replying to -> #10 21h

Again it is not a notoriously republican tactic, it is used on both sides as they see fit, take a look at Illinois for example

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Anonymous replying to -> #13 21h

This both-sides routine is getting exhausting after looking at how the south drew so many GOP seats last week

upvote 6 downvote
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Anonymous replying to -> #1 21h

While this instance is certainly more of a 1 sided issue it is historically a both sides issue and saying it is a completely 1 sided thing ignores all history nuance and context

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Anonymous replying to -> #13 21h

both sides have done it and that’s bad, but right now the GOP is doing it more and that is also bad

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Anonymous replying to -> #1 21h

Literally what I said

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Anonymous replying to -> #13 20h

So now you expect democrats (who have actively tried to stop gerrymandering on the state and federal level) to just lay over and lose while republicans (who started the whole mid cycle redistricting) continue gerrymandering without consequences because you find it personally distasteful?

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