![]() ![]() This system has been adopted in Louisiana, Washington, and California. If you think that’s a problem, here’s what can be done about it:įirst, states can replace partisan primary elections with non-partisan “Top Two” or “blanket primaries” in which any candidate can run regardless of party, with only the top two vote-getters proceeding to a second-round run-off primary if no one gets a majority, even if the top two are from the same party. That’s why both political parties are dominated by the most extreme and uncompromising members. So the most extreme and passionate elements of each party have a disproportionate impact on primary elections, which obliges elected officials to pander to them or risk being challenged in the next primary. Primary elections have lower voter turnout than general elections. In those districts the election that really counts is the primary election to determine the candidate of whichever party controls that district. The result of this process is that most congressional and legislative districts are effectively non-competitive between the two political parties. This process has an old name, “gerrymandering”, and has been going on for a long time, though without the current precision in desired results. ![]() Many of the minority party’s voters are deliberately concentrated together in districts where its percentage of likely voters approaches 100%. Thanks to computers, this is now a very scientific and accurate process of assuring that the maximum number of districts have at least 60% likely voters for the majority party, and no more than 40% likely voters for the minority party. WHYY thanks our sponsors - become a WHYY sponsor ![]() In most states that process is highly political, the majority party trying to draw the lines so that it can win the maximum number of districts. Here’s mine:Īfter every national census, which occurs every 10 years, it’s necessary to re-apportion congressional districts and state legislative districts to account for changes in population. There are no doubt many explanations for why gridlock seems to be getting worse. New political players and movements like the Tea Party, Occupy, Move-On, and the Club for Growth, seem to highlight our increasing inability to compromise or find common ground. The manifestations of gridlock are everywhere, from the failure of Congress to pass a budget for the United States, or to confirm enough judges to fill all the vacancies in the federal courts, to the passionate confrontations in Wisconsin and other states over the role of labor unions in representing state employees, and the standoff over the Affordable Care Act. Political gridlock in America has become like tax reform and the weather in that everyone talks about it, but no one does anything about it. ![]()
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