1.One such scheme involves an improved control method designed to automatically quarantine trouble spots and gerrymander the remaining grid into islands of balanced load and generation.
4.And then there’s gerrymandering, with politicians drawing the boundaries of their own voting districts into crazy shapes designed to prevent competition.
6.But he actually talked about the voter ID reforms that the Conservatives imposed for elections, and he said it's a very bad idea to go gerrymandering.
7.The creation of a new majority-Black district, the state claimed, was therefore nothing more than a " racial gerrymander, " a phrase that Alabama's lawyers used multiple times in the application for a stay.
8.And in its defense, what they are doing is, you know, trying to attack the ability of people to actually vote and gerrymandering districts so that the Republicans will be, as they are, overrepresented in the Congress.