Breadcrumbs
Home / NC: Could Biggest Consequence of Midterm Elections be Redistricting?NC: Could Biggest Consequence of Midterm Elections be Redistricting?
Last Updated on Wednesday, 29 September 2010 12:20 Written by rslcpol Tuesday, 29 June 2010 11:38
From Carolina Journal Online:
Forget jobs and health care. The most far-reaching effect of North Carolina’s midterm elections could be which party gets to draw legislative and congressional districts next year.
The reason: Redistricting can go far in making or breaking a party’s political fortunes. States are required to redraw their districts every decade to reflect population shifts documented in the census. If Tar Heel Republicans control the process this time around, it could be their ticket out of an electoral slump that dates back to Reconstruction.
But if Democrats — who have a 30-20 majority in the Senate and 68-52 edge in the House — maintain control, it could guarantee their command of state politics for the foreseeable future and strengthen their majorities in the state’s congressional delegation.
“There are massive implications for the future, not least because the two parties seem so evenly matched,” said Andy Taylor, chairman of the political science department at N.C. State University. “The composition of a few districts could make a significant difference on which party is in control. That obviously ups the stakes considerably for this election.”
Tags: North Carolina