Showing posts with label Illinois secession movement. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Illinois secession movement. Show all posts

Tuesday, September 2, 2025

The Texas Redistricting Battle: Representative Al Green's Congressional District is Going Republican

 The Texas Legislature, dominated by Republicans, recently redrew congressional district boundaries to disadvantage Democrats in the next election. This political maneuver, called gerrymandering, is as old as the Republic.

For example, Al Green, a Democratic congressman and a perpetual burr under the Republican saddle, represents Texas Congressional District 9, a historically safe district for Democrats. No doubt, Green felt confident enough about his congressional seat to disrupt President Trump's address to Congress last spring. His Democratic constituents undoubtedly loved his buffoonish behavior. That's our boy!

Then things changed. The Texas legislature drastically altered District 9 to encompass voting precincts that are reliably Republican. The district's stalwart Democratic neighborhoods were shoved into District 18, and Green's congressional sinecure was wiped out. He will lose if he runs for reelection next year in District 9. 

Indeed, unless the Republicans' gerrymandering maneuver is overturned by the courts, Texas will probably send five additional Republicans to Congress after the next federal election. No wonder that Democratic Texas legislators fled the state in August to stall a vote on the Republicans' redistricting scheme. 

Of course, the Democrats didn't take the Republicans' gerrymandering scheme lying down. California Governor Gavin Newsom, self-appointed leader of the increasingly deranged Democratic Party, signed gerrymandering legislation countermanding the Texas action by gerrymandering the Golden State's congressional districts to favor the Democrats. 

Now, gerrymandering battles between Republicans and Democrats have broken out in other states. It seems likely that all this political turmoil will have to be sorted out by the U.S. Supreme Court.

No one can predict the outcome of the gerrymandering war. Nevertheless, Americans are waking up to the fact that congressional districts have been gerrymandered nationwide and that most of it has benefited Democrats. 

New England's six states have no Republican-held congressional seats, even though the region has many Republican voters. Illinois is the poster child for corrupt Democratic gerrymandering. No wonder that 33 conservatively leaning counties want to join with Indiana to escape the state's oppressively corrupt, Democrat-dominated political system.

All this sturm and drang over congressional redistricting highlights the fact that numerous congressional representatives are lunatics who behave childishly and irresponsibly because they are in safe districts where their constituents prefer to be entertained rather than governed. 

Congressman Al Green's fans need not mourn the loss of their wingnut representative. Although he is being pushed out of District 9, he will probably run again in District 18, where many of his supporters were placed due to redistricting. If Green runs in District 18 in 2026, I predict he will win.

Gerrymandering for me but not for thee.










Friday, May 2, 2025

America is now two countries: Which one do you want to live in?

 Not long ago, voters in 33 Illinois counties voted to leave Illinois and become part of Indiana. Twelve counties in eastern Oregon--perhaps America's wokest state-- voted to leave the Beaver State to become part of Idaho.  And in Texas, a robust secession movement has been active for many years.

What's going on? 

Clearly, Americans are dividing into two camps.  Blue State residents vote Democratic and are comfortable with the Democrats' woke agenda, which includes heavy government intervention in the national economy, transgender participation in girls' sports, and open borders.

Red State voters tend to hold traditional cultural values that emphasize patriotism, family, and Christianity. Red State voters are suspicious of federal regulations, and they're frightened by the Democrats' open border policies and the insertion of woke values in the public schools.

As a map of national voting patterns illustrates, Blue and Red states are geographically distinct. The Blue states are mostly clustered on the East and West Coasts, while the Republican-leaning Red states comprise the South, the Midwestern plains, and the Rocky Mountains west (except for Colorado and New Mexico).

As Abraham Lincoln observed in a 1858 speech, "a house divided cannot stand," and we are a divided nation. I thought the 2024 election results might usher in an era of political calm, but the election of Donald Trump for a second presidential term has been met by calls for resistance and a "civic uprising" by the coastal elites. Trump's enemies have filed well over 100 lawsuits to sabotage his political agenda.

What does the future hold? I think it is unlikely that conservative populations in woke states will be able to break away and join more conservative states.  The conservative counties in Illinois will never be able to escape to Indiana, nor will the eastern counties of Oregon ever become part of Greater Idaho.

Nevertheless, America's political and cultural divide is becoming sharper and more contentious by the day. I live off a gravel road in rural Mississippi, where cultural values are as different from Boston as Congo is different from Canada. America is now truly two separate countries.

America today is becoming more and more like the United States in 1860. As Bruce Catton, Erik Larson, and others have explained, by the eve of the Civil War, the radical abolitionists in New England and the rabid pro-slavery advocates in South Carolina despised each other and actually longed for war. 

And war is what they got. 

Unless academia, Democratic politicians, and the legacy media show more respect for the hard-working and decent people of Flyover Country, the nation will one day fall apart. If that occurs, my loyalties will be with Flyover Country--my doctoral degree from Harvard notwithstanding.

 

2024 Presidential Election Results by County