The Rich Men north of Richmond may have won for a day, but they cashed out every ounce of public goodwill they had to do it.

by Shaun Kenney
First and foremost, letโs knock down all the pretended olive branches from those who voted โyesโ on Tuesday to impose some sort of federal anti-gerrymandering law. They know damn good and well that the federal government cannot impose such regulations (which is why the present lawsuit stops at the Supreme Court of Virginia and not the U.S. Supreme Court) because redistricting is a reserved power of the statesโ not the federal government.
If they truly wanted non-partisan redistricting, they would have pushed the Virginia Model to the other 49 states. So spare me โ not interested.
Lucy can keep her football this time.

Bob Lewis and I had a good talk about the present state of affairs which made its way into the pages of the Virginia Mercury:
Kenney is a former Republican Party of Virginia top official and committed conservative who lives in rural Virginia and often differs with Trump. On Wednesday, he posted on Facebook: โ51-49 for Virginia to have 91-9 representation.โ
Seven words that say it all.
The last slender string of hope for nonpartisan redistricting is needling its way through the courts โ first in Tazewell and eventually to the Supreme Court of Virginia โ where the unfair language of the amendment undoubtedly cost the โnoโ campaign votes. Yet one is reticent to believe that SCOVA will undo the public will, even if the language itself and the process by which the voters were dragged to this point was and remains patently unconstitutional (and most assuredly unfair).
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