
The problem isnโt Republican states, but Democratic states where unfairness has prevailed for so long that Democrats cannot recognize the wordย fairย anymore.
by Shaun Kenney
Tension between Virginia Governor Abigail Spanberger and the renegades in the Democratic-controlled General Assembly is flaring up yet again, only this time it isnโt taxing data centers to death but taxing Virginiaโs patience:
With less than one month to go, nearly a dozen Democratic state lawmakers, strategists and candidates say Spanberger โ Virginiaโs popular Democratic governor who cruised to victory by double-digits last November โ needs to step up more assertively to sell the referendum to voters. And theyโre warning that sheโll bear the brunt of the blame if the effort fails.
Itโs not that sheโs doing nothing: Spanberger has endorsed the referendum and launched an ad supporting it this week, her first of the campaign, as POLITICO first reported. But critics say itโs the bare minimum for an effort that is supposed to be a top Democratic priority as the party works to counter GOP-led states that are redrawing their own maps.
Of course, this shibboleth of blame shifting โ Republicans did it first, Democrats are responding โ just isnโt playing out for the precise reason that it just ainโt true.
If the question around redistricting is who is playing with the lines, or more precisely whether playing with the lines is a reaction to bad form on the opposite side, then the answer โ and indeed, the blame โ lies with New York Democrats, whose effort to gerrymander their congressional seats so as to remove a lone Republican in Staten Island was blocked by the U.S. Supreme Court this March.
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