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Back Door Power Grab Democrat Elections Gerrymander

No Virginia, you can’t eliminate all Republican districts in California, Illinois, and Colorado.

No Virginia, you can’t eliminate all Republican districts in California, Illinois, and Colorado.

I saw on one of those obscure websites where a loon posted that California, Illinois, and Colorado could eliminate all Republican districts. Here’s what leftist AI has to say about that.

After the supreme court ruling on Gerrymandering in Louisiana, is it possible for California, Illinois, and Colorado to eliminate all Republican districts?

Short answer: No — even after the Louisiana ruling, California, Illinois, and Colorado cannot legally eliminate all Republican districts. The ruling restricts race‑based mapmaking, not partisan gerrymandering, and each of these states faces structural, legal, and geographic constraints that prevent a total wipeout of GOP representation.

🧭 What the Louisiana ruling actually did

The Supreme Court’s 6–3 decision in Louisiana v. Callais struck down Louisiana’s map because it used race as the predominant factor in drawing a second majority‑Black district. The ruling weakens Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act, making it harder to justify maps drawn with explicit racial considerations.

Important:

  • The ruling does NOT ban partisan gerrymandering.
  • It only restricts race‑based district design.

This means blue states can still draw partisan‑leaning maps — but they cannot use race as the primary tool to do so.

🗺️ Could California eliminate all GOP districts?

No. Even with Prop 50 giving Democrats power to redraw maps mid‑decade, analysts show California can at most eliminate 3–5 Republican seats, not all seven.

  • Prop 50 allows Democrats to redraw the map and “put around five GOP seats in play,” but not eliminate every Republican district.
  • Geographic clustering of Republican voters (e.g., Central Valley, Orange County, parts of the Inland Empire) makes it mathematically impossible to crack every GOP pocket without violating compactness and community‑of‑interest rules.

Even Rep. Terri Sewell’s political call to “eliminate all GOP districts” in CA was aspirational rhetoric, not something legally or mathematically feasible.

🗺️ Could Illinois eliminate all GOP districts?

No. Illinois already has one of the most aggressively pro‑Democratic maps in the country.

  • Experts say Illinois is unlikely to squeeze out another Republican seat, let alone all three remaining GOP districts.
  • Republican voters are too geographically concentrated in certain downstate regions to be fully cracked without violating constitutional standards.

🗺️ Could Colorado eliminate all GOP districts?

No — and even less so than CA or IL. Colorado uses an independent redistricting commission, not legislative control.

  • The Louisiana ruling does not affect Colorado’s commission structure.
  • The commission is constitutionally required to produce competitive districts.
  • Colorado’s GOP vote share is too large and too geographically distributed to eliminate all Republican representation.

⚖️ Why total elimination is impossible

Across all three states, three constraints prevent a full partisan wipeout:

1. Federal constitutional limits

Even though partisan gerrymandering is allowed, maps still must satisfy:

  • Equal population
  • Compactness
  • Contiguity
  • Respect for communities of interest
  • No predominant use of race (reinforced by the Louisiana ruling)

2. Geographic clustering

Republican voters are not evenly spread; some areas are too strongly Republican to be cracked without creating bizarre, indefensible districts.

3. State‑specific legal structures

  • California: Legislature can redraw maps but still faces legal challenges and geographic constraints.
  • Illinois: Already maximized; experts say no further Democratic gains are realistically possible.
  • Colorado: Independent commission prevents partisan mapmaking.

📌 Bottom line

The Louisiana ruling makes race‑based gerrymanders harder, but it does NOT empower blue states to eliminate all Republican districts. Political rhetoric aside, the math, geography, and legal frameworks make such a total partisan wipeout impossible in California, Illinois, or Colorado.

 

 

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By MC

Master of Truth. A writer who has captured the imagination of many.