Archive for the ‘Democracy’ Category

How Mathematicians Are Fighting to Save the American Democracy – Big Think

The political strife that defines today's America derives its energy from the feeling among many that their voices are not being heard. By and large, Americans do not trust Congress and often vote to send a message, hoping to get their opinions represented. The reality is that the political parties do all they can to stay in power, with achieving fairness and democracy not their primary goals.

Gerrymandering is the practice of drawing the borders of voting districts to favor specific candidates or political parties. It can make a difference in the number of representatives of each party that a state sends to Washington. In essence, using these strategies can allow one party to keep winning the majority of districts (and representatives) without having the most votes.

Jonathan Mattingly, a mathematician from Duke University in North Carolina, has been working for the past several years to figure out mathematical solutions to the problem. He would like to take the job of drawing voting district lines away from self-serving politicians.

As part of that goal, Mattinglycreated an algorithm that produces random iterations of the states election maps to show the impact of gerrymandering. This is not just a hypothetical exercise. The mathematician says that partisan gerrymandering is having a serious effect on our democracy.

Even if gerrymandering affected just 5 seats out of 435, thats often enough to sway crucial votes, he said in an interview with the journalNature, referring to the number of representatives in Congress.

Two of the most used methods in gerrymandering are packing and cracking. When they employ packing, legislators try to draw the map in such a way that the opposing voters would be packed into the fewest districts possible. Cracking means dividing the other partys voters into several districts, making it harder for them to elect a representative. This tactic helps the party in power to stay in power.

Heres a useful graphic from Washington Post on how gerrymandering works:

Mattinglys state of North Carolina has been ground zero in this fight. While both parties used to receive a generally equal number of representatives (either six or seven), Republican redistricting several years ago packed most of the Democrats into three districts. The 2015-2016 North Carolina cohort to Washington included just3 Democrats and 10 Republicans,while the statewide vote is split close to 50-50 between the two parties.

Recently, the Supreme Courtweighed inthat two districts in North Carolina were drawn along racial lines and were, as such, unconstitutional.

While the Supreme Court intervened in that case, the highest court in the land doesn't generally address gerrymandering as long as districts abide by four criteria - the districts need to be compact, continuous, have more or less the same number of people and give minority groups a chance to elect their own rep. The difficulty of objectively proving whether and how the district is gerrymandered has been one of the difficulties in stopping this practice.

Mattingly set out to create mathematical tools that would prove to the courts time and time again if a district borders have been drawn by politics and not fairness. What Mattingly and his student Christy Graves realized is that gerrymandering produces certain statistical signs. The opposition party usually gets a landslide in the packed districts and loses narrowly in the cracked ones. Using data analysis, Mattingly and his team were able to create an index that shows the extent of gerrymandering in a district.

It is important to note that Mattingly is not alone in this quest. Other mathematicians have also been working to create better methods for evaluating gerrymandering. The political statistician Wendy Tam Cho from the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign has also designed district map-drawing algorithms that satisfy state law requirements without relying on partisan voting information.

Nicholas Stephanopoulos, a political scientist from the University of Chicago, created an "efficiency gap" to show how each state's wasted votes can reveal signs of gerrymandering. If a party has landslide victories or losses, with numbers much more extreme than the proportion it actually needed to win, that could be a sign of political shenanigans.

Despite the various science and math-based ideas to combat gerrymandering, they have not been embraced by the politicians. Perhaps, unsurprisingly, as they do not want to lose this weapon from their arsenal. But there are signs that the courts are admitting more mathematical analysis when gerrymandering is being alleged. Whitford v. Gill, aWisconsin case, which may end up before the Supreme Court, used Stephanopoulos's efficiency gap analysis to inform their decision.

The upcoming 2020 census is the next big event in this fight. The new numbers are likely to create much redistricting around the country. While Republicans have been shown to use gerrymandering to their advantage, the Democrats also engage in the practice. Mattingly's analysis showed they used the tactic in Maryland, where they control the legislature. For the sake of American democracy, devising objective mathematical approaches that ensure all voices are being heard equally seems like a no-brainer.

You can read the paper by Mattingly and his team here.

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How Mathematicians Are Fighting to Save the American Democracy - Big Think

Are The French Giving Us A New Lesson In Democracy? – Forbes


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Are The French Giving Us A New Lesson In Democracy?
Forbes
Winston Churchill said those words in Parliament two years after Britain, under his leadership as prime minister, had defeated the fascists of Europe but were still locked in a deadly struggle with Soviet communism. His words ring true to us 70 years ...
France And Russia, Why Democracy Needs Healthy OppositionWorldcrunch

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Are The French Giving Us A New Lesson In Democracy? - Forbes

‘Sacrificing Democracy’: Senate GOP Plans to Hide TrumpCare From US Public – Common Dreams


Common Dreams
'Sacrificing Democracy': Senate GOP Plans to Hide TrumpCare From US Public
Common Dreams
In an act of secrecy denounced by one commentator as "an insult to Americans and our democratic process," two GOP aides told Axios on Monday that although the Senate will soon complete its version of the widely panned American Health Care Actalso ...

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'Sacrificing Democracy': Senate GOP Plans to Hide TrumpCare From US Public - Common Dreams

Robredo: Defense of democracy is biggest fight – Inquirer.net

Vice President Leni Robredo delivers a speech during the Defending Democracy Summit: Isang Pagtitipon at Paninindigan Para sa Demokrasya held at the UP Diliman in Quezon City last June 12, 2017. (Photo by OVP)

Defending our democracy is our biggest fight today, Vice President Leni Robredo said on Monday.

Hours after leading Independence Day ceremonies at Manilas Rizal Park in lieu of President Duterte, she spoke at the Defend Democracy Summit, attended mostly by opposition politicians.

Extraordinary times

We are already seeing our institutions being eroded. They are already weakening, Robredo said in her keynote speech at the University of the Philippines School of Economics in Quezon City.

We must move swiftly, effectively to ensure they are strong enough for our children, our childrens children. These are extraordinary times. If were not able to lay aside our differences and talk to one another, we will be fighting enemies within as well as without, she said.

Disillusion

Among those who attended the event were Senators Risa Hontiveros, Kiko Pangilinan, Bam Aquino and Antonio Trillanes IV, former Commission on Human Rights Chair Etta Rosales, Representatives Gary Alejano and Kit Belmonte, former Solicitor General Florin Hilbay, and singers Agot Isidro and Leah Navarro.

Robredo acknowledged the challenge of general disillusion with democracy amid the failure to deal with the suffering of the poor and the availability of freedom only to the ultrarich.

Exactly 119 years after, is it not saddening that our people are still fighting for the same things? To be included, to speak freely and be heard, to be remembered, to live without fear? she said. All I know is what I can see and what I hear. Our people can no longer wait to almost reach the real promises of democracy.

She insisted that only democracy will bring about true progress in our country.

Roots of discontent

Robredo stressed that the roots of discontent have been caused by weak institutions that allow an entrenched minority to monopolize economic and political power.

A documentation of why nations fail shows that countries that have allowed democracy to thrive and built strong, inclusive institutions are countries where people thrive better. We need that desperately now; or people deserve to thrive better, she said.

Hope and unity

Robredo said that in these extraordinary times, everyone should set aside the narrative of divisiveness, hate, anger, and attacks that we experience in our nation today [and] change the narrative with hope, unity, and positive conversations.

Let us not us think of democracy as a concept, but as a means to lessen the suffering of our people. Let us not defend democracy for democracys sake, but for the emancipation of the last, the least, and the lost.

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Robredo: Defense of democracy is biggest fight - Inquirer.net

Puerto Rico Backs Statehood in Referendum Boycotted by Opposition Groups – Democracy Now!

This is a rush transcript. Copy may not be in its final form.

AMY GOODMAN: Tens of thousands turned out Sunday for the National Puerto Rican Day Parade here in New York. The parade came on the same day when Puerto Rico held a controversial referendum on political status. Ninety-seven percent of those who cast ballots voted in favor of Puerto Rico becoming the 51st state, but just 23 percent of eligible voters took part. Many Puerto Rican opposition groups boycotted the vote. Juan, you have followed this extremely closely. Talk about what happened. The governor, Rossell, has called this a great victory for statehood.

JUAN GONZLEZ: Yes, its actually probably the poorest showing that the pro-statehood party has had in about 50 years, because so few people voted. You have to understand, in Puerto Rico, its normal for 78 to 80 percent of the people to vote in a normal election or plebiscite. Youre talking 23 percent. So the statehood party got a little over 500,000 votes. Back in 2012, during the last plebiscite, statehood got 834,000 votes. So they got 300,000 fewer votes than they did in the 2012 plebiscite. The reality is that with the economic crisis that Puerto Rico is facing right now, the last thing on the minds of the people of Puerto Rico is a vote over statehood that Congressthey know that Congress cannot or will not grant.

So what the governor has said is that hes going to nowbased on this 97 percent vote in favor of statehood, will now elect two United States senators and five congressmen and send them to Congress and demand admission as a state. This is a tactic that Tennessee used in the 19th century to pressure Congress to admit Tennessee as a state. So theyre now going to go through an election of two senators and five congressmen, which will again be boycotted by the other parties, so only the statehood people will vote. And the reality is that the economic crisis of Puerto Rico at this point cannot be resolved just through a statehood process. There has to be a process of real self-determination for the island of Puerto Rico that has not happened yet.

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Puerto Rico Backs Statehood in Referendum Boycotted by Opposition Groups - Democracy Now!