Democrats created gerrymandering—they must own it, and more!

Frankenstein

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Democrats have notoriously attempted to throw the Heisman hands at their policies when they turn south and point the finger to the Republicans, case in point:


  • The “Defund the Police” movement. Amid a crime wave in liberal cities and states, Democrats in the White House and big media tried, albeit unsuccessfully, to spin the defunding of our law enforcement on Republicans.
  • ObamaCare. During the 2012 presidential election, Democrats attempted to shift blame from the failing “Affordable” Care Act and deceptively tried to say the ACA was a Republican plan.
  • Voting Rights. This week alone, the president falsely claimed that “voting rights are under assault,” mindlessly spreading falsehoods that GOP states are hindering minorities from voting. When the reality is, Blue states are the most restrictive states for voting, look further than New York and Delaware, where it is harder for Americans of all backgrounds to vote in local, state, and federal elections.
  • Lastly, and the genesis of this piece, the Democrats’ attempts to blame Republicans for gerrymandering.

Gerrymandering––like the Ku Klux Klan, segregation of the Armed Forces, ending of Reconstruction, Jim Crow, current-day voting restrictions, and the list goes on––are all creations of, you guessed it, the Democrat Party.


The so-called attempt to disenfranchise minorities through gerrymandering has the Democrats’ DNA all over it, and if you know your history, you’d understand this statement. Full stop, a non-political assertion, the Democrats invented gerrymandering. Have you ever wondered where the name gerrymandering originated? Unfortunately, the answer does not live in textbook materials in your middle school civics book; however, it does live in a multitude of literature that is easily accessible courtesy of the internet.
 

Democrats have notoriously attempted to throw the Heisman hands at their policies when they turn south and point the finger to the Republicans, case in point:


  • The “Defund the Police” movement. Amid a crime wave in liberal cities and states, Democrats in the White House and big media tried, albeit unsuccessfully, to spin the defunding of our law enforcement on Republicans.
  • ObamaCare. During the 2012 presidential election, Democrats attempted to shift blame from the failing “Affordable” Care Act and deceptively tried to say the ACA was a Republican plan.
  • Voting Rights. This week alone, the president falsely claimed that “voting rights are under assault,” mindlessly spreading falsehoods that GOP states are hindering minorities from voting. When the reality is, Blue states are the most restrictive states for voting, look further than New York and Delaware, where it is harder for Americans of all backgrounds to vote in local, state, and federal elections.
  • Lastly, and the genesis of this piece, the Democrats’ attempts to blame Republicans for gerrymandering.

Gerrymandering––like the Ku Klux Klan, segregation of the Armed Forces, ending of Reconstruction, Jim Crow, current-day voting restrictions, and the list goes on––are all creations of, you guessed it, the Democrat Party.


The so-called attempt to disenfranchise minorities through gerrymandering has the Democrats’ DNA all over it, and if you know your history, you’d understand this statement. Full stop, a non-political assertion, the Democrats invented gerrymandering. Have you ever wondered where the name gerrymandering originated? Unfortunately, the answer does not live in textbook materials in your middle school civics book; however, it does live in a multitude of literature that is easily accessible courtesy of the internet.
We will own it.

And we will crush all you worthless MAGA Republicans next year.
 
Texas will have five Democrat districts, just like California has five Republican districts. How is that undemocratic?
 

Democrats have notoriously attempted to throw the Heisman hands at their policies when they turn south and point the finger to the Republicans, case in point:


  • The “Defund the Police” movement. Amid a crime wave in liberal cities and states, Democrats in the White House and big media tried, albeit unsuccessfully, to spin the defunding of our law enforcement on Republicans.
  • ObamaCare. During the 2012 presidential election, Democrats attempted to shift blame from the failing “Affordable” Care Act and deceptively tried to say the ACA was a Republican plan.
  • Voting Rights. This week alone, the president falsely claimed that “voting rights are under assault,” mindlessly spreading falsehoods that GOP states are hindering minorities from voting. When the reality is, Blue states are the most restrictive states for voting, look further than New York and Delaware, where it is harder for Americans of all backgrounds to vote in local, state, and federal elections.
  • Lastly, and the genesis of this piece, the Democrats’ attempts to blame Republicans for gerrymandering.

Gerrymandering––like the Ku Klux Klan, segregation of the Armed Forces, ending of Reconstruction, Jim Crow, current-day voting restrictions, and the list goes on––are all creations of, you guessed it, the Democrat Party.


The so-called attempt to disenfranchise minorities through gerrymandering has the Democrats’ DNA all over it, and if you know your history, you’d understand this statement. Full stop, a non-political assertion, the Democrats invented gerrymandering. Have you ever wondered where the name gerrymandering originated? Unfortunately, the answer does not live in textbook materials in your middle school civics book; however, it does live in a multitude of literature that is easily accessible courtesy of the internet.
Back when Democrats were the conservative white Southerners.
 
Texas will have five Democrat districts, just like California has five Republican districts. How is that undemocratic?
As with so many anti-democratic things going on in the era of trumpery, mid-decade gerrymandering gets added to the list.
 
That is the opposite of the truth.
then why is the public support fr democrats below 35%?

From Newsweek:
"

What To Know​

In the new poll, the Democratic Party carries a -32 net favorability rating among registered voters.

"The -32 rating appeared to be the lowest rating for either party going back to at least 1996," CNBC said of the survey.

The Party has a 24 percent positive rating and a 56 percent negative rating."
 

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