Gerrymandering is when politicians change the shape of voting areas to help themselves win elections.
Imagine you and your friends are dividing up a candy jar for a game. Instead of splitting it fairly, someone rearranges the candies so that most of them end up in their own group, that’s gerrymandering!
How It Works
Politicians draw voting maps like a puzzle. If they make the areas where people live look strange, maybe long and skinny or all bunched together, they can control who wins.
For example, if a neighborhood has lots of people who vote for one team, but politicians split them up into different groups, it's easier for the other team to win more games overall. It’s like taking some candies from one group and giving them to another so that their group gets more candies in total, even though they had less at first.
Why It Matters
Gerrymandering can make elections unfair. People might feel like their votes don’t matter if the map is drawn in a tricky way. But it’s all about how politicians choose to divide and control the areas where people vote.
Examples
- A town is split into two districts, with one district having more of the mayor’s supporters to ensure he wins both seats.
- Creating funny-shaped districts just to make sure a specific group always loses.
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See also
- How Does Gerrymandering Really Warp Elections?
- How Does Gerrymandering: How Your Elections Are Rigged Work?
- How Does Gerrymandering, explained | USA TODAY Work?
- How Can a Single Vote Change the Whole Election?
- What is gerrymandering?