Imagine you are sharing a pizza with friends. If your friend gets to cut the slices, they might give themselves the biggest pieces with the most pepperoni! That is what gerrymandering does for politicians.
What Is It?
Politicians draw lines on a map to decide who votes where. They can group their supporters together or spread them out so that even if they get fewer total votes, they still win more seats.
Why Does It Matter?
Think about a classroom election. If all the fans of one student are in one big group, they might win that group by a huge amount but lose everywhere else. Another way is to put just enough of their fans into other groups so those friends also win.
Real Life Example
In real life, states like Maryland or Texas have had maps that looked very strange, almost like squiggly worms on the paper. These weird shapes help politicians stay in power even when people vote differently than expected.
Examples
Ask a question
See also
- How Can a Single Vote Decide an Election?
- How Can One Person Become the Leader of an Entire Country?
- How Can One Person Win an Election?
- How Do Political Parties Actually Work?
- How Can One Person Win an Entire Election?