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Culture War Roundup for the week of April 20, 2026

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Virginia is voting on redrawing their congressional districts today. Here is the Wikipedia entry.

The main highlight is that it would change Virginia from 6-5 democrat-republican split to a 10-1 split. It is being sold by Democrats as an effort to counter Republican gerrymandering in other states. It is being panned by Republicans as unfair representation, and an election map that looks like Fairfax county (rich county in northern Virginia) gets to elect about half of the state's representatives.

I'm a Virginia resident. So I've been getting lots of mailers about the issue and simple vote "yes" or "no" signs are everywhere.

I'm very frustrated with the whole thing. First for Trump kicking off this fight. Second with the Democrats in Virginia that have made a ridiculously bullshit map. I still have yet to hear anyone from the "yes" side explain how this is good for Virginia other than "fight Trump". I even read one article that had a title implying it would be about voters not feeling represented, and it turns out the content of the article was about democratic leaders addressing the democrat voters in the now single solitary red district. No content about how Republican voters might feel in the 10 other districts.

If this level of bullshit is on the table I feel like other proposals that get shot down for being "crazy" in normal times might end up back on the table. Like a bunch of Virginia counties seceding and joining West Virginia. Or the right to giant congress

I'm particularly peeved by the complete abdication of the courts, here. Partisan gerrymander is, ultimately, legal; it's not their place to complain that a lobster district looks too goofy.

But Virginia does, specifically, have a lot of process requirements, some statutory and some constitutional, for that constrain this redistricting amendment. Some of those constraints are matters of opinion:

Should the Constitution of Virginia be amended to allow the General Assembly to temporarily adopt new congressional districts to restore fairness in the upcoming elections, while ensuring Virginia's standard redistricting process resumes for all future redistricting after the 2030 census?

That's a pretty hefty thumb on the scale, in my opinion, but I'm sure some others would disagree (in the distance, Mark Elias and Darwin sneeze). Other components, however, are straightforward math, such as whether 90 days occurred between the amendment being announced and the voting, or whether an election of the house of representatives had occurred in between. There is no universe where the law complied with those mechanisms; proof against is available with the use of a calendar alone.

Now, the courts could have stepped in. And, indeed, a lower court did. The state supreme court stepped in and said that the amendment process could continue, and only after the vote is complete would they review the constitutionality and legality of the amendment process.

There's some funny potential situations. If I trusted the Virginia Supreme Court, it'd be a really funny as a parallel to the old California Prop 8 were massive amounts of manpower and capital and political force applied to a constitutional amendment that never went into effect, but I don't. I'm very skeptical that the people who wouldn't put the brakes on a blatantly illegal process two months ago will do so now that millions of Virginians have put their names on it, and unless the amendment vote is still getting tabulated in six months, I don't even know that they could. It'd be funny to watch another cycle of everyone calling for other people to start de-escalating first, except we already saw several Red Tribe states pull back from less-extreme gerrymandering and I can't argue for them ever doing it again if this sticks.

The people could react. Everyone pretended that they were appalled by Jay Jones (for almost a whole month!), and Spanberger's claimed moderation immediately turned into a giant illegal gun grab and tax heist, and okay, I can't keep a straight face. The DC blob is blue, deep blue, and self-destructively blue, not just in the sense of having politics different than mine, but willing to melt down everything for that political flag. If the constitutional amendment was titled "Flip Republicans The Bird" and its actual text delivered a warm steaming pile of dogshit to the mailbox of every yes voter on a daily basis, it'd still beat 40%. The best case scenario is a staggeringly close loss that kinda embarrasses Spanberger and Obama, and the most optimistic Red Tribers are more praying that it's just a close win rather than a 5%+ one.

It could end up a stupidmander, which would be the funniest of all possibilities, but that depends on people reacting after the vote. Gfl.

But this whole combination -- the blatant manipulation of rules and expertise for their benefit, the complete disavowal of others as ever getting a voice in policy, and the sheer self-dealing and corruption -- is just the nature of politics, today. I'd like to say the Blue Tribe is worse about it, but if that's the case, it's just because the Red Tribe has taken the stupid party hat (cfe Texas).

but if that's the case, it's just because the Red Tribe has taken the stupid party hat (cfe Texas).

California?