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Notes -
It's also unfair to just be counting it for federal elections. State legislatures are often gerrymandered as well (or at least split in a way that is effectively gerrymandered) such as my state of NC where despite being a purple swing state, is effectively a red state in terms of state government despite having a Dem governor right now. The NC governorship is one of the weakest in the country due to state legislatures gerrymandering and things like Republican governors literally signing bills to limit their own power before leaving the position for a Dem successor. This is a routine thing the state legislature does, transferring power away from positions that Dems win to positions that Republicans win. Even when a Democrat wins in NC, they still lose.
The NC senate is 30:20 and house 71:49 for Republican/Democrat makeup. The GOP has held a veto proof majority until recently and are still so close they barely have to try to pass things they want. Again, this is considered a purple swing state that regularly votes in Democrats. It doesn't matter, the gerrymandering is simply too strong.
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