Sue Sturgis

Why we have the right-wing majority of the US Supreme Court to thank for GOP’s House takeover

Number of previously Democratic U.S. House seats Republicans captured in this year's midterm elections by drawing congressional districts rigged to their advantage, with the chamber now under GOP control while counting is still underway in some races more than a week after Election Day: more than 12

Year in which the U.S. Supreme Court ruled in Rucho v. Common Cause, a case out of North Carolina, that partisan gerrymandering can't be challenged in the federal courts: 2019

Month in which the high court ruled in a redistricting case out of Alabama titled Merrill v. Milligan to suspend the Voting Rights Act's ban on racial gerrymandering, thereby freeing Republican lawmakers in that state and others including Florida, Georgia, Louisiana, and Texas to draw maps that diminished Black voting power: 2/2022

Number of words the Supreme Court majority—which did not include dissenting Chief Justice John Roberts—offered to explain its decision to overturn the ruling of the lower court's three-judge panel, which had two Trump appointees: 0

As a consequence of Milligan, estimated number of congressional seats lost by Democrats this year: 7 to 10

In Florida, number of congressional seats the Republican Party picked up under a voting map ordered by Gov. Ron DeSantis (R) after he rejected a less extreme one drawn by the GOP-controlled legislature: 4

Year when Florida voters added an amendment to the state constitution to bar gerrymandering, which observers say DeSantis's congressional map likely violates: 2010

Month in which the Florida Supreme Court declined to rule DeSantis's gerrymandered voting map unconstitutional: 6/2022

Percent of the population that's Black in Florida's former 5th Congressional District, which had been represented by Black Democrat Al Lawson before the new map split it up and moved the parts into Republican districts: 46

The GOP's edge in Florida's congressional delegation under the previous congressional map: 16-11

The GOP's edge under DeSantis's map: 20-8

Date on which a federal court allowed a lawsuit challenging Florida's congressional map for diminishing Black power to move forward, though it removed DeSantis as a defendant by reasoning that governors do not directly enforce the map: 11/8/2022

The new congressional delegation party split in North Carolina, where court-ordered districts replaced a map drawn by the Republican-controlled legislature that was expected to yield a 10-4 GOP advantage : 7-7

New Republican majority on the previously Democratic-controlled North Carolina Supreme Court, which could result in a 10-4 map in 2024: 5-2

Company Behind Dakota Access Pipeline 'Strong-Armed' Landowners and Protesters, Says Federal Lawsuit

Four Pennsylvania residents filed a federal lawsuit this week against Texas-based pipeline company Energy Transfer Partners (ETP), claiming the Fortune 500 company and its subsidiaries violated their constitutional rights by engaging in illegal surveillance and harassment against landowners and pipeline protesters and caused emotional distress and other harm.

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12 Pieces of Proof Laying Bare the GOP Lust for Power and Racial Discrimination

Editor's Note: Until last week's Supreme Court ruling on North Carolina's extreme redistricting, federal courts have tended to look at political mapmaking as either overtly partisan, which has been legal, or as racially discriminatory, which has been illegal. In North Carolina, the Court's 5-3 majority said race and party overlap and it told a lower court to oversee drawing new U.S. House districts. This list, from Sue Sturgis of Facing South, summarizes some of the history and issues surrounding extreme GOP gerrymanders in North Carolina and elsewhere.

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18 Staggering New Numbers on Corporate Income Tax Dodging As Average Americans Each Pay $9,100

The 35 percent federal corporate income tax rate is a myth, according to a new Institute on Taxation and Economic Policy report that studied 258 consistently profitable Fortune 500 firms over an eight-year period. Among the sectors that paid the least were electric utilities and oil, gas and pipeline companies.

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13 Facts Showing Why Civil Rights Leaders Are Asking for Extra International Election Monitors this November

AlterNet editor's note: On August 23, the Leadership Conference on Civil and Human rights announced its request to an international election-monitoring body for additional Election-Day scrutiny of polling places for the 2016 presidential election. The letter sent by the LCCH to the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe reads, in part: "Now a presidential candidate—who has made demonizing minorities a central part of his campaign strategy—is encouraging his supporters to challenge voters at polls in 'certain sections' of Pennsylvania, an apparent reference to 59 mostly African-American precincts. Efforts at voter intimidation stemming back to the mid-1970s resulted in a federal court banning the Republican Party from engaging in challenge and intimidation efforts aimed at voters of color." Below is an index of facts about the past and present state of voting rights in the United States.

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The Inequality Index: What Can Be Done to Close America's Growing Wealth Gap?

Two new reports document the growing chasm between the rich and the poor in the United States: "Billionaire Bonanza: The Forbes 400 and the Rest of Us" by Chuck Collins and Josh Hoxie of the Institute for Policy Studies, and "The American Middle Class Is Losing Ground" by Pew Research Center. Most of the numbers in the index below come from those reports.

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A Statewide Attack on Public Health and the Environment Is Underway in North Carolina

Environmental advocates in North Carolina are stepping up pressure on Gov. Pat McCrory (R) to veto a bill they say is the most anti-environmental of the 2015 legislative session — and possibly of McCrory's tenure.

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What Tennessee Paid to Lure Lawbreaking Volkswagen to Chattanooga

The scandal over Volkwagen's illegal scheme to sell diesel vehicles equipped with software designed to cheat U.S. air pollution limits is widening.

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'Reckless Gamble': Obama's Atlantic Drilling Plan

More than 300 businesses along the East Coast sent a letter to President Obama this week urging his administration to drop the Atlantic from the proposed plan for offshore oil and gas drilling through 2022.

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Resistance to Atlantic Offshore Drilling Is Growing

Monthly town council meetings in Kure Beach, North Carolina, an oceanfront community of 2,000 people located 15 miles south of the port city of Wilmington, are usually quiet affairs, drawing a half-dozen or so residents to discuss mundane matters like board appointments and budgets.

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Gulf Fishermen Protest Re-opening of Fishing Grounds

As the Gulf Coast's seafood industry works to bolster public confidence in the safety of its product, fishermen from four Gulf states held a press conference over the weekend to voice concerns about what they consider to be the premature opening of commercial fishing grounds following the BP oil disaster.

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Startling Revelations about Three Mile Island Disaster Raise Doubts Over Nuke Safety

This story originally appeared on Facing South, online magazine of the Institute for Southern Studies.

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