Several western democracies, notably
Israel, the
Netherlands and
Slovakia employ an electoral system with only one (nationwide) voting district for election of national representatives. This precludes gerrymandering. Other European countries such as
Austria, the
Czech Republic or
Sweden, among many others, have electoral districts with fixed boundaries (usually one district for each administrative division). The number of representatives for each district can change after a census due to population shifts, but their boundaries do not change. This also effectively eliminates gerrymandering. Additionally, many countries where the president is directly elected by the citizens (e.g.
France,
Poland, among others) use only one electoral district for their presidential election with the winner of the popular vote winning the position, despite using multiple districts to elect representatives.
Australia National Gerrymandering has not typically been considered a problem in the national
Australian electoral system largely because drawing of electoral boundaries has typically been done by non-partisan
electoral commissions. There have been historical cases of
malapportionment, whereby the distribution of electors to electorates was not in proportion to the population
in several states. though most of these have been eliminated over time. In 1996, the
High Court of Australia in
McGinty v Western Australia confirmed the constitutional legality of electoral systems where different constituencies were differently weighted from others in the same system; in particular, the case approved Western Australia's system, described below.
South Australia Sir Thomas Playford was
Premier of the state of
South Australia from 1938 to 1965 as a result of a system of malapportionment, which became known as the
Playmander.
Queensland In the state of
Queensland, malapportionment combined with a gerrymander under
Country Party Premier Sir
Joh Bjelke-Petersen became nicknamed the
Bjelkemander in the 1970s and 1980s. The malapportionment had been originally designed to favor rural areas in the 1930s-1950s by a
Labor government who drew their support from agricultural and mine workers in rural areas. This helped Labor to stay in government from 1932 to 1957. As demographics and political views shifted over time, this system came to favor the Country Party instead. The Country Party led by
Frank Nicklin came to power in 1957, deciding to keep the malapportionment that favored them. In 1968, Joh Bjelke-Petersen became leader of the Country Party and
Premier. In the 1970s, he further expanded the malapportionment and gerrymandering which then became known as the
Bjelkemander. Under the system, electoral boundaries were drawn so that rural electorates had as few as half as many voters as metropolitan ones and regions with high levels of support for the Labor Party were concentrated into fewer electorates, allowing Bjelke-Petersen's government to remain in power for despite attracting substantially less than 50% of the vote. One district had non-contiguous parts. In the
1986 election, for example, the
National Party received 39.64% of the first preference vote and won 49 seats (in the 89 seat Parliament) whilst the Labor Opposition received 41.35% but won only 30 seats. Bjelke-Petersen also used the system to disadvantage
Liberal Party (traditionally allied with the Country Party) voters in urban areas, allowing Bjelke-Petersen's Country Party to rule alone, shunning the Liberals. Bjelke-Petersen also used Queensland Police brutality to quell protests, and Queensland under his government was frequently described as a
police state. In 1987 he was eventually forced to resign in disgrace after the
Fitzgerald Inquiry revealed wide-ranging corruption in his cabinet and the Queensland Police, resulting in the prosecution and jailing of Country Party members. Before resigning, Bjelke-Petersen asked the Governor of Queensland to sack his own cabinet, in an unsuccessful attempt to cling to power. Labor won the next election, and have remained the dominant party in Queensland since then. The Country Party and Liberal Party eventually merged in Queensland to become the
Liberal-National Party, while the Country Party in other states was renamed as the National Party.
Western Australia The
Western Australian Legislative Council was long gerrymandered via a malapportionment that clearly favored the rural conservative National Party, with the state split into electoral regions with significant differences in voter numbers. After the Labor Party won a landslide victory in both houses in the
2021 Western Australian state election, they abolished the electoral region system, replacing it with a single statewide constituency electing 37 members via optional preferential voting that creates a one-vote, one-value system.
City of Sydney Council In 2014 the conservative Liberal Party NSW State Government gerrymandered the local
City of Sydney council elections as part of their continued attempts to remove
Clover Moore from elected positions. Moore had already been removed as a state government representative by laws banning serving simultaneously as a state representative and a local council member, and their attempt to remove her from the Council saw the State Government introduce a law giving all businesses in the area two votes and requiring the council to constantly update the electoral roll and inform each business of its eligibility to vote. Moore called the laws an "undemocratic gerrymander" and election analyst
Antony Green said the changes were "clearly an attempt to disadvantage Clover Moore". The laws were specific to the City of Sydney council and not rolled out across the rest of the state councils. The attempt failed, and Moore retained her position as Lord Mayor of Sydney through multiple further elections.
Bahamas The
1962 Bahamian general election was likely influenced by gerrymandering. The election was the first to allow
universal suffrage. The
Progressive Liberal Party (PLP) received 44% of the vote, while the
United Bahamian Party (UBP) won only 36% of the vote. The other 20% was for
third parties and independents. Despite receiving a majority of the votes, the PLP won only 8 of the 33 seats in the
House of Assembly, while the UBP won 18 seats.
Canada Gerrymandering used to be prominent in
Canadian politics, but is no longer prominent, after independent
electoral boundary redistribution commissions were established in all provinces. Early in
Canadian history, both at the federal and provincial levels, gerrymandering was used to try to inflate representation for the government party. When
Alberta and
Saskatchewan became provinces in 1905, their original district boundaries were set forth in the respective
Alberta and
Saskatchewan Acts. Federal
Liberal cabinet members tried to devise the boundaries to ensure the election of provincial Liberal governments. As it happened, the Liberals took a majority of votes in each province anyway. During the reign of the
British Columbia Social Credit Party, British Columbia used a mixture of
single-member and multiple-member constituencies to pack or crack the opposition vote and to solidify the power of the Social Credit party, until
1991. After responsibility for drawing federal and provincial electoral boundaries was handed over to independent agencies, gerrymandering has largely been eliminated at those levels of government. In the 1950s,
Manitoba was the first province to authorize a non-partisan group to define constituency boundaries. Vancouver and some other cities do not district at all but elect their city councillors at-large city-wide. Although the boundaries of city wards are recommended by independent agencies,
city councils occasionally overrule them. That is much more likely if the city is not homogenous and concentration of voters in different neighborhoods have different opinions about city policy direction, making it clear to politicians the impact produced by drawing boundaries in different ways. In 2006, a controversy arose in
Prince Edward Island over the
provincial government's decision to throw out an electoral map drawn by an independent commission. Instead, they created two new maps. The government adopted the second of them, which was designed by the
caucus of the governing
Progressive Conservative Party of Prince Edward Island. Opposition parties and the media attacked Premier
Pat Binns for what they saw as gerrymandering of districts. Among other things, the government adopted a map that ensured that every current
Member of the Legislative Assembly from the premier's party had a district to run in for re-election, but in the original map, several had been redistricted. However, in the
2007 provincial election only eight Members of the Legislative Assembly were re-elected (one in a different district) (seven did not run for re-election; twelve were defeated), and the government suffered loss of 15 seats and was defeated. In advance of Toronto's 2018 municipal election, the Ontario government under Premier Doug Ford redrew Toronto's municipal boundaries, which some labelled as gerrymandering. Ahead of the
next Alberta general election, the majority opinion in the Electoral Boundaries Commission's final report recommended
Edmonton gain one new seat in the legislature while
Calgary gains two, with the additions coming largely at the expense of less populated rural areas in central and west Alberta. The minority opinion, put forward by the two
UCP-appointed members, recommended more seats in Edmonton and Calgary by creating more than a dozen new hybrid ridings combining rural and urban voters together while also not eliminating any rural ridings. The proposal gained criticism for being viewed as gerrymandering electoral districts in favor of rural voters, which made up a significant portion of UCP voters, while giving less representation to the urban voters that made up a higher share of voters for other parties.
Chile The
military government which ruled
Chile from 1973 to 1990 was ousted in a
national plebiscite in October 1988. Opponents of General
Augusto Pinochet voted NO to remove him from power and to trigger democratic elections, while supporters (mostly from the right-wing) voted YES to keep him in office for another eight years. Five months prior to the plebiscite, the regime published a law regulating future elections and referendums, but the configuration of electoral districts and the manner in which
National Congress seats would be awarded were only added to the law seven months after the referendum. For the
Chamber of Deputies (lower house),
60 districts were drawn by grouping (mostly) neighboring
communes (the smallest administrative subdivision in the country) within the same
region (the largest). It was established that two deputies would be elected per district, with the most voted coalition needing to outpoll its closest rival by a margin of more than 2-to-1 to take both seats. The results of the 1988 plebiscite show that neither the "NO" side nor the "YES" side outpolled the other by said margin in any of the newly established districts. They also showed that the vote/seat ratio was lower in districts which supported the "YES" side and higher in those where the "NO" was strongest. In spite of this, at the
1989 parliamentary election, the center-left opposition was able to capture both seats (the so-called
doblaje) in twelve out of 60 districts, winning control of 60% of the Chamber.
Senate constituencies were created by grouping all lower-chamber districts in a region, or by dividing a region into two constituencies of contiguous lower-chamber districts. The 1980 Constitution allocated a number of seats to appointed senators, making it harder for one side to change the Constitution by itself. The opposition won 22 senate seats in the 1989 election, taking both seats in three out of 19 constituencies, controlling 58% of the elected Senate, but only 47% of the full Senate. The unelected senators were eliminated in the 2005 constitutional reforms, but the electoral map has remained largely untouched (two new regions were created in 2007, one of which altered the composition of two senatorial constituencies; the first election to be affected by this minor change took place in 2013).
Croatia During the process of declaration and recognition of
independence of Croatia the
administrative divisions of the country was reorganized into
20 newly established counties and the city of
Zagreb. All of the counties had
Croat ethnic majority and were in part established as a gerrymandering effort to delegitimize
Republic of Serbian Krajina secession as well as any
regionalist requests in the historic provinces of
Istria and
Dalmatia while at the same time strengthening
dominant-party's control over the
Chamber of Counties.
Croatian Parliament electoral districts were also described as a form of gerrymandering preventing genuine political competition with each district selecting the same number of MPs while districts' population varied over the legally permitted ±5 percent. In 2010
Constitutional Court of Croatia stated in a report that population discrepancies among electoral districts is higher than ±5 percent and that districts' borders should be redrawn to address the concern.
2021 Croatian census indicated even further differences in population with the difference in needed number of votes in the smallest (
Electoral district IV) and the largest (
Electoral district VII) district for a single parliamentary mandate being 10,5 thousands votes. In October 2022 President of the Constitutional Court of Croatia
Miroslav Šeparović warned that this situation may jeopardize constitutionality of the following elections in Croatia.
El Salvador On 30 December 2022, Salvadoran president
Nayib Bukele tweeted that he believed that the country's
262 municipalities should be reduced to 50. Opposition politicians accused him of attempting to gerrymander the municipalities and consolidate his power ahead of the
2024 legislative election. On 20 February 2023,
Legislative Assembly President Ernesto Castro announced that the
Nuevas Ideas (NI) political party was formally evaluating a proposal to reduce the number of municipalities as suggested by Bukele.
France France is one of the few countries to let legislatures redraw the map with no check. In practice, the
Parliament of France sets up an executive commission. Districts called
arrondissements were used in the
Third Republic and under the
Fifth Republic they are called
circonscriptions. During the Third Republic, some reforms of arrondissements, which were also used for administrative purposes, were largely suspected to have been arranged to favor the kingmaker in the
National Assembly, the
Radical Party. The system of single-member
circonscriptions was replaced by one of multi-member districts based on the
departments for the
1919 and
1924 general elections. In some departments this threatened to give more representation to the hard left and hard right than the
assemblée thought acceptable. Thus
Pas-de-Calais and
Bouches-du-Rhône were split into two districts to minimise the influence of the
SFIO, while
Aveyron,
Calvados,
Loire-Inférieure,
Maine-et-Loire and
Basses-Pyrénées were split to diminish the chances of the conservative right. The department of
Seine was split into four districts on account of its population size, but to avoid guaranteeing success for the right in the west of the city and for the left in the east, borders were drawn from east to west, with a separate district for the
banlieue. For the 1924 elections Aveyron, Calvados and Basses-Pyrénées were reunited as their division had not brought the desired result, the right had won both districts. The dissolution of
Seine and
Seine-et-Oise départements by
de Gaulle was seen as a case of gerrymandering to counter communist influence around Paris. In the modern regime, there were three designs: in 1958 (regime change), 1987 (by
Charles Pasqua) and 2010 (by
Alain Marleix), three times by conservative governments. Pasqua's drawing was known to have been particularly good at gerrymandering, resulting in 80% of the seats with 58% of the vote in
1993, and forcing Socialists
in the 1997 snap election to enact multiple pacts with smaller parties in order to win again, this time as a coalition. In 2010, the Sarkozy government created 12 districts for expats. The
Constitutional council was called twice by the opposition to decide about gerrymandering, but it never considered partisan disproportions. However, it forced the Marleix committee to respect an 80–120% population ratio, ending a tradition dating back to the Revolution in which
départements, however small in population, would send at least two MPs. There were accusations that the constituencies in
New Caledonia had been adjusted to ensure a loyalist win. The
1st constituency combines the
Loyalty Islands (a separatist province) with the capital
Noumea, while the
2nd constituency combines the rural separatist-dominated
North Province There had been no separatist deputy from the
1986 to the
2024 election with the victory of
Emmanuel Tjibaou.
Germany Since
Germany utilizes a
proportional representation system, gerrymandering is rarely a problem. There was, however, one situation in which gerrymandering could affect an election. In Germany for a party to win any seat, it had to win at least 5% of the vote or three constituencies. This latter rule was applied for the last time in the
2021 federal election, in which the
Left entered the
Bundestag despite winning less than 5% of the vote. In 2000 the electoral constituencies were redrawn and the PDS, which entered the Bundestag in the elections of 1994 and 1998 with this rule, accused the SPD, who were in power at the time of redrawing the constituencies, of gerrymandering them by breaking up districts in East Berlin, a PDS stronghold, and combining them with West Berlin. In the
2002 federal election the PDS lost their third constituency and entered the Bundestag with only two seats. Had they won a third direct seat, they would have qualified for an additional 25 seats. Another scenario in which gerrymandering could affect German federal election was when a party won more constituencies than their overall share of the popular vote—those extra seats, called "
Überhangmandate". In the
Bundestag election of 2009,
Angela Merkel's
CDU/CSU gained 24 such extra seats, while no other party gained any; this skewed the result so much that the
Federal Constitutional Court of Germany issued two rulings declaring the existing election laws invalid and requiring the Bundestag to pass a new law limiting such extra seats to no more than 15. In 2013, Germany's Federal Constitutional Court ruled on the constitutionality of Überhangmandate. Each other party would receive seats as well to remedy the disproportion, thereby making it impossible to have disproportionate election results. As this could potentially lead to an ever increasing size of the Bundestag, in 2023 a reform was passed ending both extra seats and a party being able to gain seats without winning more than 5% of the vote.
Greece Gerrymandering has been rather common in
Greek history since organized parties with national ballots only appeared after the 1926 Constitution. The only case before that was the creation of the Piraeus electoral district in 1906, in order to give the Theotokis party a safe district. A notable case of gerrymandering in Greece was in the
1956 legislative election. While in previous elections the districts were based on the
prefecture level (νομός), for 1956 the country was split in districts of varying sizes, some being the size of prefectures, some the size of sub-prefectures (επαρχία) and others somewhere in between. In small districts the winning party would take all seats, in intermediate size, it would take most and there was proportional representation in the largest districts. The districts were created in such a way that small districts were those that traditionally voted for the right while large districts were those that voted against the right. This system has become known as the three-phase (τριφασικό) system or the
baklava system (because, as baklava is split into full pieces and corner pieces, the country was also split into disproportionate pieces). The opposition, being composed of the center and the left, formed a coalition with the sole intent of changing the electoral law and then calling new elections. Even though the centrist and leftist opposition won the popular vote (1,620,007 votes against 1,594,992), the right-wing
ERE won the majority of seats (165 to 135) and was to lead the country for the next two years.
Hong Kong In
Hong Kong, functional constituencies are demarcated by the government and defined in statutes, making them prone to gerrymandering. The functional constituency for the information technology sector was particular criticized for gerrymandering and voteplanting. There are also
gerrymandering concerns in the constituencies of
district councils.
Hungary In 2011,
Fidesz politician
János Lázár proposed a redesign to Hungarian voting districts; considering the territorial results of previous elections, this redesign would favor right-wing parties according to the opposition. Since then, the law has been passed by the Fidesz-majority
National Assembly. By the political think tanks and media close to the opposition, it took twice as many votes to gain a seat in some election districts as in some others. However, their findings are controversial. Gerrymandering was seen in the
2018 election results.
Ireland Until the 1980s
Dáil boundaries in
Ireland were drawn not by an independent commission but by government ministers. Successive arrangements by governments of all political characters had been attacked as gerrymandering. Ireland uses the
single transferable vote, and as well as the actual boundaries drawn, the main tool of gerrymandering has been the number of seats per constituency used, with three-seat constituencies normally benefiting the strongest parties in an area, whereas four-seat constituencies normally help smaller parties. In 1947 the rapid rise of new party
Clann na Poblachta threatened the position of the governing party
Fianna Fáil. The government of
Éamon de Valera introduced the
Electoral (Amendment) Act 1947, which increased the size of the Dáil from 138 to 147 and increased the number of three-seat constituencies from fifteen to twenty-two. The result was described by the journalist and historian
Tim Pat Coogan as "a blatant attempt at gerrymander which no
Six-County Unionist could have bettered." The following February the
1948 general election was held and Clann na Poblachta secured ten seats instead of the nineteen they would have received proportional to their vote. The last nationwide delimitation was done in 2009 and two successive elections threw two different results giving mandate to both the political parties one after another.
Italy A hypothesis of gerrymandering was theorized by constituencies drawn by the electoral act of 2017, so-called
Rosatellum.
Kuwait From 1981 to 2005, Kuwait was divided into 25
electoral districts in order to over-represent the government's supporters (the 'tribes'). In July 2005, a new law for electoral reforms was approved which prevented electoral gerrymandering by cutting the number of electoral districts from 25 to 5. The
government of Kuwait found that 5 electoral districts resulted in a powerful parliament with the majority representing the opposition. A new law was crafted by the government of Kuwait and signed by the Amir to gerrymander the districts to 10 allowing the government's supporters to regain the majority.
Lithuania For the
2024 Lithuanian parliamentary election, the electoral districts were redrawn. 10 elderships of the
Vilnius District Municipality which has a large Polish minority were merged with elderships of
Vilnius to form the new Southern Vilnius district thus extending the total count of districts in Vilnius from 13 to 14. The
LLRA–KŠS criticized the decision to choose Polish-dominated towns like
Juodšiliai and
Valčiūnai over Lithuanian-dominated towns like
Riešė and
Avižieniai to merge with Vilnius.
Riešė and
Avižieniai remain in the Riešė district (previously known as
Nemenčinė district) even though its predecessor was considered "way too large".
Malaysia The practice of gerrymandering has been around in the country since its independence in 1957. The ruling coalition at that time,
Barisan Nasional (BN; English: "National Front"), has been accused of controlling the election commission by revising the boundaries of constituencies. For example, during the
13th General Election in 2013, Barisan Nasional won 60% of the seats in the
Malaysian Parliament despite only receiving 47% of the popular vote. Malapportionment has also been used at least since 1974, when it was observed that in one state alone (Perak), the parliamentary constituency with the most voters had more than ten times as many voters as the one with the fewest voters. These practices finally failed BN in the
14th General Election on 9 May 2018, when the opposing
Pakatan Harapan (PH; English: "Alliance of Hope") won despite perceived efforts of gerrymandering and malapportionment from the incumbent.
Malta The
Labour Party that won in
1981, even though the
Nationalist Party got the most votes, did so because of its gerrymandering. A 1987 constitutional amendment awarding compensatory seats to make the final seat tally closer reflect actual vote share prevented that situation from reoccurring.
Nepal After the restoration of democracy in 1990,
Nepali politics has well exercised the practice of gerrymandering with the view to take advantage in the election. It was often practiced by
Nepali Congress, which remained in power in most of the time. Learning from this, the reshaping of constituency was done for constituent assembly and the opposition now wins elections. In 2015, the government rewrote the
Constitution of Nepal, which included a rewriting of electoral boundaries. Parties in the southern region of
Terai believe the new boundaries discriminated against marginalized groups, like the
Madhesis, Tharus, and
Janajatis, and that the boundaries "packed" the groups. Protesting occurred in Terai and other areas in southern Nepal, raising concern from across the country.
Philippines Congressional districts in the Philippines were originally based on an ordinance from the 1987
Constitution, which was created by the
Constitutional Commission, which was ultimately based on legislative districts as they were drawn in 1907. The same constitution gave
Congress of the Philippines the power to legislate new districts, either through a national redistricting bill or piecemeal redistricting per province or city. Congress has never passed a national redistricting bill since the approval of the 1987 constitution, while it has incrementally created 34 new districts, out of the 200 originally created in 1987. This allows Congress to create new districts once a place reaches 250,000 inhabitants, the minimum required for its creation. With this, local dynasties, through congressmen, can exert influence in the district-making process by creating bills carving new districts from old ones. In time, as the population of the Philippines increases, these districts, or groups of it, will be the basis of carving new provinces out of existing ones. An example was in
Camarines Sur, where two districts were divided into three districts which allegedly favors the Andaya and the Arroyo families; it caused Rolando Andaya and
Dato Arroyo, who would have otherwise run against each other, run in separate districts, with one district allegedly not even surpassing the 250,000-population minimum. The
Supreme Court later ruled that the 250,000 population minimum does not apply to an additional district in a province. The resulting splits would later be the cause of another gerrymander, where the province would be split into a new province called
Nueva Camarines; the bill was defeated in the Senate in 2013.
Singapore In recent decades, critics have accused the ruling
People's Action Party (PAP) of unfair electoral practices to maintain significant majorities in the
Parliament of Singapore. Among the complaints are that the government uses gerrymandering. The
Elections Department was established as part of the executive branch under the
Prime Minister of Singapore, rather than as an independent body. Critics have accused it of giving the ruling party the power to decide polling districts and polling sites through electoral engineering, based on poll results in previous elections. Members of opposition parties claim that the
Group Representation Constituency system is "synonymous to gerrymandering", pointing out examples of
Cheng San GRC and
Eunos GRC which were dissolved by the Elections Department with voters redistributed to other constituencies after opposition parties gained ground in elections.
South Africa The landmark
1948 general election was influenced by provisions of the
Constitution granting rural areas more constituencies in
Parliament than urban areas. Thus the
white-supremacist National Party (NP) won a plurality against the more moderate
United Party (UP) despite receiving fewer votes. The NP subsequently implemented the
apartheid system of racial segregation.
Spain during the
Bourbon Restoration. The particular configuration of the
Cartagena constituency, divided into three geographically isolated territories, has been identified by Ruiz Abellán (1991) as a case of gerrymandering aimed at neutralizing the vote of Cartagena and the mining areas by adding rural votes, which were more susceptible to control by the
political establishment. Until the establishment of the
Second Spanish Republic in 1931,
Spain used both single-member and multi-member constituencies in
general elections. Multi-member constituencies were only used in some big cities. Some gerrymandering examples included the districts of
Vilademuls or
Torroella de Montgrí in
Catalonia. These districts were created in order to prevent the
Federal Democratic Republican Party from winning a seat in
Figueres or
La Bisbal and
to secure a seat for the dynastic parties. Since 1931, the constituency boundaries have matched the
provincial boundaries. After the
Francoist dictatorship, during the
transition to democracy, these fixed provincial constituencies were reestablished in Section 68.2 of the current
1978 Spanish Constitution, so gerrymandering is impossible in general elections. There are not
winner-takes-all elections in Spain except for the tiny territories of
Ceuta and
Melilla (which only have one representative each); everywhere else the number of representatives assigned to a constituency is
proportional to its population and calculated according to a national law, so tampering with under- or over-representation is difficult too.
European, some
regional and municipal elections are held under single,
at-large multi-member constituencies with
proportional representation and gerrymandering is not possible either. In fact, there is not even a direct translation of the term "gerrymandering" into Spanish and first-generation
Hispanic and Latino Americans have struggled with such an unfamiliar concept in the
Spanish-speaking world.
Sri Lanka Sri Lanka's new
Local Government elections process has been the talking point of gerrymandering since its inception. Even though that talk was more about the ward-level, it is also seen in some local council areas too.
Sudan In the
election of 2010, there were numerous examples of gerrymandering throughout the entire country of
Sudan. A report from the Rift Valley Institute uncovered violations of Sudan's electoral law, where constituencies were created that were well below and above the required limit. According to Sudan's National Elections Act of 2008, no constituency can have a population that is 15% greater or less than the average constituency size. The Rift Valley Report uncovered a number of constituencies that are in violation of this rule. Examples include constituencies in
Jonglei,
Warrap,
South Darfur, and several other states.
Turkey Turkey has used gerrymandering in the city of
Istanbul in the
2009 municipal elections. Just before the election Istanbul was divided into new districts. Large low income neighborhoods were bundled with the rich neighborhoods to enable the
AKP to win the municipal elections.
United Kingdom Northern Ireland Parliamentary elections Prior to the establishment of
Home Rule in
Northern Ireland, the UK government had installed the
single transferable vote (STV) system in Ireland to secure fair elections in terms of proportional representation in its
Parliaments. After two elections under that system,
in 1929 Stormont changed the electoral system to be the same as the rest of the
United Kingdom: a single-member
first past the post system. The only exception was for the election of four Stormont MPs to represent the
Queen's University of Belfast. Some believe that the boundaries were gerrymandered to under-represent Nationalists. They have argued that the electoral boundaries for the
Parliament of Northern Ireland were not gerrymandered to a greater level than that produced by any single-winner election system, and that the actual number of Nationalist MPs barely changed under the revised system (it went from 12 to 11 and later went back up to 12).
United States (outlined in red), in 2002, left, and 2004, right. In 2003, the majority Republicans in the Texas legislature
redistricted the state, diluting the voting power of the heavily Democratic county by parceling its residents out to more Republican districts. '' was a
United States Supreme Court case involving the
redistricting and racial gerrymandering of
North Carolina's 12th congressional district (pictured). The United States, among the first countries with an elected representative government, was the source of the term
gerrymander as stated above. The practice of gerrymandering the borders of new states continued past the
American Civil War and into the late 19th century. The
Republican Party used its control of Congress to secure the admission of more states in territories friendly to their party—the admission of
Dakota Territory as two states instead of one being a notable example. By the rules for representation in the
Electoral College, each new state carried at least three electoral votes regardless of its population. In 2018, Utah voters approved Proposition 4, known as the Better Boundaries Initiative, which created an independent redistricting commission and established standards intended to reduce partisan gerrymandering. In 2020, the Utah Legislature passed Senate Bill 200 (SB 200), weakening the commission’s authority by making its recommendations advisory rather than binding. Following the 2020 census, the Legislature adopted new congressional district maps in 2021. Critics alleged that the map “cracked” Salt Lake County, a Democratic-leaning population center, among all four U.S. House districts, ensuring consistent Republican advantages. Advocacy groups—including the League of Women Voters of Utah and Mormon Women for Ethical Government—filed lawsuits arguing that the Legislature’s actions violated Proposition 4 and diluted voters’ rights. In July 2024, the Utah Supreme Court ruled unanimously that the Legislature’s alterations to Proposition 4 must meet a compelling state interest and be narrowly tailored, setting a high bar for changes to voter-approved initiatives. In August 2025, Third District Court Judge
Dianna M. Gibson invalidated SB 200 and the 2021 congressional map, holding them unconstitutional under Utah’s constitution. The court ordered the Legislature to adopt a new map compliant with Proposition 4 by September 24, 2025, for use in the 2026 elections. The ruling may make at least one congressional seat more competitive and has broader implications for the balance of power between the Utah Legislature and voter initiatives regarding redistricting reform. All
redistricting in the United States has been contentious because it has been controlled by
political parties vying for power. As a consequence of the decennial
census required by the
United States Constitution, districts for members of the
House of Representatives typically need to be redrawn whenever the number of members in a state changes. In many states, state legislatures redraw boundaries for state legislative districts at the same time.
State legislatures have used gerrymandering along racial lines both to decrease and increase minority representation in
state governments and congressional delegations. In
Ohio, a conversation between Republican officials was recorded that demonstrated that redistricting was being done to aid their political candidates. Furthermore, the discussions assessed the race of voters as a factor in redistricting, on the premise that African-Americans tend to back
Democratic Party candidates. Republicans removed approximately 13,000
African-American voters from the district of
Jim Raussen, a Republican candidate for the
House of Representatives, in an apparent attempt to tip the scales in what was once a competitive district for Democratic candidates. Rather than allowing more political influence, some states have shifted redistricting authority from politicians and given it to non-partisan
redistricting commissions. The states of
Washington,
Arizona, and
California have created
standing committees for redistricting following the
2010 census. It has been argued however that in California's case, gerrymandering still continued despite this change.
Rhode Island and
New Jersey have developed
ad hoc committees, but developed the past two decennial reapportionments tied to new census data. Florida's amendments 5 and 6, meanwhile, established rules for the creation of districts but did not mandate an independent commission.
Michigan voters in 2018 approved a proposal to create an independent commission to draw new congressional maps following the
2020 United States census, thereby removing the responsibility from the state legislature. Additionally,
Ohio voters in 2018 modified their existing redistricting statutes to have a commission draw new maps. However, the ability of the state legislature to draw congressional maps remained, and this proposes the risk of gerrymandering. Other states that have implemented commissions in the 2018 midterm cycle include
Colorado. International election observers from the
Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe Office for Democratic Institutions and Human Rights, who were invited to observe and report on the
2004 national elections, expressed criticism of the U.S. congressional redistricting process and made a recommendation that the procedures be reviewed to ensure genuine competitiveness of Congressional election contests. In June 2019, the
United States Supreme Court ruled 5–4 in
Lamone v. Benisek and
Rucho v. Common Cause that
federal courts lacked
jurisdiction to hear challenges over partisan gerrymandering. In July 2025, states in the United States began considering mid-decade redistricting proposals. Following the 2024 elections, control of the U.S. House of Representatives was narrowly divided, prompting both major political parties to pursue strategies to maximize their representation ahead of the 2026 midterm elections. In some states, bipartisan gerrymandering is the norm. State legislators from both parties sometimes agree to draw congressional district boundaries in a way that ensures the re-election of most or all incumbent representatives from both parties.
Racial gerrymandering With the
civil rights movement and passage of the
Voting Rights Act of 1965, federal enforcement and protections of suffrage for all citizens were enacted. Gerrymandering for the purpose of reducing the political influence of a racial or ethnic minority group was prohibited. After the Voting Rights Act of 1965 was passed, some states created "majority-minority" districts to enhance minority voting strength. This practice, also called "
affirmative gerrymandering", was supposed to redress historic discrimination and ensure that
ethnic minorities would gain some seats and representation in government.
Venezuela Prior to the
26 September 2010 legislative elections, gerrymandering took place via an
addendum to the electoral law by the
National Assembly of Venezuela. In the subsequent election,
Hugo Chávez's political party, the
United Socialist Party of Venezuela drew 48% of the votes overall, while the opposition parties (the
Democratic Unity Roundtable and the
Fatherland for All parties) collectively drew 52% of the votes. However, due to the re-allocation of electoral legislative districts prior to the election, Chávez's United Socialist Party of Venezuela was awarded over 60% of the spots in the National Assembly (98 deputies), while 67 deputies were elected for the two opposition parties combined. ==Information gerrymandering==