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AP U.S. Government 3.4 Institutions of National Government. How many justices must agree to hear a case for the Court to grant cert?
AP U.S. Government 1.2 Institutions of National Government. Which of the following statements about Wesberry v. Sanders is not true?
AP U.S. Government 1.3 Institutions of National Government. What did the Twenty-fifth Amendment do?
AP U.S. Government 1.2 Institutions of National Government 213 Views
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AP U.S. Government 1.2 Institutions of National Government. Which of the following statements about Wesberry v. Sanders is not true?
Transcript
- 00:00
Thank you We sneak and here's your shmoop du jour
- 00:05
brought to you by one man one vote it's Why
- 00:08
reality shows have a panel of judges All right which
- 00:11
of the following statements about westbury v sanders is not
- 00:15
true and hear the potential answers are so four of
Full Transcript
- 00:18
these air true one of them All right Well james
- 00:23
westbury a citizen of fulton county georgia decided he'd had
- 00:26
enough of governor karl e sanders plan for apportionment which
- 00:30
basically means how congressional districts were divided in the state
- 00:34
let's see how this kernel of an argument transformed the
- 00:38
political landscape Was westbury v sanders a a court case
- 00:42
addressing unequal congressional representation in georgia It sure wass westbury
- 00:48
was frustrated that his district had grown so much in
- 00:51
population that its lone congressman represented two to three times
- 00:54
as many voters as other congressmen in less populated districts
- 00:59
So we can very well eliminate a did westbury v
- 01:02
sanders be result in increased congressional representation for urban areas
- 01:08
Culture did the supreme court ruled that congressional districts must
- 01:12
contain roughly the same number of people so urban areas
- 01:15
found their congressional representation increasing alongside their growing populations Oh
- 01:20
that pollsters b it westbury v sanders see contribute to
- 01:25
the establishment of one man one vote while one man
- 01:28
one vote refers to the idea that if we live
- 01:30
in a similar district with the same number of representatives
- 01:33
as a larger district our votes count for more so
- 01:36
far district has say one hundred people and we've got
- 01:39
one wrapped but another district has two hundred people and
- 01:43
only one rap than our vote counts twice a cz
- 01:45
much as those folks in the other district c the
- 01:48
math there is very clever So the odds are against
- 01:50
you as well Was the westbury v sanders ruling de
- 01:53
similar to that in reynolds Be sims Will reynolds be
- 01:56
sims which involved alabama state legislative district also dealt with
- 02:01
the same one man one vote principal Both these neighbors
- 02:04
can't decide on a plan that means westbury v sanders
- 02:07
did not eat result in increased representation for poor rural
- 02:12
areas like the other way around westbury v sanders leveled
- 02:15
the charge that rural areas were actually overrepresented since they
- 02:19
had the same number of congressmen for a lower overall
- 02:22
population So is the correct answer This intervention by the
- 02:26
supreme court reversed one aspect of gerrymandering Where states intentionally
- 02:30
draw their districts to benefit incumbent candidates Looks like westbury 00:02:33.973 --> [endTime] took the path of least redistrict ints
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