Friday, February 13, 2015

Voting Districts and Gerrymandering

You've maybe heard about gerrymandering, and if you have you've most likely heard of it with somewhat of a negative connotation. That's with good reason - gerrymandering is really bad.

For those of you unfamiliar with it, here's a brief example. Let's say you're the Blue Yuppies, a political party that is really popular with the hipster downtown folk, but not so much with suburban soccer moms. You won the last election in a city with four seats, but have lost popularity recently, and your polling tells you that neighborhoods in your city would vote like this in an upcoming election:

Super idealized city
Oh no! Only 28 out of 64 neighborhoods would vote for you! How can you stay in power in the upcoming election? If this city has to have four seats because of its population, and you're the party in power, maybe you could fiddle with the seat boundaries a bit to maximize your chances? Here are some options:


Intriguing. In all four options, the city is divided evenly into 4 districts. The top left option divides seats more or less into downtown vs suburbia and results in a 50-50 split, which is pretty good considering the Blue Yuppies don't even have 50% of the popular vote. The top right and bottom left options result in losses. Crazy enough, though, with just a bit of cleverness, the Blue Yuppies can sacrifice one district to their opponents, and just squeak by with three out of four of the seats - a solid majority - even though they have less than half the popular vote. Crazy!

This is what gerrymandering is. Redistricting is a huge power to have over your opponents between elections, because it can be leveraged quite well to retain power even against the popular vote of an area. And it's not always necessarily about giving yourself the comfortable easy seats - as in the bottom right example above, lumping all your opponent's support together can be a very effective way to secure the rest for yourself.

This often results in very funny looking districts. In the first three examples above, you could maybe justify most of the districts as effectively representing a region of the city. The gerrymandered one, though, has long snaky districts, in order to get the right sorts of people voting together.

Gerrymandering is alleged to happen in the USA a lot. Take a look at some of these examples and decide for yourself:

Capture ALL the cities!
Snaky...
And my personal favorite:
Because you know that highway is an important part of the district...
After too many shenanigans like this going on, some states are starting to insist on bipartisan committees to come up with new district boundaries, hoping to take the advantage away from the parties in power. The problem with this, though, is that the only thing the committee members from different parties tend to agree on is that they don't want to lose the next elections, and they may end up carving out districts that serve mostly to maintain their seats, leading to safe and boring elections. Yikes. 

Canada, on the other hand, tends to have completely independent commissions in charge of redistricting, with the goal of avoiding gerrymandering. But how well does our system actually work?

One way to check for potential gerrymandering is to check a district for its compactness. The underlying assumption here is that no point in a riding should be too far away from the middle, and that the riding should represent a reasonably consistent geographical area. Shapes like circles or squares are the most compact, shapes like Congressional District 4 up there aren't.

This fun report took a very in-depth look at compactness in voting districts in both the US and Canada. They measured compactness by comparing the perimeter of a district with the square root of the area, and then factored it so that a perfect square has a compactness value of exactly 1.

So how did Canada compare to the US? The average compactness values for 2006 were:

  • Canada: 1.400
  • USA: 2.103
From the report, the historical comparisons look like this:

Hill, 2009
For reference, if the average national districts were rectangles with the same areas, this is how they'd look:

So on that measure, Canada's pretty much always been better than the USA in terms of compactness (and, implied, in terms of likely gerrymandering), and the USA has seen a marked increase since about the early 1990s. 

But wait! Canada just did a full round of redistricting! We now have 338 ridings instead of 308. These are exciting times! Just how well did the commission do?

My analysis of the 338 districts using the same methodology as Hill (2009) shows an average compactness of: 1.408. In other words, nothing too much to worry about form a gerrymandering point of view! Hooray Canada for mostly transparent electoral systems!

The averages per province ranged from 1.27 for PEI to 1.59 for New Brunswick, and only six federal ridings had a compactness score worse than the average American district.

Saskatchewan was solid (average: 1.31)
Newfoundland and Labrador averaged 1.52, because shores are tricky
The great thing is that Canadian boundaries are still good, even at the provincial legislature level. Of Alberta's 87 provincial electoral districts, the average compactness is still only 1.440, very similar to the federal average and still way lower than the American average. In fact, only one Albertan district is worse than the average American district. Take a look at this super cool interactive thingy I made:



With the exception of Chestermere-Rocky View (which looks like it's giving Calgary a hug), all of these ridings are pretty reasonable, and they're all better than the average American voting district.

Go Canada! Our politics may not always be pretty, but at least there's no sign of anyone actively tinkering with them!

11 comments:

Paul said...

Compactness is definitely desirable for any voting district but keep in mind that compact configurations can still be used to dilute certain voting demographics and favour certain parties. The case has been seen in many 'rurban' districts in Saskatchewan and Alberta prior to this year's reconfiguration. Some have protested the new alignments claiming that it would initiate an urban and rural divide.

That said, wouldn't it be interesting to see proportional representation occur in our lifetime?

Richard said...

I'd be interested to see that Alberta map superimposed with a poll of where people usually vote, because the conservative party has been accused of gerrymandering. I agree with Paul, I'd much rather see proportional representation than keep status quo with our electoral system.

Anonymous said...

The 'compactness' will surely be related to the local population density, as size of the voting districts will be inversely proportional with this metric, and necessity of making very sharp cuts through the geography will be diminished. As the population density of the US (even including Alaska) is nearly an order of magnitude higher than that of Canada, it should be expected that the 'compactness' will be higher in the US. I'd imagine that if the 'compactness' to population density of all of the voting districts were plotted, you'd see a strong correlation - something to look into.

Additionally, the term 'compactness' is a poor choice, since larger 'compactness' means it is in fact less compact, so the term should by diffuseness or something similar.

The choice of definition of the metric used is also poor, as something that is very compact, but has surface roughness could rate as high as a region which is actually what you want to define as not ideal. Indeed, you concede that regions like Labrador, which are along coastline, will surely have a large perimeter length even though they are close to being as compact as it can be. A better way would be to divide the area of the voting district by the area of the convex hull. In this case, a compactness of 1 still signifies the ideal square situation (and indeed any convex shape like a circle or rectangle), and lower values are less ideal. The area of the convex hull can also be altered to discount any regions cutting over water, eliminating the issue of coastline. If you wanted to penalize elongated but convex districts, you incorporate the aspect ratio of the convex hull as an additional factor, but I find the thing that people recognize most abhorrent about gerrymandering is the exaggerated concavity of polygons used to bound districts.

Now, you may still find that Canadians are more honest and less prone to gerrymandering than Americans, but I feel like this alternate method would show this with more confidence.

Anonymous said...

Very interesting article, however your data is off by a few years. California was redistricted in 2012 using a bipartisan commission with data from the 2010 census. This resulted in more competitive districts and a top-two blanket primary. The districts you showed are prime examples of how gerrymandering was out of control in the state. If you look at the districts now, you can see more cohesive, contiguous areas.

Mapleson said...

I think two things could be done to improve this analysis. First would be to give ridings that run along physical/provincial boundaries a lower weighting (could part of the difference between Canada and the US be that Canada has more regularly shaped provinces?). Second, a comparison to population density per riding. Ideally, a riding would not be 90% rural and 10% urban (like the two for Alberta that split up Fort MacMurray).

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