FRIDAY, JUNE 12, 2026
Hulse explains why the GOP did that: In yesterday's report, we floated a question about Rep. James Clyburn (D-SC):
Without the 1982 addition to Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act, would Rep. Clyburn ever have been elected to the House of Representatives from his home state of South Carolina?
Rep. Clyburn has been an extremely significant member of Congress. But, especially given the ways of the times, would he ever have gotten there, absent the1982 addition to the Voting Rights Act?
When we floated that question, we didn't remember the fact that Rep. Clyburn recently answered that question. Carl Hulse recorded his answer right at the start of this history lesson, which appeared on page A19 of the New York Times back on May 10 of this year:
CONGRESSIONAL MEMO
How Minority Districts Fueled the G.O.P.’s Southern Ascendancy in Congress
Representative James E. Clyburn of South Carolina, formerly the No. 3 Democrat in the House, is certain he would never have been elected to Congress without changes in the Voting Rights Act that the Supreme Court determined last week amounted to unconstitutional racial gerrymandering.
“And about half of the members of the Congressional Black Caucus wouldn’t be there,” said Mr. Clyburn, the first African American sent to Congress from his state since Reconstruction. He was part of the historic 1992 class of Black and Hispanic lawmakers elected after new maps were drawn to comply with 1982 changes meant to strengthen the Voting Rights Act.
Plainly, Hulse was referring to the changes made to the VRA in 1982, not to the original provisions of the legislation. That said, Clyburn's answer was clear:
Absent those additions to the VRA—changes supported by both major parties—he never would have served in the House!
Also, “about half of the members of the Congressional Black Caucus wouldn’t be there,” Clyburn said.
New language was added to the VRA in 1982. In the redistricting which followed the 1990 census, those somewhat murky new provisions resulted in the deliberate creation of a significant number of districts which were newly majority Black.
Those newly created districts sent new members to the House—new members like Rep. Clyburn. There had long been Black members of the House—but now the number roughly doubled. The leading authority on this significant change ciphers the matter like this:
1992 United States House of Representatives elections
The 1992 United States House of Representatives elections were held on November 3, 1992, to elect U.S. Representatives to serve in the 103rd United States Congress. They coincided with the 1992 presidential election, in which Democrat Bill Clinton was elected president, defeating Republican incumbent President George H. W. Bush.
Despite this, however, the Democrats lost a net of nine seats in the House to the Republicans, in part due to redistricting following the 1990 census. This election was the first to use districts drawn up during the 1990 United States redistricting cycle on the basis of the 1990 census. The redrawn districts were notable for the increase in majority-minority districts, drawn as mandated by the Voting Rights Act. The 1980 census resulted in 17 majority-black districts and 10 majority-Hispanic districts, but 32 and 19 such districts, respectively, were drawn after 1990.
This was the first time ever that the victorious presidential party lost seats in the House in two consecutive elections. As of 2025, this is...the last time the Democrats won the House for more than two consecutive elections.
Oof! The Democrats still controlled the House, but that was soon going to end. As we detailed yesterday, the GOP took control of the House in 1994 for the first time in forty years.
The GOP didn't take control of the House because of those majority minority districts. Majority Black districts were mainly being created in the South—in states like Jim Clyburn's South Carolina—but Democrats lost more seats in the state of Washington that year (6) than in any other state.
Incredibly, Speaker Tom Foley was swept out of office in that northwestern state in the 1994 elections. Strikingly, so were Rep. Maria Cantwell, a future United States senator, and Rep. Jay Inslee, a future governor of the state.
With five incumbents defeated and a sixth (retiring) Democratic incumbent replaced by a Republican, the congressional delegation in Washington flipped in the 1994 elections from 8-1 Democratic to 7-2 Republican. "The Republican Revolution" struck on a nationwide basis that year, even on the Canadian border.
In states like Washington, the original partisan alignment would largely be restored over time. But in many Southern states, the 1994 Republican wins, along with the ongoing party-switching, was part of the larger movement in which "the solid South" slowly but steadily moved from solidly D over to solidly R.
This raises the question which Hulse explores in his New York Times report. That question goes like this:
If Republicans were slowly seizing control of the Southern states, why would they agree to form majority Black districts in those states—districts which would almost surely send Democrats on to the House?
Why did Republicans do that? In 1982, why did they overwhelmingly supports the changes to the VRA which led to the creation of those new districts? After the 1990 census, why did they support the creation of majority Black districts in the South—districts like the one which enabled Rep. Clyburn's monumental career in the Congress?
As far as we know, Hulse's answer to those questions is the standard historical answer. If memory serves, the Republican Party's political strategy was publicly discussed at the time.
Why did Republicans agree to create those Democratic districts? Midway through his concise report for the Times, the historian Hulse explains:
In the late 1980s, Republicans had been deep in the House minority for nearly 40 years. But growing dissatisfaction with the Democratic Party had begun moving white Southern conservatives into the Republican ranks, as illustrated by high-profile party switches in Washington. Then the redistricting initiated under a series of court decisions aimed at fostering more minority representation provided yet another opening that might have seemed counterintuitive at first glance.
Architects of the [new congressional] maps realized that if they could maximize Black and Hispanic representation in the new districts, they would simultaneously dilute Democratic strength in surrounding jurisdictions where coalitions of white and Black voters had elected white Democrats for decades. The shift would ultimately create dozens of openings for Republican candidates in what had formerly been known as Democrats’ “Solid South.”
Slick! If Republicans packed Black voters into heavily Democratic districts, that would help Republican candidates win in the neighboring districts which had been robbed of such voters! The creation of those new [and heavily Democratic] districts "would create dozens of openings for Republican candidates" in other nearby districts!
As far as we know, this is fairly standard history of the era. As he continues, Hulse explains how the creation of those districts was accomplished:
[continuing from above]
Groups bankrolled by wealthy conservatives joined with liberal organizations to school minority advocacy groups in state capitals and in Washington about how to shape new districts to meet court tests and best guarantee the election of minority representatives for minority communities—an outcome that many on the left argued was long overdue. Republican groups even provided free access to expensive computer software that could craft the new districts. Democrats eagerly accepted the help.
Some civil rights figures such as Representative John Lewis, the Georgia Democrat, warned at the time that the new maps could empower Republicans by weakening the partnership of progressive white and Black voters in the South. But others said the new districts were the only way to overcome centuries of institutional discrimination against minorities in the region.
According to Hulse, so the tradeoffs were assessed at that time.
According to Hulse, "many on the left" believed that "the [increased] election of minority representatives for minority communities...was long overdue" in the region. For their part, Republicans saw the creation of these majority minority districts as a way to continue their party's ongoing march through the South.
In modern parlance, it was Red and Blue Together as Rs and Ds joined hands to move these changes along. Some high-end figures—congressional figures like Rep. Clyburn—were sent to Washington from these districts. As is occasionally true with white congressional reps, some of the new Black reps who were elected were perhaps occasionally perhaps a bit less impressive overall.
At any rate, so it went as the GOP slowly accomplished its political conquest of the South. Early in his report for the Times, Hulse brings us up to date on the way Republican strategy has changed in the present day:
Now, Republicans see the chance to cement their grip on the region—and to try to maintain their thin House majority—by eliminating the minority districts that initially worked to their advantage and to take those seats for their own.
It is the latest chapter in an ongoing political saga that has had profound implications for the House of Representatives over the past three decades. Redistricting in minority communities could again be a major factor in deciding the November elections as Republicans try to lessen the traditional midterm advantages for the party out of power—the Democrats in this case—in a year when they face particularly strong headwinds.
Having consolidated their power throughout the South, Republicans are now emboldened to try to eliminate the majority-minority districts, believing they can carry them without risking their strength elsewhere as Democratic-leaning minority voters are dispersed into other districts.
Within the realm of Republican strategy, it's time for those districts to go! According to Hulse, Republicans feel that they now could win every House district in some Southern states, especially if they're helped along by a bit of gerrymandering as they create those states' new districts.
In such circumstances, it's time for those once-helpful districts to go! Or so goes current Republican strategy, at least according to Hulse.
As far as we know, this is fairly basic political history. If memory serves this general Republican strategy was publicly discussed back in the 1990s.
Alabama's 7th congressional districtAlabama's 7th congressional district is a United States congressional district in Alabama that elects a representative to the United States House of Representatives. ...The largest city entirely within the district is Selma.The district has been majority nonwhite, with a majority of African-American residents, since the redistricting following the 1990 census. As such, and with a Cook Partisan Voting Index rating of D+13, it is the most Democratic district in Alabama...It is currently represented by Democrat Terri Sewell.
Redistricting that is the result of population changes reflected in the census is not the same as redistricting to achieve political goals between censuses. Republicans are trying to rig the midterms not ensure fair representation after population shifts based on the census (as mandated by the Constitution).
ReplyDeleteWhat a marvel SpaceX is and what an extraordinary man Elon Musk is. But if you are a Dem, your first comment will be “there are not enough black and trans faces in the employees celebrating today”. Wallow in your misery leftist losers – on this side, we are having fun and enjoying life.
ReplyDeleteElon should be nominated for Nobel Peace price for putting so many NGOs and non-profits out of business. These organizations are infested with neurotic females and guys with ponytails (aka Dem base). These morons who describe themselves “college educated” because they have crap liberal arts degrees are not employable anywhere else.
DeleteEnvious failures. Fuck em.
DeleteElon salutes you!
Deletehttps://static-media.fox.com/fmcv3/prod/fts/A-237076/5ao83nqkoj9eaeuh.jpg
On the other hand it's undeniable Musk is a dipshit.
DeleteAs of mid-2026, SpaceX is not overall profitable, reporting a net loss of $4.94 billion in 2025 despite $18.67 billion in revenue.
Delete12:35 knows Musk is a snake oil salesman, his company's products are vaporware, and this causes 12:35 emotional discomfort, so his comment is a sad attempt to lick his wounds.
DeleteSorry, no one is jealous of Musk, he seems dead inside, he has no friends or real relationships, he supports fascism and neo-nazis, he's a repugnant fat pasty slob with hair implants, a botched penis implant, and herpes. Uh, yeah, no thanks, and that's a hard no.
AND his face looks like it was drawn from memory.
DeleteRight-wingers raping children will never not be factual.
DeleteFuckface von Shitzhispants has appealed taking his fucking name off of the Kennedy Center Memorial. I hope that bastard burns in hell/.
ReplyDeleteTrump knows he is going to hell, that is why he so desperately clings to life.
DeleteIf racism were truly dead, we would not see the ebb and flow of black faces in Congress as districting changes. We would see elections based on merit. All you have to do is look at Mike Johnson and Tommy Tuberville (who doesn’t even live in the state he represents) to know merit has nothing to do with it.
ReplyDelete"elections based on merit"
DeleteElections are based on voters' subjective impressions, which have little to do with merit.
You think voters couldn’t tell what Trump was?
DeleteYes, that is 1:19's point, it is not merit, it is racism, or more specifically it is an obsession with hierarchical dominance that then typically manifests as racism, sexism, and xenophobia.
DeleteSomerby is never going to tell us what Sewell said.
ReplyDeleteI think Somerby started with a certain agenda but read some of the comments and had to adjust his agenda to not look so foolish and is now trying to figure out how to express his racism without getting called out, thus the delays.
DeleteYeah, Somerby reads lame-ass comments like yours and adjusts his posts. I'm so sure.
DeleteIf Somerby wanted to waste his time with lame ass comments, he'd be watching Gutfeld on the regular.
DeleteStill to Come: There isn’t a chance in hell of Republicans keeping control of either house. Somerby should know that, so why is he encouraging false hope?
ReplyDelete"There isn’t a chance in hell of Republicans keeping control of either house."
DeleteWrong. There's certainly a chance they keep control of the Senate.
Unlikely according to everyone travking this stuff objectively. Democrats are outperforming predictions.
DeleteThere’s a new social media trend of BLM activists posting edited images of themselves urinating on Austin Metcalf's grave.
ReplyDeleteThis is the Democrat "cultural enrichment" they promised. There are no decent Democrats.
Do you realize you are mentally ill?
DeleteIs the claim true? Who knows? Also, BLM does not align itself with the Democratic Party.
DeleteFake news.
DeleteBut what is real is that Republican activists are calling for Anthony to be "lynched". Even though he merely defended himself just like Zimmerman, Rittenhouse, and Penny.
It is reasonable to conclude that Republicans want to legalize murder for White people, particularly if the person killed is Black, or supporting a Black cause.
Anthony was being threatened with violence and defended himself with a small pocket knife that created a small 2 inch wound but due to where the puncture was it became fatal. There was no intent to cause deadly harm, as is clear from the injury, but since the Metcalf did later die, it is reasonable to find Anthony guilty of something like voluntary manslaughter.
Interestingly, after being stabbed, Metcalf ran a good distance shouting for help. Some bystanders tried applying pressure and CPR, but Metcalf was pronounced dead at the hospital. It is possible that those bystanders may have contributed to Metcalf's death, since they were not trained medical professionals.
The vast majority of political violence, over 75%, comes from right wingers.
Yes, there is a certain amount of hatred of whites among blacks. Many examples of insults and physical attacks are posted on conservate sites. Far fewer are shown on "mainstream" and liberal media. As a result, many liberals are unaware of the problem. When the problem is pointed out, many or most liberals just deny the problem. Sometimes people who point out the problem are accused of being racists.
DeleteHow big is this problem? It's hard to study it, because liberals don't admit that the problem exists. I suspect a professor would find it hard to get funding to study racism in the black community.
How can you tell whether someone who hates the right is white or black?
DeleteHow can you tell the difference between a legitimate grievance fueled by white racism and generic black dislike of white people?
White conservatives receive far less abuse than they deserve because most libs are too civil to act on their impulses.
DeleteWhite people are getting woke.
DeleteActually this is studied.
DeleteThere is resentment in the Black community about the racism they suffer at the hands of Whites.
Black people are highly aware, daily, that they are hated by Whites.
The key aspect is that Whites hold all the cards.
It is amusing I guess when David pretends to not be aware of the extent of racism, or the power dynamics between Whites and Blacks.
Black people are kept from having any real bargaining power.
And this dates back to 15th century Spanish Catholics, when racism was essentially invented.
"How can you tell the difference between a legitimate grievance fueled by white racism and generic black dislike of white people?"
DeleteWe don't have to tell. For people one one race to physically attack people because they're of a different race should be unacceptable.
BTW the idea of a "legitimate grievance" for racism is a dangerous slippery slope. It tends to wind up blaming people who have done nothing wrong for bad things done by others of their ethnicity.
We don't have to live like this unless leftists are given power.
DeleteNot everyone can be as colorblind as you dickhead, proponent of ethnic cleansing in Gaza.
Delete@6:49 - I am having trouble understanding how your words apply to me. You think in terms of groups. More precisely you think in terms of people that you choose to see as groups. I see individual human beings. I assume that by "cards" you mean power over others. I don't hold any cards, nor do any members of my family.
Delete@7:10 Gaza was ethically cleansed 20 years. Every single Jew was driven out. The Israeli government participated in the process.
DeleteWhite people benefit from their racial privilege and from racism whether they themselves are racist or not.
DeleteDuh.
Just because a racist refuses to recognize that systems and institutions exist, does not mean they don't exist and do not have significant impact.
Duh.
Nobody cares about you or your made up family.
Gaza was under Egyptian control from 1948-1967 and had no Jewish population.
In 1967 Israel illegally captured Gaza by force and established illegal settlements there and illegally occupied Gaza with eventually about 9000 Israeli settlers living there (compared to 1.3 million Palestinians by 2005).
In 2005 Israeli unilaterally removed the settlers (Disengagement Plan) in order to turn Gaza into an open air prison.
Jews were not driven out, some settlers protested the plan and were forced to leave by Israeli authorities.
In 2023 Israel started a genocide in Gaza killing hundreds of thousands of innocent Palestinians, nearly half of whom were children.
you mean when Isreal gave Gaza back to the Palestinians but denied them any autonomy? Is that what you mean, dickhead Jewish Zionist atheist white Christian Nationalist fucking nazi?
DeleteYou'd have to be a sick fuck to kill 273 children, just because they're Iranian.
DeleteAt least that's what real actuary's tell me.
No tweaks can fix our electoral system, which is, let's face it, asinine. It lost its relevancy more than 150 years ago. It was designed with states being mostly autonomous, self-governing units with very little interference from the federal government. The Dread Scott decision began to chip away from that independence. The 14th amendment further brought the states in line with the federal government.
ReplyDeleteConservatives like to scream about state's rights, but they are the first ones to try and impose their will on the states that stray from their orthodoxy.
Again, our system is thoroughly broken. Our constitution is a hodge-podge of irrelevant pronouncements that get twisted any which way. United States is a failed state.
Our state is functioning so your conclusion is unjustified. just as when Somerby says is.
DeleteThe US is pretty successful to be called a "failed state".
DeleteBut there are systemic issues that can be exploited by those that are corrupt.
I agree with Bob and others about various flaws in our electoral system. In fact, as a Californian, I experience even ore flaws than they mentioned. Still, when evaluating anything, it's useful to ask, "Compared to what?"
ReplyDeleteOur system does allow decisions to be made and implemented. It allows peaceful changes of leadership. It gives the citizens substantial input into what the government does. That's better than many other countries.
yeah, but dickhead, your judgement is completely fucked up, go play with your Nazi friend.
Delete"as a Californian, I experience even ore flaws than they mentioned."
DeleteSuch as what?
Quaker - a general pessimism that it will become even more certain that CA will remain a one party state.
DeleteSorry, the above comment was responding to Hector
Delete“Much, much more remains to be said about the many different aspects of this important topic.”
ReplyDeleteNot really.
Agree.
DeleteSomerby is flailing, he can't quite figure out how to frame this issue in a way that lets him finger wag at Dems.
Elon Musk has a trillion dollars and has mended fences with Trump. The future looks bright.
ReplyDeleteI stop by every day and some days I don’t read a word beyond the first paragraph or two and this was one of those days.
ReplyDeleteSomerby repeats himself when under stress.
DeleteJustice Department approves Paramount’s acquisition of Warner Bros.
ReplyDeleteThe Justice Department’s Antitrust Division signed off on Paramount’s $111 billion acquisition of Warner Bros., allowing the blockbuster media merger to move forward.
Because fuck you, what are you going to do about it?
Keep in mind that when the fucking media refers to the fucking DOJ, the fucking media means trump's fucking lawyer.
But what may be funny is that consumers might have the last laugh - people are no longer interested in legacy media, so all this money spent on mergers and acquisitions may be money down the drain.
DeleteJasmine Crockett says that Karmelo Anthony was justified in stabbing Austin Metcalf to death:
ReplyDelete"He decided to go under a tent and simply didn't want to be put out on the rain by some kid he didn't know.There was no mercy seen when this black boy said 'I was scared.'"
Karmelo was a member of a team. I presume that his team had their own tent. Why did he go uninvited into another team's tent? Why did he stay there when asked to leave?
DeleteEven taking Crockett's version at face value, it doesn't make sense. "They asked him to go out into the rain, so he stabbed the guy to death." What kind of thinking is that?
Jasmine Crockett is hot.
ReplyDeleteRepublicans are hot for Jasmine and it drives them nuts that they will never have her, at least the few that are straight.
womp womp
Jasmine Crockett is good-looking. Her good looks are one reason that she's popular among Democrats. Therefore, says @6:55, this situation reflects badly on Republicans. Huh?
Delete"Jasmine Crockett could only get away with having a diaper full of shit in public if she was a white supremacist."
DeleteDavid in Cal's comment at 8:34, fixed for clarity.
DiC is still masturbating over the thought of a black adolescent killing a white kid.
ReplyDeleteJasmine Crockett is likely wrong here, but has no bearing on the outcome of this trial.
The day after his inauguration, Donald Trump took time out of his busy day to call the mother of a prisoner and tell her that he was rectifying a grievous injustice. Her son had made many millions in bitcoin operating a dark website in which illegal drugs were sold. For awhile it was also the conduit for illegal arms, but that business was shut down because it was less profitable. Some people died from drugs purchased through the site. When he became aware that the feds were on to him, the entrepreneur ordered the assassination of multiple employees he feared would turn on him for the feds , as well as complete strangers who happened to be traveling with his targets. Fortunately for them, the orders were placed with undercover FBI agents. He was ultimately tried and sentenced to life imprisonment. But Ross Ulbricht, founder of Silk Road, was lucky. He wasn't some black kid who did a terrible thing. He was a white drug dealer who, upon release from jail had access to tens of millions of dollars worth of bitcoin. And an ally in Donald Trump. The wheels of justice.
Conservatism consists of exactly one proposition, to wit: There must be in-groups whom the law protects but does not bind, alongside out-groups whom the law binds but does not protect...
Delete...There is nothing more or else to it, and there never has been, in any place or time.
Frank Wilhoit
David in Cal is as Conservative as they come.
It's year two.
ReplyDeleteWhen's Trump finally going to give reparations to black people for slavery?
I thought he was going to get things done.
Is he just another typical businessman who commits fraud and breaks contracts on a regular basis?