I learned a new use of a term while riding up on the train from Chicago to Milwaukee and interviewing Rick Perlstein for our upcoming book. "Backlash Insurance", it refers to the Republican efforts to institutionalize a majority through means such as partisan redistricting, destabilizing the funding constituancy groups of the Democratic Party through intimidation or legislation, and appointing as judges those ideologues that are in their 40's-50's to insure multi-generational judicial rule. For the minority-visioned Republicans, it's all about thwarting the majority through undemocratic means, by rigging the system so that even with a 60% majority nationally opposed to their leadership direction, they remain entrenched in power.
As for the Republican opposition to non-partisan redistricting in Ohio, the blade reports:
"That tells us Republican politicians are so entrenched and arrogant that they don't get the fact that, if they're going to call themselves Ohio First, they should at least pretend that they are," House Minority Leader Chris Redfern (D., Catawba Island) said.
Ohio First opted not to file its incorporation papers with Ohio Secretary of State Ken Blackwell's office and instead incorporated on July 6 as a religious nonprofit entity with the Delaware Department of State.
NJ also reported that "a California appeals court on Tuesday blocked the state's redistricting initiative from appearing on the November ballot", but let's hope that California initiative also makes the ballot.
We are running in all 435 of the districts in 2006. In not a single CD will a Republican be left unchallenged. The more that are competitive, the better the chances are that a Democratic Congress becomes the majority.
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