The "bombshells" according to the article are that her father planned gerrymandering for the North Carolina state legislature... like every single political party in power everywhere where gerrymandering is legal.
The actual bombshell? That "gerrymandering" is pronounced with a hard "g".
edit: I'm seeing from some of the comments that there are worse things in the actual files. more: Hofeller's actions were gerrymandering based on race, which is illegal and wrong.
> like every single political party in power everywhere where gerrymandering is legal
Leaving aside the rather important specifics here, this isn't even true in general. Taking US, while there are examples of gerrymandering from both parties, one of them does it a lot more than the other.
Now, it could be cynically said that the difference is because one party has a much more substantial advantage to derive from it, because it is on the losing end of popular support due to demographic changes and urbanization, and it has to resort to it to maintain control of many state legislatures. Nevertheless, as things stand, it is a de facto partisan issue.
Uh... drawing a political district on the basis of race is quite expressly illegal in the United States. What is newsworthy here is that it's a pretty clear smoking gun that that is exactly what was happening.
So, now the question becomes why, unprompted, you launched into such a vehement defense of the nature of his work, without understanding the nature of it.
Because he thought he understood it fully, but, turns out, he didn’t. Which is exactly why he asked the question and then apologized when he got corrected.
No, the shape of the district is circumstantial evidence. The people who draw those lines swear up and down (and often under oath, as these things are routinely contested in court) that they would never do this. And because the distinction is intent and not the result, it basically amounts to an unprovable thought crime.
But what we have here is a guy with a bunch of analysis based directly on racial data, and a bunch of emails detailing specific plans and concerns about racial demographics. In this one case we know the relevant boundaries constitute a civil rights crime.
Lol the angle in that story is that Democrats should "give up" gerrymandering to convince Republicans to do so. I don't think this counts as "pro-Republican" (or "anti-Democrat")
bias.
The point is that it draws attention to Maryland, which is gerrymandered by the Dems - contrary to your claims that they'd ignore that. Why is it supposed to be "pro-Republican"?
(Nor is it the only story NPR has on gerrymandering in Maryland, by the way - merely the most recent one.)
The actual bombshell? That "gerrymandering" is pronounced with a hard "g".
edit: I'm seeing from some of the comments that there are worse things in the actual files. more: Hofeller's actions were gerrymandering based on race, which is illegal and wrong.