Politics & Government
Gerrymandering and Danvers' Congressional District: Where Does It Stack Up?
Massachusetts has a few Congressional districts that appear to be highly gerrymandered, according to reports.

By Brooklyn Lowery (Patch staff)
Eastern Massachusetts’ Congressional districts might be some of the most highly gerrymandered in the country.
Specifically, the 2nd Congressional district, which includes Hopkinton, scored a 73.8 on a scale of 0-100, with higher numbers representing districts likely to be the most-gerrymandered. Jim McGovern represents the 2nd Congressional District.
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Massachusetts 7th and 8th districts scored the highest on the chart, with the 7th scoring a 92.81 and the 8th scoring 86.37.
The 6th Congressional district, of which Danvers is a part, scored a 62.73, putting it below the state average score of 78.37.
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This data comes from a 2014 Washington Post article in which Christopher Ingrahamlooked at the compactness -- “a measure of how irregular [a district’s] shape is, as determined by the ratio of the area of the district to the area of a circle with the same perimeter” -- of districts across the country to determine which of the country’s Congressional districts were likely the “most-gerrymandered” for the 113th Congress.
Massachusetts’ districts were redrawn after the 2010 Census and the new maps went into effect prior to the election of the 113th Congress.
According to Ingraham, “Districts that follow a generally regular shape tend to be compact, while those that have a lot of squiggles and offshoots and tentacle-looking protuberances tend to score poorly on this measure.”
Confused? Here’s the deal:
Take 24 inches of yarn and make a circle with it. Now tightly pack as many Gummi Bears as possible inside that circle to represent the area inside the circle.
Next, take that same 24-inch piece of yarn and make a funky shape with it -- go crazy with the tiny offshoots and weird divots and bump-outs. Try to fit all your circle Gummi Bears inside your new shape.
There are some mathematical calculations that would then follow, but the bottom line is that you generally can’t fit as many Gummi Bears inside an irregular shape because its area is usually less than the area of a regular shape.
Overall, North Carolina and Maryland were “essentially tied for the honor of most-gerrymandered state.” Nationally, the average score on the gerrymandering index was about 88, according to Ingraham. That means that Massachusetts -- with its average score of about 78 -- is likely less gerrymandered than the country on a whole.
Editor’s note: Jonathan Lowery contributed to this article.
Photo: Congressional district map from MALegislature.gov.
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