This reporting is vital. [Mother Jones]( MoJo Reader, There is no bigger story now than covering democracy and the brazen attacks on free and fair elections. And weâre lucky to have Ari Berman leading our voting rights coverage. Over the last several years, his expertise and year-round reporting have led him to the root of the problem, and to a term that for me is like a decoder ring for so much of our politics right now: minority rule. The facts in his email from earlier this week (Iâm sharing it again below in case you missed it) are eye-opening. And I wanted to share a few more data points from [his work]( that are worth knowing about the Senate: - By 2040, because less-populated states like Wyoming get the same number of senators as big ones like California, just 30 percent of Americans will elect 70 percent of the Senate, while the remaining 70 percent of us will elect a mere 30 senators. - Senate Republicans have represented fewer Americans, and won fewer votes, than Democrats since the 2000 election, but theyâve [controlled the Senate]( for half the time since then. - During the Biden administration, senators representing just 21 percent of the population have [used the filibuster](, which is not in the Constitution, to block legislation supported by large majorities of Americans on issues like [gun control](, [abortion](, and [voting rights](. I find those figures enraging, especially because at a time when some journalists keep reporting that the country is split 50-50, the data tells a different story. The facts also tell people who believe in democracy and justice that our country isnât as crazy as it seems. Itâs the system that is. And information like it can spur people to actionâand that action can change the systemâlike in the [Reveal episode]( featuring Katie Fahey, mentioned below. This is the time to get reporting like Ariâs and the rest of our teamâs in front of as many people as possible. But we urgently need [your help]( to do that right now. Because another fact I donât find comforting at all is how far behind our fundraising campaign isâwith just 15 days left to raise most of the $500,000 [in donations]( we need. In fact, a group of us are meeting today to have a tough conversation about what coming up as short as it appears we might would mean. Itâs not good. Maybe that information will spur more people to action, too? Or maybe this quote from then-Washington Post media critic Margaret Sullivan will: She warned in 2020 that the media wasnât doing enough to avoid an âElection Day debacle.â âI donât buy the argument that there are insufficient newsroom resources. After all, virtually every newsroom has at least some political reporters. And they often run in packs, producing scoop-oriented coverage thatâs not much different from their peers at other networks or newspapers. But there are precious few voting-beat specialists. Prominent among that rarefied group are Pam Fessler at NPR and Ari Berman at Mother Jones.â If you can right now, [please help Ari and all our reporters do the democracy-protecting, justice-advancing journalism we all need with a donation today](. Your support matters more than normal right now, and reporting like Ariâs below matters more than normal, too. âMonika MoJo Reader, Ari Berman writing you today, and even if Iâm not a fundraiser, I know [support from readers]( is foundational to everything we do here. For 13 years now, Iâve been reporting on voting rights and how free and fair elections are undermined so parties and politicians can hold on to power, pass extreme legislation, and not fear consequences because their districts are gerrymandered. In 2017, I joined the team at Mother Jones because of the independence we have here. I knew that because of our [readersâ support](, Iâd be able to focus on this beat day in, day out, and be ableâbe encouragedâto go deep and call it like it is, because thatâs what you expect Mother Jones to do. Many of us reporters have been able to go deep on a beat like that, and [itâs only because people like you support our work](. So if you can part with a few bucks right now, please [pitch in]( to help us throw everything we can at standing up for democracy and justice during these unbelievably high-stakes next several months. Now, about minority rule, Donald Trump, and the fundamentally anti-democratic Senate, Supreme Court, and Electoral College. If you want to take a deeper dive on these issues, you can [read an excerpt from my new book, Minority Rule](, that we published a few weeks ago. Or you can listen to [the episode of Reveal]( in which host Al Letson and I delve into how protecting a propertied white upper class was enshrined into the Constitution, how we got to where we are today, and importantly, how despite everything, reformers are fighting back and winning. Still want more? You [can buy my new book]( to be among the most informed out there and help raise awareness of these issues between now and November. The founders, in ways they could not have anticipated, placed a ticking time bomb at the heart of American politics. The structural inequalities built into the system have exploded before, most notably leading to the Civil War. But now these problems are accelerating, with one inequity exacerbating another. You probably know the basics. If you can gerrymander legislative district maps, if you can make it harder to vote, if you can install partisans to oversee elections, you donât have to fear accountability at the ballot box. But letâs look at some of the most startling facts and factors from my years of research and reporting. Theyâre shocking, and Iâd think worth keeping handy as you talk to people about everything going on right now. Like dry rot on a decaying house, the imbalances built into the electoral system keep getting worse. Things that once seemed to be an aberration, like a Âcandidate losing the popular vote but winning the Electoral College, are now routine. Before the 2000 election, only [three times]( in US history had the loser of the popular vote won the Electoral College. But thatâs happened twice in 16 years since then. It almost occurred a third time in 2020, when Joe Biden won the popular vote by 7 million votes but Trump lost the three closest states in the Electoral College by just [44,000 total votes](. The level of inequality [in the Senate today](âby far [the worst]( of any upper chamber in an advanced democracyâwould have shocked our founders. In 1790, the countryâs most populous state, Virginia, had 12 times as many people as its least populous, Delaware. Today, California has nearly 69 times the population of Wyoming. Fifteen states with a population of 41 million people combined now routinely elect 30 Republican senators; California, with 39 million residents, is represented by only two Democrats. Trumpâs impeachment trials vividly illustrated the skewed nature of the Senate and its implications. In 2020, the 48 senators who voted to convict him on the first article of impeachment represented [18 million more Americans]( than the 52 senators who voted to acquit him. When Trump was impeached again for inciting the insurrection, the 57 senators who voted to convict him represented [76.7 million more Americans]( than their colleagues. Democrats have won the popular vote in [seven of the past eight]( presidential elections, but for the first time in US history, [five of six]( conservative justices on the Supreme Court were appointed by Republican presidents who initially lost the popular vote and confirmed by senators elected by a minority of Americans. Much like Republicans in the Senate, the Supreme Court justices nominated by Trump are playing a critical role in boosting his chances of returning to the White House. The court [reinstated Trump to the ballot]( in Colorado, Maine, and Illinois after state officials disqualified him for violating the insurrection clause of the 14th Amendment. The justices also slow-walked the question of whether Trump is immune from criminal prosecution, delaying the federal election subversion case brought by special prosecutor Jack Smith, possibly until after the 2024 election. That means Trump could face [no legal accountability]( for his role in inciting the January 6 insurrection before voters go to the polls. It is the most [brazenly political act]( by the courtâs conservative majority since it decided Bush v. Gore, which handed George W. Bush (who also lost the popular vote) the presidency in 2000. Of course, Trump is not just a creation of Americaâs undemocratic political foundation; heâs an active accelerant of it. Heâs exploited institutions like the Electoral College, US Senate, and Supreme Court that benefit him and his MAGA coalition while pushing harder than any previous president to [dismantle the constitutional roadblocks]( that stand in the way of autocracyÂÂâ[weaponizing the 2020 census]( to protect a conservative white minority, trying to [undermine the postal system]( to stop mail voting, [threatening to imprison]( his political opponents, and even calling for the â[termination](â of the Constitution when his Âattempt to overturn the 2020 election results failed. Trumpâs [vow]( to be âa dictatorâ on âday oneâ and his [larger project](s for the second termâ[mass deportations](, [purging]( the federal bureaucracy, voter suppression [on steroids](âare so alarming precisely because his authoritarianism, combined with the conservative takeover of the other branches of government, could make minority rule impossible to reverse. Unless people like us do something about it. I became a journalist and focus on voting right because of a simple truth: When people find out whatâs going on, they often want to change it. That still drives me, and I sincerely hope youâll [help me and everyone here rise to the moment with the donations]( we need to keep charging hard right now. I also hope youâll [listen to the episode of Reveal]( in which we talk about minority rule, because at the end, we hear from Katie Fahey, a young Michigander who learned how bad minority rule had gotten in her state (it literally led to the Flint water crisis), was naturally enraged, googled âhow do you stop gerrymandering in Michigan?ââand ended up leading the charge to amend her stateâs constitution to put an end to it. [With your support](, we can reach more people like Katie. There is bipartisan support for reform when it comes to elections, and right now is the time to get reporting and statistics like these to as many people as we can. Thanks for reading and for making the work weâre fortunate to do here at Mother Jones possible. Weâre beyond grateful, and Iâm blown away by my colleaguesâ awesome reporting of lateâespecially now that we have Reveal in the mix. Sincerely, Ari Berman
Voting Rights Correspondent
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