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Season 2 began by laying out the larger picture: how the policies laid out in Project 2025 are tied to white supremacy and are shaping government decisions.
In Episode 6, the podcast moves from that overview to mechanics. This episode explains how redistricting and gerrymandering work, who controls the process, and how election outcomes can be shaped long before anyone votes — even when voters keep voting the same way.
What This Episode Covers
Why It Matters
Gerrymandering doesn’t change how people vote — it changes whether their votes matter. When district lines are drawn strategically, one party can secure a majority of seats even while losing the statewide popular vote.
Communities can be split apart, combined with distant areas they have nothing in common with, or packed into a small number of districts to limit their influence elsewhere. Over time, this creates legislatures that no longer reflect the voters they represent.
Although redistricting is meant to happen once every ten years after the census, some states allow maps to be redrawn mid-decade. Until recently, that power was used sparingly. In 2025, that restraint collapsed, turning map-drawing into an ongoing tool for preserving power when demographic or political shifts threaten existing majorities.
Understanding how redistricting works is necessary to understand how election outcomes can be shaped long before Election Day arrives.
Next Episode
In Episode 7, Bella examines who is behind gerrymandering, how it connects to Project 2025, and what actions are being taken — by political parties and by voters — to push back.
Support the show
Bella Goode is a pseudonym — but the voice, research, and mission are all real. A Republican turned Democrat advocate in 2016, I was raised by middle class parents in Pennsylvania. I’m a former marketing executive, entrepreneur, and lifelong learner with an MBA from Wharton and a Master’s in Psychology from Penn. I spent decades telling stories in the business world; now I use those skills to connect the dots in American politics.
I’m here because the truth matters — and because the stakes have never been higher. Surviving Trump isn’t lighthearted. It’s clarity, evidence, and a fight for the future of our democracy.
Follow my blog on Substack https://survivingtrumppodcast.substack.com
By Bella Goode4.4
1919 ratings
Send a text
Season 2 began by laying out the larger picture: how the policies laid out in Project 2025 are tied to white supremacy and are shaping government decisions.
In Episode 6, the podcast moves from that overview to mechanics. This episode explains how redistricting and gerrymandering work, who controls the process, and how election outcomes can be shaped long before anyone votes — even when voters keep voting the same way.
What This Episode Covers
Why It Matters
Gerrymandering doesn’t change how people vote — it changes whether their votes matter. When district lines are drawn strategically, one party can secure a majority of seats even while losing the statewide popular vote.
Communities can be split apart, combined with distant areas they have nothing in common with, or packed into a small number of districts to limit their influence elsewhere. Over time, this creates legislatures that no longer reflect the voters they represent.
Although redistricting is meant to happen once every ten years after the census, some states allow maps to be redrawn mid-decade. Until recently, that power was used sparingly. In 2025, that restraint collapsed, turning map-drawing into an ongoing tool for preserving power when demographic or political shifts threaten existing majorities.
Understanding how redistricting works is necessary to understand how election outcomes can be shaped long before Election Day arrives.
Next Episode
In Episode 7, Bella examines who is behind gerrymandering, how it connects to Project 2025, and what actions are being taken — by political parties and by voters — to push back.
Support the show
Bella Goode is a pseudonym — but the voice, research, and mission are all real. A Republican turned Democrat advocate in 2016, I was raised by middle class parents in Pennsylvania. I’m a former marketing executive, entrepreneur, and lifelong learner with an MBA from Wharton and a Master’s in Psychology from Penn. I spent decades telling stories in the business world; now I use those skills to connect the dots in American politics.
I’m here because the truth matters — and because the stakes have never been higher. Surviving Trump isn’t lighthearted. It’s clarity, evidence, and a fight for the future of our democracy.
Follow my blog on Substack https://survivingtrumppodcast.substack.com

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