Brendan Schneiderman in Slate on the potential of cumulative voting to curb gerrymandering:
It doesn’t have to be like this. There is a way to avoid line drawing altogether, and to do it constitutionally. Yes, the Constitution requires that the number of House seats be apportioned among the states according to their respective populations, but it says nothing of congressional districts—and nothing about line drawing. . . .
Fortunately, there’s a readily available solution to address this: Congress could also enact what’s known as cumulative voting. Under a cumulative voting scheme, rather than having Texans merely fill in ovals next to their 38 favorite candidates (i.e., giving each candidate one vote apiece), voters would have 38 votes to assign however they see fit. If there is o