No. They're all supposed to have the same number of voters living in them.
That'll be a smaller area in the city, and a larger area in the country.
No. All of a square's sides are the same size.
no only a square has all the faces of the same size
because , since each angle measures the same then all of th angles are the same size :p
I guess you mean with ALL sides the same size it's an equilateral triangle
NO!
Wesberry v. Sanders ruling
The state of Pennsylvania has 18 congressional districts. There are 435 congressional district throughout the entire United States. California has the most.
It's due to the Wesberry v. Sanders ruling.
US Supreme Court decision of 1964 dealing with apportionment of Congressional districts. After a suit against Georgia's apportionment statute was dismissed by the federal circuit court, the case was appealed to the Supreme Court. The Court ruled that all Congressional districts must be equal in size of voting population. The Georgia statute was declared invalid because its unequal apportionment gave greater voting power to residents of certain districts. source: <a href="http://encyclopedia.farlex.com/Westberry+v.+Sanders">Wesberry v. Sanders</a>
Torrance is in California's 36th congressional district, currently represented in the US House of Representatives by ("Blue Dog") Democrat Jane Harman.
People move around. When people move, some areas gain population, some areas lose population. Once every 10 years in the United States, the government takes a census, or counts the people. Each district that sends a representative to congress has to be changed so all the districts in the state will have the same number of people. When the districts are changed so that all the districts become the same size after a census, that is called redistricting.
The biggest factor is "gerrymandering", or drawing congressional districts in bizarre shapes to favor one party over another. The term comes from the name Elbridge Gerry who as Governor of Massachusetts drew a congressional district to protect his political power that vaguely resembled the shape of a lizard or salamander. A local newspaper called it a "gerry-mander", and the name has been used ever since. In the modern era, congressional districts are drawn to create safe districts for the political party that controls the re-districting process in the state. This process packs each district with voters of the preferred party, concentrating all of the voters of the opposition party to a smaller number of districts. The average congressional representative is more likely to die in office than to lose his next election.
No, all plates are not the same size
No, all plates are not the same size
Wesberry v. Sanders was settled by the Supreme Court in 1964. It didn't outlaw Gerrymandering, it instituted the "one person, one vote" rule which forces all congressional districts have nearly the same population. Gerrymandering hasn't been outlawed.
are all nuclei the same size( diameter
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