The 
        Real Tom DeLay Story
              by Allan 
        Lichtman 
        
        The real story about Tom DeLay’s indictment 
          in Texas goes far beyond the corrupt
          acts of a single individual. DeLay’s intervention in Texas state 
          legislative elections was 
          part of a concerted, nationwide Republican plan to control our government 
          through 
          political gerrymandering at the expense of black and Hispanic voters. 
          I observed this 
          process first hand as the expert witness for Democrats in the court 
          cases challenging 
          Republican congressional redistricting plans not only in Texas, but 
          also in Pennsylvania, 
          Florida, Ohio, and Michigan.
        These latter four states are equally divided 
          between Republicans and Democrats,
          yet Republican gerrymandering has resulted in GOP control of about two-thirds 
          of
          their congressional seats. 
         
        By pumping money into state legislative races in Texas, DeLay engineered Republican 
          
          control in 2002 over a previously divided state legislature. He then 
          guided Texas 
          lawmakers into breaking precedent by rewriting mid-decade an established 
          congressional redistricting plan. The DeLay plan thwarted the will of 
          voters by drawing districts to 
          guarantee Republican victories and take over five Democratic seats. 
          To this end, 
          DeLay and his allies cynically and knowingly destroyed the voting rights 
          of millions 
          of African-Americans and Hispanics in Texas. 
        
In the Dallas County area, the plan demolished a 60.5 percent minority 
          district and 
          scattered its voters into five Anglo-dominated, Republican districts 
          in which they have 
          no chance to influence the outcomes of elections. In southwest Texas, 
          DeLay’s plan 
          removed some 90,000 Hispanics from Congressional District 23 to ensure 
          that it 
          would elect a Republican opposed by Hispanic voters. His plan dismantled 
          seven other congressional districts across Texas in which African-American 
          and Hispanic voters 
          critically influenced election outcomes, submerging these voters into 
          heavily Republican 
          districts in which they have no influence. 
 
        The big corporate interests behind Tom DeLay 
          knew full well what they bought in Texas. 
          They bought our government. Absent DeLay’s gerrymandering, the 
          Democrats, not 
          Republicans, would have picked up congressional seats nationally in 
          2004, putting 
          Democrats in a much better position to regain control of Congress next 
          year. 
        
 
        Allan Lichtman is a political historian at American University and 
          a Democratic
          candidate for US Senate from Maryland. 
        E-mail: allan@allanlichtman.com
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          Allan Lichtman For U.S. Senate
          http://www.allanlichtman.com
        Having