I was looking at the new congressional district map for my state and the shapes are just bizarre. I read a gerrymandering explained article, but I'm still confused about how these maps are actually drawn and approved. Who has the final say, and is there any real check on how extreme the districts can get?
Final say is usually with the state legislature, sometimes with the governor; a lot of states also use independent commissions that draft the maps but still hand them over to the legislature for approval. In federal courts, partisan gerrymandering claims aren’t justiciable after the Rucho decision, so the main checks are state law, state constitutional rules, and political pressure.
Redistricting checks you can count on include formal criteria in state constitutions or statutes, court challenges under state law, and when available, independent redistricting commissions that have published rules and maps for review. Some states rely on commissions to draft and the legislature to approve; others use politician or backup commissions.
Those packing and cracking terms aren’t just jargon; they describe common ways lines are drawn to influence which voters end up together. You’ll often see discussions of contiguity, compactness, communities of interest, and those ideas show up in court tests and commission rules.
Even with commissions, bias isn’t impossible. Maps can reflect political compromises, and in many places major changes come after high‑stakes negotiations. The legality and legitimacy usually hinge on state law and the courts’ willingness to enforce it, not on a universal national standard.
Your best move is to check your own state’s rules: who draws the maps, what criteria they’re required to meet, and what the public process looks like. If you want, tell me your state and I’ll pull up the current process and key dates.
California is a prominent example: an independent California Citizens Redistricting Commission drew the maps after the 2020 census, though later political processes have altered it and kept maps in play under certain conditions. You can see the final maps and the commission’s report on the secretary of state site, and California’s own redistricting site explains the process in detail. xxx
If you want a quick, state-specific check list, I can draft one once you share your state.