Congressman Steve Cohen

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As the current representative of the 9th district of Tennessee, Democratic Congressman Steve Cohen has emerged as a tactful candidate with goals in mind to help better the lives of his constituents through his representative style and his home-style. Theory I: Redistricting, Gerrymandering, and Candidate Emergence A congressional district is an electoral division of a state, electing and entitled to send one member to the United State House of Representatives. Districting is the initial set district, whereas redistricting is the process of drawing district boundaries after the decennial census and new population changes. Redistricting is a political process that affects the fortunes of incumbent House members, state legislators, governors, lobbyists, leaders of racial and ethnic groups, and congressional leadership, because of its impact of state legislature. The state legislature determines which party dominates its congressional delegation and which party gains majority control of the House itself. Because of this, districting is a tool generally used by politicians to seek personal, partisan, and factional advantage. Davidson et al. state that redistricting is typically a state responsibility carried out by the legislature with impeding help from federal courts throughout the process. Congressional districting is regulated by two federal statutes. The first is the 1967 statue that mandates that all 50 states entitled to one or more seat create districts that are each represented by a single member. The second is the Voting Rights Act 1965, which requires that districts not dilute the representation of racial minorities. In addition to these statues, the Supreme Court constructed the Constitution to require districts to ... ... middle of paper ... ...n in Memphis, I think the racial variety shown throughout my key staffers has helped in some ways.” Before Congressman Cohen, Congressman Ford, both Sr. and Jr., represented the ninth district until 2006. Would the shift of races lower voter turnout rates during elections? The voter turnout rates for the African-American representatives in comparison to Cohen’s shows small marginal differences. During Presidential election years, the Ford men were elected at high rates, where as in midterm elections, voters re-elected the representatives but at lower turnout rates. Similarly, Cohen has maintained and in some instances surpassed previous voter turnout rates of Ford Sr. and Jr. In 2008 both Steve Cohen and Jake Ford, Harold Ford Sr.’s son ran for the House, Cohen received 198,798 votes of the total 226,282 votes, beating Jake Ford by a large margin of 187,795 votes.

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