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In reply to the discussion: Facts Our Party Will Not Officially Admit, That It Must [View all]totodeinhere
(13,688 posts)House members. The House majority goes to whoever wins a majority of those districts, not who gets the most votes in House races nationwide. That is the way it's always been and it would take a constitutional amendment to change that. If one party runs up big margins in some districts while the other party wins a lot of close contests in other districts it is quite possible to get the scenario we have now where the Democrats win more votes nationwide but win fewer seats overall.
As far as the gerrymandering which made this possible goes, Democratic voters have nobody but themselves to blame for that. It was the wave election in the census year of 2010 that gave the Republicans the wherewithal to do so much gerrymandering. More Democrats should have come out to vote to prevent the Republicans from taking political control of so many states. Elections have consequences. And now we have to wait until 2020 to change that. And thankfully 2020 will see a presidential election, not a midterm election, so based upon past history there will probably be more Democrats voting in that election.