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Gerrymandering wasn't a talking point until the unprecedented Republican wins in the 2010 election that let them control the redistricting process for the majority of states. This led to nearly a decade of republican control in many states that were traditionally purple/mixed.
In previous census years control of state legislations was more balanced, so maybe the Democrats lost a seat in Florida, but they gained one in Ohio, so nationally things stayed about the same. Gerrymandering occasionally got brought up in egregious case, but nothing like today where it gets used as a reason when it's not even applicable.
Uh, it's been a talking point for over 200 years. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gerrymandering
It's been little more than a high school civics question for most of the 200 years. Maybe it got brought out on a slow news day, but it's been a non stop topic since 2010. People were just mad about hanging chads in 2000.
It's been an issue for my entire adult life. I've know about it since I could vote and I'm middle aged.
Forget the chads, I'm still pissed about violent Republicans interrupting the voting process.
First, but not last time I heard about Roger Stone.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brooks_Brothers_riot