Ohio’s redistricting process is a masterclass in corruption disguised as procedure. Deadlines pile up, citizens submit maps, and public hearings go through the motions, but the real map lives in hiding until the last possible second. David Pepper captures it bluntly: “It’s in some secret hiding place somewhere.” That secrecy isn’t accident — it’s the strategy, designed to strip meaning from every safeguard the state constitution lays out.
Lisa distills the absurdity in one line: “Nothing screams democracy like we’re having our meetings in a bunker.” The image lingers because it’s not metaphor but history —Republicans literally ran the operation out of a room they themselves nicknamed “the bunker.” Staff were reclassified to dodge sunshine laws, lawyers cloaked the process in privilege, and all of it was presented as civic ritual. What looks like democracy is instead theater staged to make illegitimacy look routine.
The larger danger comes from what this normalization creates. “This is literally how Victor Orbán would draw districts,” Pepper warns, tying Ohio’s playbook to the global script of authoritarianism. When maps are rigged, elections stop being contests and start being coronations. Politicians who’ve never faced a real race lose the muscle memory of democracy — they don’t knock on doors, don’t listen to constituents, don’t adapt. They legislate in a vacuum, accountable only to the party that guarantees their seat.
Resignation is exactly what the architects of this system want. “They literally want us to just go along and quit,” David says. But he refuses, fueled by the knowledge that public outrage can still bend outcomes. This fight stretches beyond 2026 or 2028; winning one cycle won’t fix what years of manipulation have entrenched. The only path forward is to call out the sham for what it is and stay in it for the long haul.
Tune in for this urgent conversation on why refusing to legitimize the rigged game is the first step to protecting our democracy.
The Autocrat’s Rulebook
Autocrats don’t improvise. They divide, they distract, and when needed — they destroy.