This year, the Georgia legislature will tackle one of the most pivotal facets of the political process: redistricting. Redistricting is the process by which Georgia’s voting districts are created, and it touches nearly every part of the political system: congressional seats, as well as state house and senate districts. The whole pie is on the table. It’s inherently political, and the stakes are high, and the party currently occupying a majority of the seats in the state legislature — Republicans — will get the final say on the matter. The process only happens once every 10 years, the year after the Census is taken. It determines which contests voters will have a say in, not just for the next election, but for the next decade.