• Rigged by Design: The Redistricting Wars and the Maps That Decide Your Vote
    May 2 2026

    Before the first vote is cast in November 2026, the election may already be over — not because of fraud, but because the lines on the map have already been redrawn.

    In this episode of Beyond the Ballot, Karl Cieslak breaks down the most aggressive mid-decade redistricting wave in 50 years. Eight states have redrawn congressional maps in the last 12 months. Florida passed new maps this week that four of its own Republican senators called unconstitutional — in direct defiance of the Fair Districts Amendment that 63% of Florida voters passed in 2010.

    In This Episode:
    • What redistricting is and why it matters right now
    • How Trump triggered a nationwide mid-decade redistricting arms race
    • The Supreme Court's Callais v. Louisiana ruling and what weakening the Voting Rights Act means in practice
    • What California and Virginia did — and why it's not the same as Florida
    • The Fair Districts Amendment — what it took to pass it and why ignoring it matters
    • The Gaetz Moment — when the Republican bill sponsor contradicted his own governor on the Senate floor
    • What happens next and why the clock is ticking before August primaries
    Key Facts:
    • Florida's new maps shift the congressional delegation from 20R/8D to a projected 24R/4D
    • Tampa Bay loses its only Democratic Congressional seat
    • The Supreme Court ruled in Callais v. Louisiana the same morning Florida passed its maps — one hour apart
    • Florida is one of only 4 states requiring a 60% supermajority to amend its constitution
    • The Fair Districts Amendment required signatures across 14 congressional districts to reach the ballot
    • Four Republican senators voted no — calling the maps unconstitutional on the record
    Listen & Subscribe:

    Spotify | Apple Podcasts | Amazon Music

    Resources:
    • Democracy Docket — election law news and litigation tracker
    • Common Cause Florida
    • National Conference of State Legislatures — Redistricting

    Beyond the Ballot is hosted by Karl Cieslak, Vice Chair of the Pinellas County Democratic Party. New episodes every week on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, and Amazon Music.

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    29 mins
  • What DEI Actually Is — From Someone Who's Actually Used It
    Apr 29 2026

    Three letters. Endless opinions. Almost no honest explanation of what they actually mean.

    Karl Cieslak spent nearly 20 years in hospitality operations management — building teams, making hiring decisions, and navigating workplace compliance from the ground up. In this episode he cuts through the culture war noise and breaks down what Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion actually mean in a real workplace — and what they don't mean.

    In this episode:

    • What Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion actually mean in practice
    • Why Walt Disney World is the ultimate real-world case study
    • What DEI is NOT — and why the confusion is intentional
    • How DEI frameworks connect to laws already on the books
    • Florida's SB 1134 — what it does, what it doesn't do, and its legal vulnerabilities
    • The DeSantis vs. Disney fight — and how it ended

    Key legal references:

    • Honeyfund.com v. DeSantis, 11th Cir. (2024)
    • Norgren v. Minnesota DHS, 8th Cir. (2024)
    • Pickering v. Board of Education (1968)

    Beyond the Ballot covers three pillars: Politics & Civics, Hospitality, and Disney. Hosted by Karl Cieslak — Vice Chair, Pinellas County Democratic Party.

    Follow Beyond the Ballot on Spotify

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    14 mins
  • Who Really Has Power Between Elections?
    Apr 2 2026

    What happens after the vote is cast?

    We spend so much time talking about elections—who’s running, who wins, what the headlines say. But what we don’t talk about nearly enough is what actually happens next.

    In this episode of Beyond the Ballot, Karl Cieslak breaks down where power really exists between elections—and how everyday people can influence decisions long after the votes are counted.

    This episode explores how local government actually works, from city councils and county commissions to planning boards, zoning meetings, and advisory committees. It also looks at real-world examples here in Pinellas County, including:

    • The ongoing Tampa Bay Rays stadium negotiations and how decisions evolve over time
    • A packed Largo City Commission meeting where over 200 residents showed up to make their voices heard
    • Hurricane recovery programs and the gap between funding and access
    • How federal decisions—like offshore drilling—impact local communities in real ways

    Through these examples, one idea becomes clear:

    The people have power between elections—but only when they choose to use it.

    Whether it’s showing up to a meeting, asking questions, or simply paying attention, this episode connects the dots between participation and real influence.

    And it sets the stage for what comes next:

    How do you move from watching the process… to influencing it?

    That’s what we’ll begin to unpack in Episode 4.

    🎧 Subscribe for more episodes of Beyond the Ballot

    📲 Follow and share to help others understand where their voice fits in

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    10 mins
  • No Kings—Understanding the Moment
    Mar 31 2026

    What does “No Kings” actually mean—and why did thousands show up across Tampa Bay and millions across the country?

    In this episode of Beyond the Ballot, Karl Cieslak takes a step back from the noise to unpack the moment from multiple perspectives—connecting local events here in Pinellas County and the Tampa Bay region to national conversations, rising cost-of-living pressures, and deeper historical context.

    From St. Petersburg to Gulfport, Largo to Clearwater, people are feeling many of the same daily challenges—higher gas prices, rising grocery bills, insurance costs, and financial uncertainty. But how we understand those challenges often depends on where we get our information.

    And whether you agreed with the “No Kings” protests or not—it’s hard to ignore something happening at that scale.

    This episode explores how different perspectives can shape very different narratives around the same lived experience—and why curiosity, context, and civic engagement matter now more than ever.

    Different explanations… same experience.

    In this episode:

    • What the “No Kings” message means across different perspectives
    • Local context from across Tampa Bay and Pinellas County
    • How rising costs are shaping public sentiment
    • The role of media, social platforms, and information ecosystems
    • Historical parallels from American and Roman systems of governance
    • Why civic participation—and understanding—both matter

    About the show:
    Beyond the Ballot is a podcast focused on thoughtful, grounded conversations about the issues shaping our communities—locally, nationally, and beyond. Hosted by Karl Cieslak, the show aims to bridge perspectives and encourage informed civic engagement.

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    14 mins
  • Beyond the Ballot: What Happens After the Vote
    Mar 29 2026

    Beyond the Ballot begins with a simple question: what happens after the vote is cast?

    In this first episode, Karl Cieslak introduces the podcast and shares the personal experiences that shaped his perspective—from growing up as a military brat and traveling across the country and around the world, to a career in hospitality and human resources focused on people-first leadership.

    This episode explores why civic engagement must go beyond Election Day, how leadership shows up in everyday life, and why bridging differences matters more than ever.

    This is a conversation about people, purpose, and what it means to show up.

    Follow and share to be part of the conversation.

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    10 mins