{"version":"1.0","type":"rich","provider_name":"Everlit","provider_url":"https://everlit.audio/","title":"Why the redistricting results might not stand: It's because of a Lynchburg man who wanted to run for office more than a century ago but never did","description":"A 1912 Virginia Supreme Court case held that justices should let an election go forward, then rule afterwards if it was constitutional. Here's the story.","author_name":"Cardinal News","thumbnail_url":"https://cdn.everlit.audio/covers/artl_1Pn5bCAZmXa/70fc5498-819f-40a3-8cac-1b6d09b1426f/small.webp","width":480,"height":136,"html":"\u003ciframe title=\"Why the redistricting results might not stand: It's because of a Lynchburg man who wanted to run for office more than a century ago but never did\" src=\"https://everlit.audio/embeds/artl_1Pn5bCAZmXa\" width=\"100%\" height=\"136px\" frameborder=\"0\" allow=\"accelerometer; autoplay; clipboard-write; encrypted-media; gyroscope; picture-in-picture; web-share\" allowfullscreen\u003e\u003c/iframe\u003e"}