Imperial Valley Press

California loses congressio­nal seat for first time in history

- BY BEN CHRISTOPHE­R CalMatters

For the first time in its 171-year history, California’s political voice is about to get a little quieter.

After months of delay, the U.S. Census Bureau Monday released new population estimates for each state. The bad news for California: It loses a seat in Congress, down from 53 House districts to 52.

The worse news: Not only does that mean the state will have one fewer representa­tive in the House, it also means one fewer vote in the Electoral College that decides the presidency and proportion­ately less of the $1.5 trillion in federal money distribute­d by population each year.

Maybe the hardest news to take of all: While California is seeing its national stature shrink ever-so-slightly, that power is being shunted to our faster-growing rivals, Texas (which adds two seats) and Florida (which gets one). In all, seven House seats will shift among 13 states, the smallest change since 1941.

The federal government is required to conduct the census every 10 years. That data is used to dice the country up into 435 roughly equally sized congressio­nal districts.

“It’s a fixed pie, and California did not grow as fast as the rest of the nation,” said Hans Johnson, a demographe­r at the Public Policy Institute of California, speaking today at a UC Riverside webinar on the new census data.

Between 2010 and 2020, the national population increased by 7.4 percent to 331.4 million, according to the bureau’s new figures. That’s the second smallest increase in the 24 decades the census has been done. California’s population grew by even less, just 5.9 percent, from 37.3 million to 39.5 million residents.

Census officials said that while California recorded more births than deaths over the decade and the state added internatio­nal residents, more people moved to other states than came here. There’s another potential factor: Last year, the U.S. Supreme Court refused to allow the Trump administra­tion to place a question about immigratio­n status on the 2020 census. Still, activists and Democratic elected leaders said the high-profile effort might discourage undocument­ed immigrants from participat­ing and lead to an undercount in states with large non-native born population­s like California.

The loss of a congressio­nal seat is also likely to fuel a narrative peddled by conservati­ves that California­ns are fleeing an expensive Democratic-governed state in search of cheaper, less regulated climes.

Sure enough, former San Diego Mayor Kevin Faulconer, who plans to challenge Gov. Gavin Newsom in the recall election that Monday became all- but- certain to happen later this year, used the announceme­nt by the Census Bureau to bash the governor.

“Gavin Newsom’s policies have been an assault on affordabil­ity and livability for families across this state. California­ns are being forced to leave their home state in droves,” Faulconer said in a campaign press release.

Though the number of new California­ns has been slowing for decades, a Public Policy Institute of California analysis found that rising net migration from California to other states has become an increasing­ly significan­t “drag on the state’s overall population growth.”

An analysis of the new data conducted by the state Department of Finance and shared by department spokespers­on H. D. Palmer disputed the notion that outward domestic migration was to blame for California’s lost seat and instead pointed the finger at former President Trump’s nativist immigratio­n policies.

“Domestic flows out to other states were more than offset by internatio­nal migrants,” the analysis reads. “However, federal immigratio­n policy decisions in the last half of the decade, accompanie­d and perhaps exacerbate­d by an officially pronounced federal view of immigratio­n overall, slowed California’s migration- related growth.”

Much of the federal funding distribute­d to the various states is also based on census data. Medicare and Medicaid, food stamps, highway constructi­on and affordable housing vouchers are among the federal programs split up on a per- person basis. Now California will be getting a bit less.

The news also makes a thorny political problem even thornier for the state’s independen­t redistrict­ing commission, which must now draw new congressio­nal maps with one fewer district.

That will water down the political representa­tion of hundreds of thousands of voters somewhere in the state and could potentiall­y deprive an incumbent of his or her seat.

It’s still too early to say who is going to lose out in that process. But today’s announceme­nt raises the stakes of what was already a very high- stakes job.

“The highly debated question regarding where we will lose a congressio­nal seat remains unanswered,” the commission said. “The commission will use the census data in conjunctio­n with input from communitie­s on the ground to create a full assessment of the representa­tional needs of the state.”

Because the bloc of states that stand to gain House districts skew more purple and red than the states that are losing seats, Monday’s shuffle also raises questions over control of the House. Rep. Nancy Pelosi of San Francisco regained the speaker’s gavel after the 2018 election; Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy of Bakersfiel­d wants to become speaker.

While census officials said that states will get redistrict­ing data by Aug. 16, elections officials across California have also been sounding the alarm that the delay in census data will make it much harder for the redistrict­ing commission to draw up the state’s new electoral maps in time for the 2022 midterms.

Even if the commission is able to do the work on time, the crunched timeline could jeopardize “the ability of the public to participat­e in the process,” said John Dobard with Advancemen­t Project California, a racial justice advocacy group, speaking at the webinar.

Monday’s news also removes an easy alternativ­e if the commission runs out of time to finish its maps, said political consultant Matt Rexroad.

With California losing a seat, “there is no legal remedy to just run the old seats,” he said.

“You don’t have that offramp anymore.”

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