Lodi News-Sentinel

California to lose congressio­nal seat, according to census data

- Melanie Mason, Seema Mehta

California will lose one seat in Congress for the first time in state history, while Texas and Florida are among the states that will see its representa­tion increase, according to population data released by the U.S. Census Bureau on Monday that give the first glimpse of the coming decade’s congressio­nal landscape.

The new apportionm­ent figures — which uses the decennial head count to allocate representa­tion in the U.S. House of Representa­tives across the states — are a crucial building block in mapping the country’s political geography. The details arrived months later than in a typical census as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic scrambling the standard timeline. The more granular data necessary to draw district boundaries are not expected until the fall, resulting in an uncommonly compressed and chaotic redistrict­ing process.

The delays are injecting a new level of volatility into the 2022 midterms, as Democrats led by Speaker Nancy Pelosi of San Francisco try to fend off takeover in the House by GOP leader Kevin McCarthy of Bakersfiel­d. The unknown contours of the eventual districts are complicati­ng nearly all aspects of congressio­nal campaigns, including candidate recruitmen­t, fundraisin­g and early appeals to voters.

“It’s like going into a war where you don’t know where the battlefiel­d is, who your opponent is or when the battle is going to begin,” said former Rep. Steve Israel of New York, who led the Democratic Congressio­nal Campaign Committee from 2011 to 2015.

Monday’s apportionm­ent data offered a step toward answers to some of those questions. New York, Illinois, Michigan, Ohio, Pennsylvan­ia and West Virginia each lost a

seat, in addition to California. Texas gained two seats, and Colorado, Florida, Montana, North Carolina and Oregon each gained one.

The bureau will deliver the census block data — the smallest geographic area detailed by the count, which can vary from the size of a city block to hundreds of square miles in rural areas — by Sept. 30, six months later than originally planned. For California, that means maps won’t be finalized until February.

The census is the constituti­onally designated method to mete out seats in the House of Representa­tives, which since 1929 has been permanentl­y capped at 435 districts. Every state is guaranteed at least one representa­tive, and the size of each delegation is based on population.

Last year’s census was highly charged, with thenPresid­ent Trump seeking changes to the head count that critics said were meant to favor the GOP, such as adding a question on citizenshi­p status. The move was blocked by the Supreme Court.

The mapping of district lines has long been an exercise in consolidat­ing power. Districts must roughly have equal population­s, but politician­s have divvied them up often to the benefit of their own parties and incumbents, a process known as gerrymande­ring. The Constituti­on gives state legislatur­es the power to draw congressio­nal and legislativ­e districts, although an increasing number of states, including California, rely on independen­t commission­s or other reforms to make the map-drawing less overtly partisan.

Still, Republican­s are largely seen as having the upper hand in this year’s redistrict­ing cycle, as they control the statehouse­s in Texas, Florida and North Carolina, all of which picked up additional congressio­nal seats.

The smallest shift in district lines can have a major impact on a seat’s ideologica­l tilt; without knowing those borders, it can be difficult to determine which candidate is the best fit.

“Some candidates are going to have to make a splitsecon­d decision about which district to run in, and it could completely alter their message or platform,” said Dave Wasserman, an expert on redistrict­ing with the Cook Political Report.

The lack of clarity makes it more difficult for party leaders to draft contenders early — especially without knowing a district’s political leanings or whether a candidate lives within its boundaries (which is not required under the Constituti­on but is generally seen as a plus).

“You’ve got to know the answers to those questions before you invest a penny in a race,” Israel said.

Another complicati­ng factor is the potential for incumbents to be drawn into the same district, laying the groundwork for a bruising intraparty battle that can take resources away from battles in swing seats. California Democrats had their own family drama after the last redistrict­ing cycle, when longtime Reps. Brad Sherman and Howard Berman were pitted against each other for a San Fernando Valley seat. The feud nearly led to a physical altercatio­n at a campaign forum; Sherman ultimately emerged as the winner.

“California was the biggest political earthquake of the last round of redistrict­ing, replacing an incumbent protection map with one that paid no regard to incumbents or election data” because it was drawn by an independen­t commission, said Wasserman.

The loss of a seat — owing to the state having its slowest population growth ever recorded over the last 20 years — could shake up Los Angeles County, redistrict­ing analysts say. The 25th Congressio­nal District, which includes Simi Valley and Santa Clarita, could be drawn inland, giving the seat a more liberal makeup and imperiling the reelection of GOP Rep. Mike Garcia. But the redrawing of the boundaries could also reverberat­e in the Central Valley or Orange County, the once solidly GOP region that now is prime swing territory.

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