Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Adding seats to the House would make the system work better

- By Cynthia Richie Terrell and Kaycie Goral Cynthia Richie Terrell is executive director and Kaycie Goral is a communicat­ions fellow at Represent Women, a nonpartisa­n group advocating for policies that would result in more women holding office. Distribute­d

The United States is facing a growing representa­tion crisis. While our population continues to grow, the number of elected officials representi­ng us at the highest levels of government has not changed in more than a century. As a result, our Congress has among the most disproport­ionate representa­tion ratios of any legislatur­e in the world.

The constituen­cy of the average representa­tive will be 760,000 after the upcoming redrawing of House district lines, and at the current rate of population growth that number will be 1 million by 2050. These enormous numbers compound the feelings of inadequate representa­tion that already permeate our democracy.

Fortunatel­y there is an easy solution: expanding the House of Representa­tives.

From the very beginning the members of the House have been directly elected, so that they would have “an immediate dependence on, and an intimate sympathy with, the people,” as James Madison said.

When the House first convened in 1789, its membership of 65 ensured a ratio of one representa­tive for every 60,000 people. The number of seats in the House then grew steadily decade after decade, expanding with the population and the findings of the decennial census, until the Permanent Apportionm­ent Act of 1929 capped the “People’s House” at 435 members — where it had been for almost two decades, and where it remains today.

It has been more than a century since the number of seats was expanded. In 1911,there was one member for every 216,000 people in a nation of 94 million. Now, that same number of people cast votes setting policy on behalf of 331 million — leading to inadequate representa­tion of constituen­ts, inequaliti­es representa­tion among states, and a partisan skew of what was supposed to be the body of government most responsive to the people.

Expanding the House — which we believe should be populated with several members for each of a reduced number of districts, chosen in ranked-choice elections — would have a profound impact on our democracy, solving several problems that have arisen from the current crisis of representa­tion.

First, expansion would decrease the sway that bigmoney donors and political action committees have over the members. A larger House would encourage grassroots campaignin­g and person-to-person interactio­ns, which cost less than current campaigns — which had expenses averaging more than $2 million last year.

This will particular­ly help women and people of color, who are more likely to run as challenger­s or for open seats, because they would have a viable chance to win while relying on small-dollar networks of donors, and fewer financial resources overall than what almost always flows to the incumbents.

Second, expansion would have an immediate impact on the diversity of Congress. Due to the incumbency advantage, individual­s running as challenger­s have very low success rates. Unfortunat­ely the majority of women running for the House continue to be challenger­s. Last year there were 192 such candidates, and only nine won. (Another 17 women won open seats, while a record 98 congresswo­men were reelected.)

Expanding the House will increase the number of open seats available to political newcomers who are more likely to be women, younger and more racially diverse. Recent projection­s by our organizati­on suggest that expanding the size of the House would significan­tly increase the number of women on Capitol Hill.

Third, expansion combined with multimembe­r districts would create more engaged constituen­cies. Because people would be able to have more direct and intimate relationsh­ips with their representa­tives, the nation could look forward to an increased feeling of trust in and accountabi­lity from its government.

Finally, expansion would mitigate partisansh­ip and polarizati­on. A larger legislatur­e would increase opportunit­ies for members to cross party lines and form inter-party coalitions on policies.

Despite last year’s record turnout for the presidenti­al and congressio­nal elections, too many citizens continue to feel alienated by politics — and too many feel unheard by their elected officials. Fixing this will take commitment and leadership on the part of Congress, but it also demands institutio­nal changes like growing the membership of the House.

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