Sweetwater Reporter

It’s Time To Make the U.S. House of Representa­tives More Representa­tive

- BY KEITH RAFFEL

Way back in 1929, the number of House members was set at 435 by the Permanent Apportionm­ent Act. Little did those voting to pass the law realize how permanent it was to be.

In 1929, the population of the U.S. was about 122 million. Each member of the House represente­d about 280,000 constituen­ts. Today, with a population of about 336 million, each member represents 773,000 — almost triple as many.

The U.S. is an outlier when it comes to the size of districts for the lower house of its legislatur­e. For example, Germany, with a population about a quarter the United States’, has 300 more members in its Bundestag than sit in the House of Representa­tives. The United Kingdom’s House of Commons has 215 more members than the House of Representa­tives with a population about a fifth of ours.

The fewer members of the U.S. House don’t appear to act with greater efficiency than their European counterpar­ts, that’s for sure. Germany and Britain’s parliament­s do a far better job at passing budgets and keeping the government running smoothly than the American Congress.

It’s not the first Sunday in November, but it’s still time to turn the clock back. It’s time to return to the days of fewer people in each House district.

It’s a tough job for members to represent today’s populous districts. The kind of door-todoor campaignin­g instrument­al in Jack Kennedy’s 1946 congressio­nal victory has largely disappeare­d. The successor to Kennedy’s seat in 1953, oldtime politician Tip O’Neill, would regularly go back to the district to get his hair cut, have shoes repaired and hang out with constituen­ts at “Barry’s Corner.” Today’s voters typically don’t feel that connection with their representa­tive, don’t have the sense that the member is representi­ng them in the national capital. Closer connection­s matter. Each vote matters more. At a time when trust in Congress is at record lows, polling shows locally elected officials are more popular with constituen­ts than members of Congress.

House members have turned to performanc­e rather than representa­tion, to fundraisin­g from contributo­rs outside their district rather than staying in touch with those inside. More districts would make it less expensive to run for Congress. In advocating for more members of the House, Harvard professor Danielle Allen has pointed out, “The ever-growing size of districts reinforces the power of incumbency and money.”

It doesn’t take a constituti­onal amendment to change the number of representa­tives, just a law passed by Congress and signed by the president. Oregon Rep. Earl Blumenauer believes the growing population of congressio­nal districts “makes it more difficult for members to be responsive to the will of the people, and voters are more likely to sit out elections when their voice and input are not fully represente­d in government.” He has introduced H.R. 622, a bill that would add 150 seats to the current 435. It’s a start.

There’s plenty of room in the House chamber for those members. At State of the Union addresses, House members are joined on the floor by senators, members of the joint chiefs of staff, Supreme Court members, Cabinet secretarie­s and foreign ambassador­s. Allen has worked with an architect to show how the House floor could easily accommodat­e double the current 435 members and almost four times more with a little crowding.

Not only would passage of

Rep. Blumenauer’s bill or one like it make the House members more responsive to their constituen­ts, but it would also make presidenti­al elections more responsive to the national will.

In this country, we don’t elect the president by a popular vote. Instead, the winner is the candidate who gains a majority in the Electoral College. Each state gets two electoral votes for its senators and then an additional vote for each member it has in the House of Representa­tives. This favors smaller states because they get the “Senate bump,” two seats no matter their population. Thus, in the last presidenti­al election, the least populous state, Wyoming, had one elector per 180,000 people, while California, the most populous, had one per 700,000.

The current formula contribute­s to anomalies such as the 2016 election where Donald Trump was elected president by the electoral college 304227, even while losing the popular vote by over 3 million. Adding more representa­tives would make that Senate bump less significan­t and increase the chances that the candidate with the most popular votes would also win the Electoral College.

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Unfortunat­ely, a bill such as Rep. Blumenauer’s has little chance of passing in the current Congress. Republican­s would see the change as diluting their chances in the Electoral College. There’s a certain irony there since back in the 19th century, Republican­s lobbied successful­ly to have the Dakota Territory divided into two states, North and South Dakota. This was in no small part to gain their party six electoral votes rather than the three if the territory had been admitted as a single state.

Would increasing the size of the House help one party more than the other now? Maybe, but that really shouldn’t matter. It would make the United States government both more responsive and more democratic (with a small d).

Call me naive, but I still believe support for American democracy should trump partisansh­ip every time.

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