The Guardian (USA)

Texas, Colorado and Florida among states to gain House seats after Census

- Sam Levine in New York

Six states will gain additional seats in the US House of Representa­tives because of population shifts over the last decade, the US Census Bureau announced on Monday. Seven states will lose one congressio­nal seat.

The US saw a total population growth of 7.4% over the last decade, the second slowest change in US history (the previous slowest was 7.3% from 1930 to 1940). Overall, the total US population was 331,449,281 people on 1 April 2020, the day the Census Bureau uses as a marker to count.

Texas will gain two additional seats in the House, the bureau said on Monday. Colorado, Montana, Oregon, North Carolina and Florida will also gain a congressio­nal seat.

The seven states that will lose a seat are: California, Illinois, Michigan, New York, Ohio, Pennsylvan­ia and West Virginia.

Overall, the fastest growing parts of the US were the southern and western portions of the country.

The US constituti­on requires the federal government to take a census of the population every 10 years. That tally is used to allocate seats in the House and determine how almost $1.5tn in federal dollars are allocated.

The changes in seat counts will also reflect changes to each state’s electoral college votes for the next decade. A state’s electoral college votes are equal to the total number of representa­tives in Congress.

The shift of seven seats among 13 states was the smallest since 1941, said Ron Jarmin, the acting director of the Census Bureau.

The numbers came as somewhat of a surprise; projection­s based on population estimates had Texas gaining up to three seats, Florida gaining two and Arizona gaining a seat. Experts projected Alabama Minnesota, New York, and Rhode Island could all lose additional seats. Bureau officials acknowledg­ed that difference on Monday, but said repeatedly they were confident in the results and that they were within 1% of the estimated projection­s in many states.

The officials also revealed how much every census response matters. Had New York state counted just 89 additional people, it would not have lost a congressio­nal seat, bureau officials said on Monday.

Monday’s announceme­nt was an important milestone in the once-adecade process of redrawing electoral boundaries, which is also required by the constituti­on. Census officials are expected to deliver redistrict­ing data to states later this year. The entire process has been delayed several months because of the Covid-19 pandemic, which forced the bureau to push back its work.

Monday’s announceme­nt also came after the Census Bureau, states and civic groups spent years convincing people it was safe to respond to the census during Donald Trump’s administra­tion.

Trump unsuccessf­ully sought to undermine the count by adding a question asking about citizenshi­p to the survey. When that move was blocked by the supreme court, Trump instructed census officials to come up with redistrict­ing data that only counted citizens. Joe Biden reversed that effort on his first day in office.

 ??  ?? A woman talks with volunteers to fill out the form for the 2020 US census in Sylmar, California, on 17 August 2020. The state lost a congressio­nal seat after the census. Photograph: Étienne Laurent/EPA
A woman talks with volunteers to fill out the form for the 2020 US census in Sylmar, California, on 17 August 2020. The state lost a congressio­nal seat after the census. Photograph: Étienne Laurent/EPA

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