Census projections show red states to see gains in U.S. House seats, electoral college
Several blue states appear set to lose electoral college votes while red states will make sweeping gains, new data from the U.S. Census Bureau suggests.
On Tuesday, the U.S. Census Bureau announced a significant decrease in U.S. population growth, largely due to less international immigration.
However, analysis of the census data revealed several noteworthy takeaways in domestic migration trends that could affect electoral college and congressional makeup.
Electoral votes are allocated to states based on the Census. Each state is allocated a number of electoral votes based on the number of U.S. Senators and Representatives in that state.
The District of Columbia is allocated three electors in the Electoral College.
The American Redistricting Project estimated Texas would gain four seats in 2030 based on recent Census data and Florida would gain two seats. On the other end, California is projected to lose 4 seats.
North Carolina, Georgia, Idaho, Utah and Arizona would gain one additional seat respectively. However, New York, Pennsylvania, Wisconsin, Minnesota, Illinois and Oregon would lose one seat, respectively.
Democrat leaders expressed concern over these new projections and criticized mid-decade redistricting efforts across the country. John Bisognano, president of the National Democratic Redistricting Committee, called on Democrats to respond to redistricting efforts.
“Republicans have enacted mid-decade gerrymanders in states like Texas and North Carolina by drawing maps that aim to further silence the very communities driving the most population growth,” Bisognano said.
Jonathan Cervas, a redistricting forecaster at Carnegie Mellon University, shared similar predictions as the American Redistricting Project. However, Cervas predicted Florida would gain four seats instead of two and New York would lose two seats instead of one.
David Hogg, a former leader in the Democratic National Committee, called on Democrats to build support in the South to counter reapportionment.
“If we don’t start building infrastructure in the South and start winning states like Texas, Georgia, North Carolina and Florida, we can kiss goodbye any chance of winning the White House in the 2030s,” Hogg said.
Latest News Stories
Everyday Economics: The Fed faces a slowing economy and a new inflation shock
Poll: Slim majority of Americans unhappy with Trump’s job performance, economy
Most voters support bans on transgender athletes in female sports
Martinsville School Board Bans Individual from District Events Following Special Hearing
Midterm elections poll shows tight congressional races
Casey Township Library Pauses Architectural Services Amid $24,975 Expansion Payout
Forbes: A record 989 billionaires are in the U.S., 88 are in Texas
Casey-Westfield Powers Past St. Thomas More 16-1 in Saturday Tournament Action
Advocates call for repeal of FACE Act over unequal enforcement concerns
Trump’s fall-back tariffs face court scrutiny, skeptical voters
Illinois lawmakers want to end foreign language requirement in high schools
In a first, nine Texas Antifa members found guilty on federal terror charges