Chris Cuomo Had a Former Leftist Call in to His Show. He Clearly...
This Town Filled Its Coffers With a Traffic Shakedown Scheme – Now They...
Planned Parenthood: Infants Not 'Conscious Beings' and Unlikely to Feel Pain
Democrats Boycotting OpenAI Over Support for Trump
USAID You Want a Revolution?
Roy Cooper Dodges Tough Questions About His Deadly Soft-on-Crime Policies
Axios Is Back With Another Ridiculous Anti-Trump Headline
In Historic Deregulatory Move, Trump Officially Revokes Obama-Era Endangerment Finding
Colorado Democrats Want to Trample First, Second Amendments With Latest Bill
White House Religious Liberty Commission Member Removed After Hijacking Antisemitism Heari...
Federal Judge Blocks Pete Hegseth From Reducing Sen. Mark Kelly's Pay Over 'Seditious...
AG Pam Bondi Vows to Prosecute Threats Against Lawmakers, Even Across Party Lines
Georgia Man Sentenced to Over 3 Years in Prison for TikTok Threats to...
Walz Administration Claims $217M in Fraud After Prosecutor Pointed to Billions
2 Pakistani Nationals Charged in $10M Medicare Fraud Scheme
Tipsheet

These Are the States Projected to Gain and Lose Congressional Seats Following the Census

These Are the States Projected to Gain and Lose Congressional Seats Following the Census
AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite

Things are going to be interesting once the 2020 census is completed. Based on newly-released figures from the Census Bureau, quite a few heavily populated, Democratic-leaning states are going to lose Congressional seats. And states that traditionally vote Republican are set to gain seats. 

Advertisement

According to the Wall Street Journal, California, Illinois, Michigan, Minnesota, New York, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island and West Virginia are all expected to lose one Congressional District. Texas is expected to gain two seats while Arizona, Colorado, Florida, Montana, North Carolina and Oregon are expected to each gain one Congressional seat. 

The population rate grew 0.5 percent over the last year, which is the slowest in a century, the Brookings Institution concluded.

For the first time since California joined the union the state is projected to lose Congressional seats, The Hill reported.

The power shift from the midwest and northeast is huge for the southwest, where housing is cheaper, the weather is warmer, the job market is stronger, and, in some cases, the taxes are lower. 

Districts will be doled out by December 2020 but details will be worked out in 2021. It's hard to say which political party will benefit from the reallocation because the political party that's in the majority redraws those districts. Who controls the state legislatures will be determined during the 2020 election. 

Advertisement

Related:

2020 ELECTION

The actual reapportionment calculation will take place by December 2020, with its details worked out in 2021. Each state will redraw its legislative maps, and those that have more than one congressional seat will redraw districts as well.

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos