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11:10 am CST - December 24, 2010
Posted under The Scoop
Texas Gains 4 New U.S. House Seats
Both Texas’ major parties bracing for showdown, spark to court action.
Texas Insider Report: Austin, TX – With Texas Republicans using recent elections to fortify their already solid control of the state Legislature in Austin, the political process of redrawing the state’s Congressional map would seem to benefit the GOP. But Democrats say, not so fast.
Texas is gaining four seats in the U.S. House, twice as many as Florida, the only other state to pick up multiple ones, according to new population figures announced Tuesday by the U.S. Census Bureau.
Starting early next year, most state governments will use detailed, computer-generated data on voting patterns to carve neighborhoods in or out of newly drawn House districts, tilting them more to the left or right.
All told, Republican-leaning states will pick up at least a half dozen House seats thanks to the 2010 census, which found the nation’s population growing more slowly than in past decades but still shifting to the South and West.
Sometimes politicians play it safe, quietly agreeing to protect Republican and Democratic incumbents alike. But sometimes the party in control will gamble and aggressively try to reconfigure the map to dump as many opponents as possible.
A surge of Hispanic residents and other population gains have Texas poised to add more congressional clout than any other state, but a partisan fight now looms over exactly where the new seats should go.
Boyd Richie, chairman of the Texas Democratic Party, said Hispanic and black population growth account for the additional seats, and he vowed to
fight for a redistricting plan that takes their numbers into account.
“A legal and fair redistricting process must produce new congressional districts that reflect the Hispanic and African American population growth,” Richie said. “Our Democratic numbers may be down, but we are not out. Democrats cannot and will not allow our voices to be silenced in this critical process.”
The Census Bureau said:
- The nation’s population on April 1 was 308,745,538, up from 281.4 million a decade ago.
- The growth rate for the past decade was 9.7%, the lowest since the Great Depression.
- The U.S. population grew by 13.2% from 1990 to 2000.
- Michigan was the only state to lose population during the past decade.
- Nevada, with a 35% increase, was the fastest-growing state.
The new numbers are a boon for Republicans, with Texas leading the way among GOP-leaning states that will gain House seats, mostly at the Rust Belt’s expense. Following each once-a-decade census, the nation must reapportion the House’s 435 districts to make them roughly equal in population, with each state getting at least one seat.
In all, the census figures show a shift affecting 18 states taking effect when the 113th Congress takes office in 2013. The political power follows the high population growth, shifting toward the south and west and away from the industrial Midwest and northeast.
With reapportionment settled, the far more politically divisive process of redistricting is set to begin. In Texas, both major parties were bracing for a showdown over the state’s new residents, beginning a fight that is sure to spark court action.
But with Republican supermajorities in the Legislature, the temptation to run
the table will be strong.
Rep. Pete Gallego, D-Alpine, said if the federal courts don’t intervene to compel fairness, Republicans will likely produce a map that gives their party the advantage in three or perhaps even all four of the new seats.
“It is very easy to overreach when you’re holding the map and have the pen in your hand,” he said.
Despite the party’s recent gains in the November legislative elections, Republicans won’t have unchecked authority to draw the state’s congressional map to benefit themselves.
Civil rights laws require that the interests of minority voters be protected as district boundaries are redrawn, and Texas is one of the states whose redistricting plans require “pre-clearance” by federal authorities under the Voting Rights Act.
Democrats are also counting on an assist from the Obama administration, which could have a significant voice in the pre-clearance process. It is the first time since the Voting Rights Act passed that the Justice Department will be in Democratic hands during the redistricting process.
Hispanic growth doesn’t automatically translate into Democratic growth, though. Two heavily Hispanic congressional seats in South Texas flipped to Republicans this year. There also are several new Latino GOP members about
to be sworn into legislative seats.
South Texas Rep. Aaron Pena, who recently left the Democrat Party and became a Republican, said Texas Latinos are more conservative than their counterparts in western states such as California and Nevada.
Pena, who sits on the Texas House Redistricting Committee, said his “educated guess” was that Republicans would get three of the four seats.
“The Hispanic community is increasingly up for grabs,” Pena said. “It’s truly a swing population.”
Texas already had the largest Republican delegation in Congress, holding 20 of the state’s 32 seats. In the 2010 elections, the party picked up another three seats, two of them in heavily Latino districts in South Texas. With all the new growth, Texas will now have 36 seats and 38 presidential electoral votes.
Federal lawsuits are essentially guaranteed as part of the process, and if the past is any guide, the courts will have a major say in how the lines are finally drawn.
- In 2001, the Texas Legislature deadlocked on Congressional redistricting, leaving the federal courts to redraw all the districts.
- In 2006, the U.S. Supreme Court ordered that new lines be drawn in several districts to protect the rights of Hispanic voters in South Texas.
The 2010 census results also are used to distribute more than $400 billion in annual federal aid and will change each state’s Electoral College votes beginning in the 2012 presidential election.
Apart from the respective four- and two-seat gains in Texas and Florida:
- Arizona, Georgia, Nevada, South Carolina, Utah and Washington are all picking up one new U.S. House seat.
- Ohio and New York will lose two House seats each.
- Losing one House seat are Illinois, Iowa, Louisiana, Massachusetts, Michigan, Missouri, New Jersey and Pennsylvania.
Each House district represents an electoral vote in the presidential election process, meaning the political map for the 2012 election will tilt somewhat more Republican.
10 Comments
Sonny
11:25 am CST
December 24, 2010
It looks like we have more illegal aliens in Texas than other states.
http://visiontoamerica.org/story/illegal-immigrants-factor-into-2010-census-results.html
SJK
2:17 pm CST
December 24, 2010
Let’s hope we can fill those 4 new House seats with Constitutional Conservatives!
Sonny, I think Texas is one of the states that has the majority of illegals because of how close the border to Mexico is to our state! We need to get Ricky boy to stand up and stop sitting on his hands and take his head out of the sand and do somethng about the illegal situation in Texas that he has been hiding from and ignoring! Perry needs to listen to the will of the people and we want the illegals to either be sent homw or they should become legal citizens starting in the back of the line and/or get green cards to work here! I am tired of carrying the load of their free ride and abuses of our systems! All those illegals need to be rounded up and sent back to Mexico!
garywfbg
8:54 pm CST
December 24, 2010
I hope the Republicans don’t turn coward and say–”We want to be fair”— and lose again. Do we really think for one instance the Democrats would have any mercy on the Republicans if the tables were reversed—look at the crap they have pulled over the last 4 years. If Republicans did what the Democrats have done, they would be in law suits the rest of their lives. The Republicans should use their head and draw these line where it’s obviously not biased, yet allows us to weed out some chaff in the larger cities and south, like Houston and Dallas–even Austin and maybe along the border. These cities are bastions of liberal Democrats and need some of that DIVERSITY that the Democrats are always crowing about!!
CWJensen
7:59 am CST
December 24, 2010
I disagree SJK, Ricky was there to WELCOME the DEMON RATS to the RETREAT LIE CAN’T party alone with all the other RINO’S.
So Tricky Ricky is NOT hiding he is JUST publicly announcing that the ONLY thing important to him is advancing the representation of wishy washy weak NON CONSERVATIVES.
With the huge advantage gained in the last election we should be focusing on the mandate of the people of TEXAS.
Instead we are BATTLING to unseat a RINO Speaker who was only elected with a majority of DEMON RAT votes. Joe Straus is an OPPORTUNIST POLITICAL SELF SERVING INDIVIDUAL with absolutely NO regard for the CONSERVATIVE values and principles of the majority of Texas voters.
WHAT GOOD IS AN ELECTION and a MANDATE if weasel self serving blood sucking politicians ignore the will of the people.
The people that serve in those 4 new seats will be determined by our representatives in AUSTIN if you DO NOT SPEAK OUT expect to see the same dribble from Austin that we have experienced for the last two years from JOE STRAUS and his DEMON RAT friends. An redistricting that at best will favor the liberals and appeasers.
You can lie but you cannot hide from your record JOE.
SJK
11:00 pm CST
December 24, 2010
CW….That too to what you said about “Ricky”! He “PANDERS” to whatever benefits Ricky in the moment! To me, Joe Straus and Rick Perry are two birds of a feather! Just the spin I get on those two!
mkddachs
1:44 am CST
December 24, 2010
Now they cry because they want to be treated fairly. The last two yrs they didn’t want to share any power or rulings with anyone else. It was their way or the highway and they are still doing it with TSA and S510 and so many others.
The Republicans must hold their noses and use Salinskys Rules for radical conservatives – use their rules against them….
Get rid of Doggett….
Gertrud Ortelt
3:22 pm CST
December 24, 2010
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December 24, 2010
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Ahmed Goehring
3:03 pm CST
December 24, 2010
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Michael
9:19 pm CST
December 24, 2010
they should try to be fair and draw the districts fair. if not for.all the.immigrants Texas wouldn’t have such a huge increase in. voices in the Congress…..they should get too be party of democracy……wee.got to work together
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