California to lose four Congressional seats after 2030 Census, TX and FL to gain

In seven years California will get the results of bad government.  Based on the Census Bureau we will lose four congressional seats.  My bet is that it will be closer to six.

As taxes go up, government schools get worse, racism is the mantra of Sacramento—and sexualized children the goal of government schools, families will flee the State by even larger numbers.

The only way we have not lost a net population of more is the replacemends.  P, the non prodiuctive, illiterate illegal aliens are taking the place of our investors, mechanics, innovators, scientists and people who do not want to live in fear.

“California is projected to lose four congressional seats after the 2030 Census, with Texas positioned to gain four and Florida to gain three, says the American Redistricting Project based on this week’s new Census data.

Yet the lying Newsom said in the Hannity debate that California is getting more people than Florida.  Poor guy is always high—or just a liar.

California to lose four Congressional seats after 2030 Census, TX and FL to gain

By Kenneth Schrupp | The Center Square, 12/20/23  https://www.thecentersquare.com/california/article_9caddeb8-9f7f-11ee-ba0f-175a17524e03.html?a&seyid=108746?utm_source=thecentersquare.com&utm_campaign=%2FNational%2Flists%2Ft2%2F%2F&utm_medium=email&utm_content=read%20moreStates projected by the American Redistricting Project to gain and lose congressional seats in the aftermath of the 2030 Census based on Census data released in December 2023. Graphic: American Redistricting Project

(The Center Square) – California is projected to lose four congressional seats after the 2030 Census, with Texas positioned to gain four and Florida to gain three, says the American Redistricting Project based on this week’s new Census data.

According to Thad Kousser, an expert in California and national politics and a professor of political science at UC San Diego, a reduction in California’s congressional delegation could have mixed effects.

“On the one hand, if these population trends continue and California loses congressional seats, our delegation will loom slightly less large and likely wouldn’t bring in as many total dollars in district support. On the other hand, because there would be fewer Californians with needs to fulfill with these dollars, their needs could still be met,” Kousser said to The Center Square. “ What’s more, California, which did not produce a House Speaker until the Pelosi/McCarthy era, might be less threatening to other states through the sheer size of its delegation and could become more unified ideologically, both of which could bode well for its political power in DC.” 

The contrast between California and Florida, which are each governed by respective Democratic and Republican trifectas —  is not only evident in projected apportionment, but in the recent national debate and ongoing sparring between California governor Gavin Newsom and Florida governor Ron DeSantis as a choice between “blue” and “red” America.  

The states ARP estimates will lose at least one congressional seat — California (four seats), Illinois (two), Minnesota (one), New York (three), Oregon (one), Pennsylvania (one), and Rhode Island (one) — have Democratic governors. All but Pennsylvania, which has Republicans controlling its House and Democrats controlling its governorship and Senate, have a Democratic trifecta in which both legislative chambers and the governorship are controlled by the Democratic Party. 

Meanwhile, the states ARP estimates will gain at least one congressional seat — Arizona (one seat), Florida (three), Georgia (one), Idaho (one), North Carolina (one), Tennessee (one), Texas (four), and Utah (one) — have Republican trifectas or Republican legislative control. In Arizona and North Carolina, Republicans control the entire legislature but not the governorship.

One thought on “California to lose four Congressional seats after 2030 Census, TX and FL to gain

  1. Is anyone surprised? Most sane people do not want to live in a state, even with its natural beauty, that has a growing crime wave, growing homeless wave, growing illegal alien invaders wave, high taxes, largest welfare population in the nation, and a state government that cares more about illegals than they do its own citizens. Many who can are leaving (especially now that remote work is uniformly accepted). Others have reasons for remaining.

    How long can Taxifornia continue when the working-, middle- and upper classes leave and are replaced with homeless, welfare recipients and illegal alien invaders?

    On top of this, the weak state GOP continually pushes weak candidates.

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