Recarving The Congressional Pie

A new chapter of political intrigue is set to open as the reelected incumbents and newly elected freshmen take their places in the US House of Representatives for the 112th Congress: Congressional Redistricting. Mishpacha sampled opinions and perspectives of askanim in four key states with large Jewish populations around the country to learn the opportunities and the risks for the frum community and how can we make our voices heard.

Recarving    The    Congressional    Pie

One of the chief reasons the US Constitution mandates a census every ten years is to determine the proper apportionment of congressional representatives to each state. While each state gets two senators automatically US House seats are apportioned based on population. Following the tabulation of the 2010 census results Congress will get to work on reapportioning the 435 representatives among the states based on the updated population figures. States with declining populations such as New York and New Jersey will give up seats in Congress to those with increasing populations such as Florida Arizona and Texas.

While the apportionment of seats will be carried out by the Congress federal law leaves it to the states to draw the boundaries of each congressional district that sends a representative to Washington. This process will likely help the Republicans more than the Democrats.

“The sleeper story of the Republican wave this November was their picking up almost 700 seats in state legislatures across the nation” says Howard Beigelman deputy director of the Orthodox Union (OU) Institute for Public Affairs “Which US House seats are redrawn combined or lost are up to those legislatures that will help redraw district lines unless the state has a nonpartisan redistricting commission.”

Republicans are now in firm control of 29 governorships. Twenty-five state legislatures are under GOP control as opposed to just 14 for the Democrats (the rest are divided) giving the GOP a historic leg up in the redistricting process. “Republicans are in the best shape for the decennial line-drawing that they have been in since the modern era of redistricting began in the 1970s” commented Tim Storey of the National Council of State Legislatures in a blog on the organization’s web page.

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