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Originally Posted by dilbert firestorm
yes, but that is not likely PR would get 4 or 5 in this current political climate. when PR enters the union, they will get 1 or 2 seats, like Alaska & Hawaii and other states before them did...
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The "current political climate," such as it may exist at the time a new state enters the Union, is not what governs the number of House seats it would get. House apportionment law is.
Of course, congress could change the law at any time it wishes, although it seems extremely unlikely that it would do so absent some compelling reason. (Of course, it may be equally unlikely that P.R. will ever become a state. At least, I hope so!)
So, under existing law, P.R. would get at least 4 House seats (and possibly 5), assuming that its population would be somewhat more than 1% of the US as a whole.
4 (or maybe 5) other states would lose a seat. The losers would be states that just barely have enough population to qualify them for their present number of seats, and thus got their apportionment of districts "rounded" to the next higher integer at the time of the previous census.
The point I made earlier is that the net effect of all this would likely be a net +2, averaged out over time, for Democrats, who obviously would be expected to dominate elections in P.R. The states that lose a seat might result in a slight loss to either party, depending on the luck of the draw (and how redistricting shakes out over time).
Quote:
Originally Posted by dilbert firestorm
...and with your proposed split of california, that is additional 2 house seats. making it 439.
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No, it isn't, at least under present law. Since the two split states would not have a greater population than CA had before, they would not be entitled to have a larger combined share of seats. Of course, they could easily end up with one more (or less) than CA now has, depending on how the rounding worked out.
That's how it would work, at least under current law.