10/28: Proposed change in census could alter congressional seats
New York Times: Proposed change in census could alter congressional seats
Sen. David Vitter of Louisiana is proposing to count only United States citizens when reapportioning Congress. This could alter the representation in each state, according to an independent analysis. For instance, North Carolina and South Carolina would each gain a seat under this proposal; if counted the traditional way, Florida and Georgia would gain a seat each.
The Constitution, as amended, requires that Congressional districts be reapportioned on the basis of a count every 10 years of the “whole number of persons” in each state. The 10-question 2010 census form does not ask about citizenship, but the Census Bureau collects information on citizenship on other forms.
Sen. Vitter warned this month that a vote against his proposal would “strip these states of their proper representation in Congress,” while including noncitizens would “artificially increase the population count” in other states.
Also in the South:
ALABAMA: A look at investments made by state employees' pension fund
ARKANSAS: U.S. Chamber of Commerce to run ads against health care plan in Arkansas, Louisiana
FLORIDA: Proposed huge biopower plant to bring jobs and energy to North Florida
GEORGIA: State gets federal funds to upgrade power grid
KENTUCKY: Gov. Beshear announces funding for 911 call centers
LOUISIANA: State officials blast FDA plan on limiting oyster production
MISSISSIPPI: Gulfport to start environmental court
NORTH CAROLINA: 'Memory loss' hits former Gov. Easley's witnesses at Board of Elections hearing
SOUTH CAROLINA: State's farmers fight language of climate change bill
TENNESSEE: Nonpartisan Tax Foundation says state's tax structure needs new look
VIRGINIA: Attorney General candidates face off in Richmond
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Labels: chamber, climate, Easley, environmental, FDA, pension, power, tax


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