Re: The Power of the SCOTUS Part VI - Roberts rules disorder
It would be nice to see a % of state's population that's registered to vote table. Not of eligible voters but of total inhabitants. My point being is you could see a shift back to a state like PA, or even MN, where there's not a lot of illegals so they have a greater % of their people as voters. By right that should ensure them a greater slice of the overall pie, hence a shift in congressional districts from Texas to those states. You'd also benefit older states without a lot of children as they wouldn't be part of the new calculations either.
To the extent that this data is accurate, TX is third behind CA and AZ for per capita illegal immigrants.
I'm surprised MS and LA are so low -- I'd have thought they were much higher. Based on population the big absolute numbers are in CA, TX, NY and FL, though CA and TX really dwarf the rest.
It would be nice to see a % of state's population that's registered to vote table. Not of eligible voters but of total inhabitants. My point being is you could see a shift back to a state like PA, or even MN, where there's not a lot of illegals so they have a greater % of their people as voters. By right that should ensure them a greater slice of the overall pie, hence a shift in congressional districts from Texas to those states. You'd also benefit older states without a lot of children as they wouldn't be part of the new calculations either.