Hubert H. Humphrey Institute of Public Affairs
CSPG
About Us
Contact Information
In the News
Join our Email List

Smart Politics Blog

Events

Initiatives
Policy Fellows
Election Administration
Redistricting Project

Research
Reports
Articles
Mondale Papers

Public Opinion
Humphrey Polling
Public Opinion Archive

Elections
Election Data Archive
Candidate Profiles

Humphrey Institute
Question mark icon
Phone icon
Blogs & Podcasts icon
Gift icon
Lock icon
Home icon

 

 

 Center for the Study of Politics and Governance
 

Will Minnesota lose a seat in Congress?


Byline: Tim Nelson
Source: Minnesota Public Radio - Polinaut
Date: December 1, 2008

View original story here.

With the U.S. Census set to open an office in St. Paul tomorrow, political discussion focused this morning on Minnesota's eight U.S. House seats. The Humphrey Institute is holding a forum on redistricting reform today.

State demographer Tom Gillaspy said, as it stands now, Minnesota's "last seat" has fallen off the bottom of the Congressional roster, below Washington state's 9th and California's 53rd.

Here's the upshot: Congress has been fixed at 435 seats for almost 100 years. Each state gets one Representative, and the other 385 are doled out proportionately. But the population - and the makeup of Congress - have been moving to the Sun Belt. Texas is likely to get four new seats, for example, and those seats have to come from somewhere else.

Minnesota's "last district" (it could be any of the current eight) now stands 387th on the probable ranking that Gillaspy has drawn up.

That's the bad news.

The good news is that Minnesota is only about 1,800 people from making the list. That's about two weeks of population growth in Minnesota. "It's close," Gillaspy told the legislators and political wonks who turned out for the discussion. "It's closer than the Senate recount right now."

And with exactly 16 months before Census Day (April 1, 2010), there's still time to close the gap. Heck, there's still time to even "grow your own," if you were of a procreational mind about Congressional representation.

Gillaspy suggested something with a shorter gestational period: "When you get those census forms," he joked, "Fill 'em out early and fill 'em out often."