United States congressional apportionment explained

United States congressional apportionment is the process[1] by which seats in the United States House of Representatives are distributed among the 50 states according to the most recent decennial census mandated by the United States Constitution. After each state is assigned one seat in the House, most states are then apportioned a number of additional seats which roughly corresponds to its share of the aggregate population of the 50 states.[2] Every state is constitutionally guaranteed at least one seat in the House and two seats in the Senate, regardless of population.

The number of voting seats in the House of Representatives has been 435 since 1913, capped at that number by the Reapportionment Act of 1929—except for a temporary (1959–1962) increase to 437 when Alaska and Hawaii were admitted into the Union.[3] The Huntington–Hill method of equal proportions has been used to distribute the seats among the states since the 1940 census reapportionment.[1] Federal law requires the clerk of the United States House of Representatives to notify each state government of the number of seats apportioned to the state no later than January 25 of the year immediately following each decennial census.

The size of a state's total congressional delegation (which in addition to representative(s) includes 2 senators for each state) also determines the size of its representation in the U.S. Electoral College, which elects the U.S. president.

Constitutional context

Article One, Section 2, Clause 3 of the United States Constitution initially provided:

The phrase "all other persons" refers to slaves, a word not used in the Constitution until the Thirteenth Amendment.

Following the end of the Civil War, the first of those provisions was superseded by Section 2 of the Fourteenth Amendment:

The phrase "counting the whole number of persons in each State" has traditionally been understood to include non-citizens for purposes of apportionment.[4]

Reapportionment

Reapportionments normally occur following each decennial census, though the law that governs the total number of representatives and the method of apportionment to be carried into force at that time are enacted prior to the census.

The decennial apportionment also determines the size of each state's representation in the U.S. Electoral College. Under Article II, Section 1, Clause 2 of the U.S. Constitution, the number of electors of any state equals the size of its total congressional delegation (House and Senate seats).

Federal law requires the Clerk of the House of Representatives to notify each state government no later than January 25 of the year immediately following the census of the number of seats to which it is entitled. Whether or not the number of seats has changed, the state determines the boundaries of congressional districts—geographical areas within the state of approximately equal population—in a process called redistricting.

Because the deadline for the House Clerk to report the results does not occur until the following January, and the states need sufficient time to perform the redistricting, the decennial census does not affect the elections that are held during that same year. For example, the electoral college apportionment and congressional races during the 2020 presidential election year were still based on the 2010 census results; all of the newly redrawn districts based on the 2020 census did not finally come into force until the 2022 midterm election winners were inaugurated in January 2023.

Number of members

The size of the U.S. House of Representatives refers to the total number of congressional districts (or seats) into which the land area of the United States proper has been divided. The number of voting representatives is currently set at 435. There are an additional five delegates to the House of Representatives. They represent the District of Columbia and the territories of American Samoa, Guam, the Northern Mariana Islands, which first elected a representative in 2008,[5] and the U.S. Virgin Islands. Puerto Rico also elects a resident commissioner every four years.

Controversy and history

Since 1789, when the United States Congress first convened under the Constitution, the number of citizens per congressional district has risen from an average of 33,000 in 1790 to over 700,000 . Prior to the 20th century, the number of representatives increased every decade as more states joined the union, and the population increased.

Representation in the House, historical
Starting
year
SourceAvg. constituents
per member
1793nowrap 1790 census34,436
18031800 census34,609
18131810 census36,377
18231820 census42,124
18331830 census49,712
18431840 census71,338
18531850 census93,020
18631860 census122,614
18731870 census130,533
18831880 census151,912
18931890 census173,901
19031900 census193,167
19131910 census210,583
19231920 census243,728
19331930 census280,675
19431940 census301,164
19531950 census334,587
19631960 census410,481
19731970 census469,088
19831980 census510,818
19931990 census571,477
20032000 census646,946
20132010 census709,760
20232020 census761,169

The ideal number of members has been a contentious issue since the country's founding. George Washington agreed that the original representation proposed during the Constitutional Convention (one representative for every 40,000) was inadequate and supported an alteration to reduce that number to 30,000.[6] This was the only time that Washington pronounced an opinion on any of the actual issues debated during the entire convention.[7] Five years later, Washington was so insistent on having no more than 30,000 constituents per representative that he exercised the first presidential veto in history on a bill which allowed half states to go over the quota.

In Federalist No. 55, James Madison argued that the size of the House of Representatives has to balance the ability of the body to legislate with the need for legislators to have a relationship close enough to the people to understand their local circumstances, that such representatives' social class be low enough to sympathize with the feelings of the mass of the people, and that their power be diluted enough to limit their abuse of the public trust and interests.

Madison also addressed Anti-Federalist claims that the representation would be inadequate, arguing that the major inadequacies are of minimal inconvenience since these will be cured rather quickly by virtue of decennial reapportionment. He noted, however,

Madison argued against the assumption that more is better:

Global comparison and disparities

When talking about the populations within California's reapportioned House districts in 1951, a report from Duke University found that "[there] is not an excessive disparity in district populations, but [the populations and disparities are] perhaps larger than necessary."[8] If the House had a similar ratio of representatives to constituents as it did after the 1930 United States census, it would currently have 1,156 members (still just the second largest lower house, after China).[9]

The United States has unusually large constituencies compared to other OECD countries, the third largest in the world. However, most of this is caused by the United States's large population, which is the fourth-largest in the world; legislatures typically grow in proportion to the cube root of the population, rather than linearly, meaning larger countries tend to have larger constituency sizes.

Membership cap

The Apportionment Act of 1911 (Public Law 62-5) raised the membership of the U.S. House to 433 and provided for an apportionment. It also provided for additional seats upon the admissions of Arizona and New Mexico as states, increasing the number to 435 in 1912.

In 1921, Congress failed to reapportion the House membership as required by the United States Constitution. This failure to reapportion may have been politically motivated, as the newly elected Republican majority may have feared the effect such a reapportionment would have on their future electoral prospects.[10] [11] A reapportionment in 1921 in the traditional fashion would have increased the size of the House to 483 seats, but many members would have lost their seats due to the population shifts, and the House chamber did not have adequate seats for 483 members. By 1929, no reapportionment had been made since 1911, and there was vast representational inequity, measured by the average district size. By 1929 some states had districts twice as large as others due to population growth and demographic shift.[12]

In 1929 Congress (with Republican control of both houses of Congress and the presidency) passed the Reapportionment Act of 1929 which capped the size of the House at 435 and established a permanent method for apportioning a constant 435 seats. This cap has remained unchanged since then, except for a temporary increase to 437 members upon the 1959 admission of Alaska and Hawaii into the Union.[13]

Two states, Wyoming and Vermont, have populations smaller than the average for a single district, although neither state has fewer people than the least populous congressional districts.

Proposed expansion

Among the Bill of Rights amendments to the United States Constitution proposed by Congress in 1789, was one addressing the number of seats in the House. It attempted to set a pattern for growth of the House along with the population, but has not been ratified.

Taken at face-value, with the nation's population reaching approximately 308.7 million according to the 2010 census, the proposed amendment would have called for an up-to 6,000-member House.[14] [15] [16] However, in the context of its original construction, the amendment may have instead outlined an iterative procedure for apportionment following a square root rule relative to the population (e.g. Representatives \approx \sqrt - 100) that would still have called for a more than 1,600-member House following the same 2010 census.[17] [18]

One proposal to alleviate the current constituency disparities and the high average number of constituents in many states' congressional districts is the "Wyoming rule." Operating similar to New Zealand's method of allocation for proportional representation, it would give the least populous state (which has been Wyoming since 1990) one representative and then create districts in other states with the same population.[19]

Another proposed expansion rule, the cube root rule,[20] calls for the membership of the legislature to be based on the cube root (rounded up) of the U.S. population at the last census. For example, such a rule would call for 692 members of the House based on the 2020 United States census. An additional House member would be added each time the national population exceeds the next cube; in this case, the next House member would be added when the census population reached 331,373,889, and the one after that at 332,812,558. A variation would split the representation between the House and the Senate, e.g. 592 members in the House (692 − 100 senators).[21]

On May 21, 2001, Rep. Alcee Hastings sent a dear colleague letter pointing out that U.S. expansion of its legislature had not kept pace with other countries.[22]

In 2007, during the, Representative Tom Davis introduced a bill in the House of Representatives that would add two seats to the House, one for Utah and one for the District of Columbia. It was passed by the House, but was tripped up by procedural hurdles in the Senate and withdrawn from consideration. An identical bill was reintroduced during the . In February 2009 the Senate adopted the measure 61–37. In April 2010, however, House leaders decided to shelve the proposal.[23]

Two provisions of Section 102, subsection (d) in the Washington, D.C., Admission Act by delegate Eleanor Holmes Norton and its same-titled Senate companion by Sen. Tom Carper, both introduced in 2021 and again in 2023 during the and es, seek to amend Section 22(a) of the Reapportionment Act by adding one to the permanent House membership for a total of 436 representatives as the state of Washington, Douglass Commonwealth (i.e., Washington, D.C.) would have been entitled to an at-large district. Holmes Norton's bill previously passed the House during the but not the Senate.[24]

Apportionment methods

State! colspan="2"
Population percent House percent
201920102019[25] 2010
12.06%12.09%11.95%12.18%
8.85%8.16%8.74%8.28%
6.56%6.10%6.44%6.21%
5.94%6.29%5.98%6.21%
3.91%4.12%3.91%4.14%
3.87%4.16%3.91%4.14%
3.57%3.74%3.68%3.68%
3.24%3.14%3.22%3.22%
3.20%3.09%3.22%2.99%
3.05%3.21%2.99%3.22%
2.71%2.85%2.76%2.76%
2.61%2.60%2.53%2.53%
2.32%2.18%2.30%2.30%
2.22%2.07%2.30%2.07%
2.10%2.12%2.07%2.07%
2.09%2.06%2.07%2.07%
2.06%2.10%2.07%2.07%
1.87%1.94%1.84%1.84%
1.85%1.87%1.84%1.84%
1.78%1.85%1.84%1.84%
1.76%1.63%1.84%1.61%
1.72%1.72%1.61%1.84%
1.57%1.50%1.61%1.61%
1.50%1.55%1.61%1.61%
1.42%1.47%1.38%1.38%
1.36%1.41%1.38%1.38%
1.29%1.24%1.38%1.15%
1.21%1.22%1.15%1.15%
1.09%1.16%1.15%1.15%
0.98%0.90%0.92%0.92%
0.96%0.99%0.92%0.92%
0.94%0.88%0.92%0.92%
0.92%0.95%0.92%0.92%
0.91%0.96%0.92%0.92%
0.89%0.93%0.92%0.92%
0.64%0.67%0.69%0.69%
0.59%0.59%0.69%0.69%
0.55%0.60%0.46%0.69%
0.55%0.51%0.46%0.46%
0.43%0.44%0.46%0.46%
0.42%0.43%0.46%0.46%
0.41%0.43%0.46%0.46%
0.33%0.32%0.46%0.23%
0.32%0.34%0.23%0.46%
0.30%0.29%0.23%0.23%
0.27%0.26%0.23%0.23%
0.23%0.22%0.23%0.23%
0.22%0.23%0.23%0.23%
0.19%0.20%0.23%0.23%
0.18%0.18%0.23%0.23%
Apart from the requirement that each state is to be entitled to at least one representative in the House of Representatives, the number of representatives in each state is in principle to be proportional to its population. Since the adoption of the Constitution, five distinct apportionment methods have been used.

The first apportionment was contained in Art. I, § 2, cl. 3 of the Constitution. After the first census in 1790, Congress passed the Apportionment Act of 1792 and adopted the Jefferson method to apportion U.S. representatives to the states based on population.[26] The Jefferson method required fractional remainders to be discarded when calculating each state's total number of U.S. representatives and was used until the 1830 census.[27] [28] [29] [30] The Webster method, proposed in 1832 by Daniel Webster and adopted for the 1840 census, allocated an additional representative to states with a fractional remainder greater than 0.5.[31]

From 1850 to 1900, the situation was substantially less clear. Congress passed a law in 1850 declaring future apportionment would be done with Hamilton's method. However, Congress continued to pass ad hoc apportionment bills from 1850 through 1900 which overruling the procedure laid out, particularly in the 1860 Census (complicated by the Civil War), where no real apportionment method was used. Apart from 1860, Congress deliberately chose to set the size of the House at a level where Hamilton and Webster's methods gave the same apportionment.[32] This unofficial adoption of Webster's method was driven by the discovery of the Alabama paradox, which created an uproar in the House.[33] The Apportionment Act of 1911, in addition to setting the number of U.S. representatives at 435, returned to the Webster method, which was used following the 1910 and 1930 censuses (no reapportionment was done after the 1920 census). The current method, known as the Huntington–Hill method or method of equal proportions, was adopted in 1941 for reapportionment based on the 1940 census and beyond.[34] [35] [36] The revised method was necessary in the context of the cap on the number of representatives set in the Reapportionment Act of 1929.

Method of equal proportions

The apportionment method currently used is the method of equal proportions, which minimizes the percentage differences in the number of people per representative among the different states.[37] The resulting apportionment is optimal in the sense that any additional transfer of a seat from one state to another would result in larger percentage differences.[38]

In this method, as a first step, each of the 50 states is given its one guaranteed seat in the House of Representatives, leaving 385 seats to assign. The remaining seats are allocated one at a time, to the state with the highest priority number. Thus, the 51st seat would go to the most populous state (currently California). The priority number is determined by the ratio of the state population to the geometric mean of the number of seats it currently holds in the assignment process, n (initially 1), and the number of seats it would hold if the seat were assigned to it, n+1. Symbolically, the priority number An is

An=

P
\sqrt{n(n+1)
}

where P is the population of the state, and n is the number of seats it currently holds before the possible allocation of the next seat. An equivalent, recursive definition is

Am+1=\sqrt{

m
m+2
} \ A_

An=\sqrt{

n-1
n+1
} \ A_

where n is still the number of seats the state has before allocation of the next (in other words, for the mth allocation, n = m-1).

Consider the reapportionment following the 2010 U.S. census: beginning with all states initially being allocated one seat, the largest value of A1 corresponds to the largest state, California, which is allocated seat 51. After being allocated its 2nd seat, its priority value decreases to its A2 value, which is reordered to a position back in line. The 52nd seat goes to Texas, the 2nd largest state, because its A1 priority value is larger than the An of any other state. However, the 53rd seat goes back to California because its A2 priority value is larger than the An of any other state. The 54th seat goes to New York because its A1 priority value is larger than the An of any other state at this point. This process continues until all remaining seats are assigned. Each time a state is assigned a seat, n is incremented by 1, causing its priority value to be reduced and reordered among the states, whereupon another state normally rises to the top of the list.

The 2010 census ranking of priority values[39] shows the order in which seats 51–435 were apportioned after the 2010 census, with additional listings for the next five priorities. Minnesota was allocated the final (435th) seat. North Carolina missed its 14th seat by 15,754 residents as the 436th seat to be allocated; ten years earlier it had gained its 13th seat as the 435th seat to be allocated based on the 2000 census.[40]

The 2020 census ranking of priority values[41] shows the order in which seats 51–435 were apportioned after the 2020 census, with additional listings for the next ten priorities. For the second time in a row, Minnesota was allocated the final (435th) seat. If either New York had registered 89 more residents or Minnesota had registered 26 fewer residents, New York would have been allocated the 435th seat instead.[42] [43]

Past apportionments

Note: The first apportionment was established by the Constitution based on population estimates made by the Philadelphia Convention, and was not based on any census or enumeration.

indicates the largest number of representatives each state has had.

Changes per census

2010

See main article: 2010 United States redistricting cycle. On December 21, 2010, the U.S. Census Bureau released its official apportionment results for congressional representation. The changes were in effect for the U.S. elections in 2012.[44]

Gain fourGain twoGain oneNo change !Lose oneLose two
1. Texas1. Florida1. Arizona
2. Georgia
3. Nevada
4. South Carolina
5. Utah
6. Washington
(32 states)1. Illinois
2. Iowa
3. Louisiana
4. Massachusetts
5. Michigan
6. Missouri
7. New Jersey
8. Pennsylvania
1. New York
2. Ohio
+4+2+6−8−4
+12 seats gained total−12 seats lost total

2020

See main article: 2020 United States redistricting cycle. Apportionment results were released on April 26, 2021:

Gain twoGain oneNo change !Lose one
1. Texas1. Colorado
2. Florida
3. Montana
4. North Carolina
5. Oregon
(37 states)1. California
2. Illinois
3. Michigan
4. New York
5. Ohio
6. Pennsylvania
7. West Virginia
+2+5−7
+7 seats gained total−7 seats lost total

List of apportionments

The size of the U.S. House of Representatives has increased and decreased as follows:[45]

width=130 Effective datewidth=50 Sizewidth=35 ChangeLegal provisionReason and/or comments
March 4, 178959n/aConst. Art. I, § 2, cl. 3Seats apportioned by the Constitution based on population estimates made by the Philadelphia Convention. Only 11 of the original 13 states had ratified the Constitution by this time.
November 21, 178964 5North Carolina ratified the Constitution with the seats apportioned by the Constitution.
May 29, 179065 1Rhode Island ratified the Constitution with the seat apportioned by the Constitution.
March 4, 179167 2Vermont admitted.
June 1, 179269 2Kentucky admitted.
March 4, 1793105 36data-sort-value="01-253" (Apportionment Act of 1792)Apportionment following the first census (1790). First to use the Jefferson method.
June 1, 1796106 1data-sort-value="01-491" Tennessee admitted.
March 1, 1803107 1data-sort-value="02-175" Ohio admitted.
March 4, 1803142 35data-sort-value="02-128" Apportionment following the second census (1800).
April 30, 1812143 1data-sort-value="02-703" Louisiana admitted.
March 4, 1813182 39data-sort-value="02-669" Apportionment following the third census (1810).
December 11, 1816183 1data-sort-value="03-290" Indiana admitted.
December 10, 1817184 1data-sort-value="03-349" Mississippi admitted.
December 3, 1818185 1data-sort-value="03-430" Illinois admitted.
December 14, 1819186 1data-sort-value="03-492" Alabama admitted.
March 15, 1820data-sort-value="03-555" Maine admitted, 7 seats transferred from Massachusetts.
August 10, 1821187 1data-sort-value="03-547" Missouri admitted.
March 4, 1823213 26data-sort-value="03-651" Apportionment following the fourth census (1820).
March 4, 1833240 27data-sort-value="04-516" Apportionment following the fifth census (1830).
June 15, 1836241 1data-sort-value="05-051" Arkansas admitted.
January 26, 1837242 1data-sort-value="05-050" Michigan admitted.
March 4, 1843223 19data-sort-value="05-491" Apportionment following the sixth census (1840). First to use the Webster method. Became the only time the size of the House was reduced, except for the minor readjustments in 1863 and 1963.
March 3, 1845224 1data-sort-value="05-743" Florida admitted.
December 29, 1845226 2data-sort-value="05-798" Texas annexed and admitted.
December 28, 1846228 2data-sort-value="05-743"
Iowa admitted.
May 29, 1848230 2data-sort-value="09-058"
Wisconsin admitted.
March 4, 1849231 1data-sort-value="09-235" Additional seat apportioned to Wisconsin.
September 9, 1850233 2data-sort-value="09-452" California admitted.
March 4, 1853data-sort-value="09-432.1853" Apportionment following the seventh census (1850). First to use the Hamilton/Vinton (largest remainder) method.
234 1data-sort-value="10-025" Additional seat apportioned to California
May 11, 1858236 2data-sort-value="11-166" Minnesota admitted.
February 14, 1859237 1data-sort-value="11-383" Oregon admitted.
January 29, 1861238 1data-sort-value="12-126" Kansas admitted
June 2, 1862239 1data-sort-value="12-411" California apportioned an extra seat.
March 4, 1863233 6data-sort-value="09-432.1863" Apportionment following the eighth census (1860), in accordance with the 1850 act, which provided for an apportionment of 233 seats.
241 8data-sort-value="12-353" Supplemental apportionment of 8 seats (1 each for Pennsylvania, Ohio, Kentucky, Illinois, Iowa, Minnesota, Vermont, and Rhode Island), for an overall increase of 2 seats in the 38th Congress.
June 20, 1863data-sort-value="12-633" West Virginia admitted, three seats transferred from Virginia.
October 31, 1864242 1data-sort-value="13-032" Nevada admitted
March 1, 1867243 1data-sort-value="14-391" Nebraska admitted
March 4, 1873283 40data-sort-value="17-028" Apportionment following the ninth census (1870), replacing the 1850 act
292 9data-sort-value="17-192" Supplemental apportionment added one seat each for nine states
August 1, 1876293 1data-sort-value="13-034" Colorado admitted
March 4, 1883325 32data-sort-value="22-005" Apportionment following the tenth census (1880).
November 2, 1889328 3data-sort-value="25-679" North and South Dakota admitted, with one and two seats respectively.
November 8, 1889329 1data-sort-value="25-679" Montana admitted.
November 11, 1889330 1data-sort-value="25-679" Washington admitted.
July 3, 1890331 1data-sort-value="26-215" Idaho admitted.
July 10, 1890332 1data-sort-value="26-222" Wyoming admitted.
March 4, 1893356 24data-sort-value="26-735" Apportionment following the eleventh census (1890).
January 4, 1896357 1data-sort-value="28-109" Utah admitted.
March 4, 1903386 29data-sort-value="31-733" Apportionment following the twelfth census (1900)
November 16, 1907391 5data-sort-value="34-271" Oklahoma admitted
January 6, 1912393 2, incorporating New Mexico admitted
February 14, 1912394 1Arizona admitted
March 4, 1913435 41data-sort-value="37-013" (Apportionment Act of 1911, §§1–2)Apportionment following the thirteenth census (1910). Process returned to the Webster method.
March 4, 1933data-sort-value="46-026" (Reapportionment Act of 1929)Apportionment following the fifteenth census (1930). The size of the House became permanently capped at 435 seats under the Reapportionment Act of 1929.
January 3, 1943data-sort-value="54-162" (Reapportionment Act of 1929)
Apportionment following the sixteenth census (1940). First to use the Huntington–Hill method.
January 3, 1953data-sort-value="55-761" Apportionment following the seventeenth census (1950)
January 3, 1959436 1data-sort-value="72-345" Alaska admitted.
August 21, 1959437 1data-sort-value="73-008.8" , §8Hawaii admitted.
January 3, 1963435 2data-sort-value="73-008"

Apportionment following the eighteenth census (1960)
January 3, 1973Apportionment following the nineteenth census (1970).
January 3, 1983Apportionment following the twentieth census (1980).
January 3, 1993Apportionment following the twenty-first census (1990).
January 3, 2003Apportionment following the twenty-second census (2000).
January 3, 2013Apportionment following the twenty-third census (2010).
January 3, 2023Apportionment following the twenty-fourth census (2020).

See also

Notes

Citations

References

Further reading

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Kristin D. Burnett . Congressional Apportionment (2010 Census Briefs C2010BR-08) . U.S. Department of Commerce, Economics and Statistics Administration . 2011-11-01 . 2015-02-25.
  2. The populations of Washington, D.C. and federal territories are not included in this figure.
  3. [Public Law 62-5]
  4. Web site: Apportioning Seats in the U.S. House of Representatives Using the 2013 Estimated Citizen Population. 2021-03-26. Congressional Research Service.
  5. http://www.saipantribune.com/newsstory.aspx?cat=1&newsID=79834 Bush signs federalization bill
  6. News: Goldberg . Jonah . January 15, 2001 . George Will Called Me An Idiot . en-US . National Review . live . April 11, 2018 . https://web.archive.org/web/20090213221035/http://article.nationalreview.com/?q=NTMxYWU4ZjU1M2U5NmJhZjc4YjRiY2Y2NTc4MjNjM2M= . February 13, 2009.
  7. http://avalon.law.yale.edu/18th_century/debates_917.asp Madison's notes on the Constitutional Convention - Tuesday September 17, 1787
  8. Todd. James. Law and Contemporary Problems: Legislative Apportionment (Chapter Title: The Apportionment Problem Faced by the States). Law and Contemporary Problems. Duke University. 1952. 17. 2. Durham, North Carolina. 314–337. 1945-2322. 1945-2322.
  9. Web site: DeSilver. Drew. May 31, 2018. U.S. population keeps growing, but House of Representatives is same size as in Taft era. Pew Research Center.
  10. Book: Fair Representation, Meeting The Ideal of One Man One vote" . Michel Balinski . Michel . Balinski . H. Peyton . Young . 51.
  11. Web site: Congressional Apportionment . NationalAtlas.gov . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20090228091000/http://www.nationalatlas.gov/articles/boundaries/a_conApport.html#seven . February 28, 2009 . February 15, 2009.
  12. Apportionment of Representatives in Congress . CQ Researcher by CQ Press . CQ Researcher Online . 1927 . 975 . en . 1942-5635.
  13. Web site: Proportional Representation . September 21, 2018 . Office of the Historian, United States House of Representatives . Washington, D.C..
  14. Web site: Pack the House: How to Fix the Legislative Branch . Stone . Lyman . October 17, 2018 . Mere Orthodoxy . September 17, 2019.
  15. Web site: The case for massively expanding the US House of Representatives, in one chart . Matthews . Dylan . Dylan Matthews . June 4, 2018 . Vox . September 17, 2019.
  16. Web site: Packing the House? . Hurlbut . Terry . April 16, 2015 . Conservative News and Views . September 17, 2019.
  17. Book: Kyvig, David . Explicit and Authentic Acts . University Press of Kansas . 2016 . 978-0-7006-2229-0 . 470.
  18. Web site: Madison Apportionment Amendment . 2023-09-07 . genuineideas.com.
  19. Web site: Taylor. Steven. December 14, 2010. Representation in the House: The Wyoming Rule. Outside the Beltway.
  20. Book: Kane. Caroline. Why the House of Representatives Must Be Expanded and How Today's Congress Can Make it Happen. Mascioli. Gianni. McGarry. Michael. Nagel. Meira. Fordham University School of Law. 2020.
  21. Web site: The "Cube Root Rule": A Push to Make Congress More Representative?. May 31, 2019. IVN. October 16, 2017. Independent Voter Network.
  22. Web site: June 2, 2006 . FairVote - Hastings Letter . https://web.archive.org/web/20060602021508/http://www.fairvote.org/?page=866 . dead . June 2, 2006 . June 23, 2020 .
  23. News: Marimow . Ann E. . Pershing . Ben . April 21, 2010 . Congressional leaders shelve D.C. voting rights bill . The Washington Post .
  24. Web site: DC is closer to becoming a state now than it has ever been. Millhiser. Ian. June 26, 2020. Vox.
  25. 2019 numbers are calculations from estimated population data
  26. 3 Annals of Cong. 539 (1792)
  27. Act of Jan. 14, 1802,
  28. Act of Dec. 21, 1811,
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  45. http://www.thirty-thousand.org/pages/QHA-02.htm The Size of the U. S. House of Representatives and its Constituent State Delegations