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Bob Benenson of CQ-Roll looks at the latest reapportionment projections:

The country’s balance of population, and hence its balance of political power, continues to shift to the South and West, as it has for the past six decades. The census figures being released in December, which will decide the reapportionment of House seats among the states starting with the 2012 election, will probably show less dramatic changes than in the recent past. But they also could upend much of the advance planning of the nation’s political mapmakers, if the final and official count varies even a little from current projections.

Texas clearly will be the big winner and stands to gain as many as four seats, due in large part to its fast-growing Hispanic population. But it could be limited to a three-seat gain if the state’s population surge proves to be just 38,005 smaller (in a population of 25.3 million) than expected. And similarly minuscule differences — in relative terms, at least — could make the difference for as many as 16 states that might gain, retain or lose congressional seats.

Get Bob’s full take here …

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Last Updated on Tuesday, 12 October 2010 08:36

From the San Angelo Standard Times

If redistricting weren’t so serious, it would be funny.

As Forrest Gump’s mama says about life in the 1994 movie, “It’s like a box of chocolates. You never know what you’re gonna get.”

Most folks don’t know, or care, about legislative and congressional redistricting, to be done in the legislative session beginning in January, by the legislators mostly chosen in this year’s election.

Don’t care, that is, until they see a relatively compact Austin-based congressional district split into three — one reaching to Houston, one to South Texas, and one to San Antonio and West Texas.

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Last Updated on Friday, 16 July 2010 07:51

From Jason Embry and the Austin American Statesman:

Hearing today led by lame-duck chairman, lobbyists are learning to shoot guns and check my math, folks, because the countdown is back.

At this point, it looks like there will be two big issues in the 2011 session of the Legislature: The budget and redistricting. We’ve talked plenty about the former, and will get to some more budget talk in a minute, but redistricting steps briefly into the spotlight today.

The House Redistricting Committee will join with the Judiciary and Civil Jurisprudence Committee for an 11 a.m. hearing today in E1.030. From the meeting notice: “The joint public hearing will consider recent legal, technological and demographic developments relating to the upcoming redistricting process.”

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Last Updated on Wednesday, 2 June 2010 09:15

From the Fort Worth Star Telegram

For now, it’s being waged quietly below the surface as party operatives, consultants, computer wonks and legislative analysts pore over emerging census data and preliminary maps charting population changes.

But in the coming months, the battle over congressional and legislative reapportionment will explode into full view as Republicans and Democrats plunge into a power struggle played out at least once every decade — transforming population changes into control of the statehouse and Texas’ delegation in the U.S. House of Representatives.

With its population expected to grow to more than 25 million, the Lone Star State appears on track to pick up at least three, and possibly four, new seats in the House of Representatives, the largest gain of any state.

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Last Updated on Monday, 29 March 2010 08:30

From the Texas Tribune:

In politics, the crayon is mightier than the ballot. A political mapmaker can do more to change the power structure than a herd of consultants with fat bank accounts behind them. And 2011 will be the Year of the Mapmakers.

They’ll take the new census numbers — Texas is expected to have a population of more than 25 million — and use them to draw new congressional and legislative districts for the state. The last time this was done, in 2003, Republican mappers took control of the Texas House by peeling away enough seats from the Democrats to give the GOP the numbers it needed for a majority.

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Last Updated on Wednesday, 24 March 2010 10:21