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HOUSE SIZE, APPORTIONMENT, AND DISTRICTING

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Title: HOUSE SIZE, APPORTIONMENT, AND DISTRICTING


1
HOUSE SIZE, APPORTIONMENT, AND DISTRICTING
  • All of these factors, which pertain directly to
    House elections, are also relevant to
    Presidential elections.
  • House size and apportionment determine the number
    of electoral votes for each state.
  • The Maine/Nebraska system of awarding electoral
    voters in based on Congressional Districts.

2
HOUSE SIZE
  • Not fixed by the Constitution, except that the
    number of Representatives shall not exceed one
    for every thirty thousand, but each state shall
    have at least one Representative.
  • Each state has electoral votes equal to its total
    represen-tation in Congress, i.e., number of
    House seats 2, so
  • each state has a guaranteed a floor of 3
    electoral votes,
  • which entails a systematic small-state advantage.
  • The Constitution specified a provisional
    apportionment of 65 House seats,
  • in turn implying 65 26 91 electoral votes.

3
Failed First Amendment
  • After the first enumeration required by the
    first article of the Constitution, there shall be
    one Representative for every thirty thousand,
    until the number shall amount to one hundred,
    after which the proportion shall be so regulated
    by Congress, that there shall be not less than
    one hundred Representatives, nor less than one
    Representative for every forty thousand persons,
    until the number of Representatives shall amount
    to two hundred after which the proportion shall
    be so regulated by Congress, that there shall not
    be less than two hundred Representatives, nor
    more than one Representative for every fifty
    thousand persons.
  • Sent to the states for ratification along with
    the Bill of Rights and Amendment 27

4
House Size (at Apportionment) by Decade
5
Electoral Vote Floor to EV Total
6
Implications of Increasing House Size for
Electoral Votes
  • Increasing the number of House seats allows a
    more precise apportionment among the states.
  • Increasing the number of House seats reduces the
    impact of the 3-electoral vote floor relative to
    the total number of electoral votes.
  • On both counts, increasing the size of the House
    increases proportionality in the allocation of
    Electoral Votes and, in particular, reduces the
    small state advantage.
  • Changing House size can change the outcome of
    Presidential elections (all else equal).

7
  • In 2000, Bush carried 30 states and Gore 21
    (including DC), so
  • On the basis of House Electoral Votes only,
    Gore would have beaten Bush
  • Bush 271 60 212
  • Gore 267 42 225
  • 2000 was the first time since 1916 that an
    electoral vote victory turned on Senatorial
    electoral votes.
  • And it was the first time since 1876 that a
    popular vote loser became an electoral vote
    winner on the basis of Senatorial electoral
    votes.

8
Moreover, Gore carried most of the biggest
states, while Bush carried most of the
middle-size states and the smallest states were
divided about equally
9
  • As a result, a larger House size could have given
    Gore an overall House Senatorial Electoral
    Vote victory.
  • But, perhaps surprisingly, the relationship
    between increasing House size and Gores
    electoral college advantage was not monotonic.
  • See M. G. Neubauer and J. Zeitlin, Outcomes of
    Presidential Elections and House Size, PS
    Politics and Political Science, October 2003

10
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11
The Apportionment Clause
  • Article I, Section 2, Clause 3
  • Representatives and direct Taxes shall be
    apportioned among the several States which may be
    included within this Union, according to their
    respective Numbers which shall be determined by
    adding to the whole Number of free Persons,
    including those bound to Service for a Term of
    Years, and excluding Indians not taxed, three
    fifths of all other Persons. The actual
    Enumeration shall be made within three Years
    after the first Meeting of the Congress of the
    United States, and within every sub-sequent Term
    of ten Years, in such Manner as they shall by Law
    direct.

12
The Apportionment Problem
  • But the Constitution does not specify a
    mathe-matical formula by which this apportionment
    would be calculated.
  • When Congress took up the first Apportionment
    Bill in 1790, it discovered that solving this
    prob-lem was not straightforward.
  • Two rival apportionment formulas were proposed.

13
Hamiltons Method Largest Remainders
  • Fix the size of the House, e.g., at 105.
  • Determine each states proportion of the
    apportionment population.
  • For example, New York had 9.77685 of the
    population. Given a House of 105 members, NY
    would ideally have 9.77685 x 105 10.26569
    seats (NYs quota).
  • But NY and every state must have a whole number
    of House seats.
  • The most obvious remedy is to round off quotas in
    the normal manner but such rounded whole numbers
    may not add to 105.
  • Hamiltons method round all quotas down, then
    allocate remaining seats to states according to
    the size of their remainders.

14
Hamiltons Method (cont.)
  • Hamiltons Method is a quota method of
    apportionment.
  • Accordingly it stays in quota, i.e., it gives
    every state its quota rounded either up or down.
  • But Hamiltons method is subject to a number of
    paradoxes.
  • The Alabama Paradox increasing the size of the
    House can reduce a states seats, all else equal.
  • The Population Paradox even if state As
    population grows faster than state Bs, A can
    lose seats to B in the later apportion-ment, all
    else equal.
  • The New State Paradox admitting a new state,
    even while expanding the size of the House so
    that the old states together have the same
    number seats as before, can redistribute those
    seats among the old states.

15
Divisor Methods
  • All divisor methods award House seats
    sequen-tially to states on the basis of their
    priority for an additional seat.
  • Initially, every states priority is determined
    by its population, so the first seat is awarded
    to the largest state.
  • Thereafter, a states priority is determined by
    its population divided by some function of n,
    where n is the number of seats it has already
    been awarded.
  • Different divisor methods use different functions
    of n.

16
Divisor Methods (Alternate Characterization)
  • Select a divisor approximately equal to the total
    population of all states divided by the total
    number of House seats, i.e., the average CD
    population.
  • Divide each states population by this divisor
    and round off the resulting quotient by some rule
    to produce an provisional apportionment.
  • Different divisor methods use different rounding
    rules.
  • Adjust the divisor up or down until the required
    number of seats has been apportioned

17
Jeffersons Method Greatest Divisors
  • Fix the size of the House, e,g., at 105.
  • House seats are awarded sequentially.
  • The first House seat is awarded to the largest
    state.
  • The second House seat is also awarded to the
    largest state if its population divided by 2 is
    greater than the population of the second largest
    state otherwise it is awarded to the second
    largest state.
  • In general, each additional seat is awarded to
    the state with the strongest claim to the seat,
    where this claim is determined by the population
    of the state divided by the number of seats it
    has already been awarded plus one, i.e., n1.
  • With respect to the alternate characterization,
    Jeffersons rounding rule is to round all
    quotients down to the nearest integer.

18
Jeffersons Method (cont.)
  • Jeffersons method (like other divisor methods)
    is not subject to the Alabama, Population, or New
    State Paradox.
  • But Jeffersons method (like other divisor
    methods) does not stay in quota. In particular
    (for Jefferson),
  • a big state may get more than its quota rounded
    up, and
  • a small state may get less than its quota rounded
    down.

19
Jeffersons Method (cont.)
  • Thus Jeffersons Method exhibits bias (to the
    advantage of big states and disadvan-tage of
    small states).
  • NOTE all apportionment methods may have to be
    adjusted to comply with the constitutional
    requirement that every state have at least one
    House seat.

20
Other Divisor Methods
  • John Adams advocated the divisor rule that rounds
    all quotients up to the nearest integer.
  • It is the divisor rule most favorable to small
    states.
  • Daniel Webster advocated the divisor rule at the
    midpoint between Jefferson and Adams, i.e., that
    rounds all quotients up or down to the nearest
    integer in the normal manner.
  • It is the divisor rule least biased toward either
    big or small states.
  • The Hill-Huntington divisor method is the
    apportionment method now in effect.
  • It is slightly biased toward small states.

21
Apportionment Legislation
  • When it first passed the 1790 Apportion-ment
    Bill, Congress used the Hamilton Method.
  • Washington rejected the bill (on Jeffer-sons
    urging), exercising the first Presi-dential veto
    in history.
  • Congress failed to override the veto and passed a
    new Apportionment Bill based on Jeffersons
    method.

22
Apportionment Legislation (cont.)
  • Throughout the 19th Century, in each
    Apportionment Bill Congress always changed
    (almost always increased) the House size and
    often changed the apportionment method.
  • Congress discovered the Alabama Paradox while
    debating 1870 bill and never used Hamilton Method
    thereafter.
  • Congress established a permanent House size of
    435 in 1913.

23
Apportionment Legislation (cont.)
  • Congress prescribed a permanent appor-tionment
    method (the Hill-Huntington Method of Equal
    Proportions in the 1940 Apportionment Bill.
  • Thus, since 1940, apportionment has been on
    automatic pilot and Congress no longer passes a
    new Apportionment Bill each decade.
  • The definitive work on this subject is by M.
    Balinski and H. P. Young, Fair Representation.
  • The authors argue that the optimal apportionment
    formula is the divisor method proposed by Daniel
    Webster.

24
Other Variations on Election 2000
  • Using the actual (Hill-Huntington) apportionment
    formula on 1990 Census
  • Bush 271 Gore 267
  • Using Jeffersons apportionment formula on 1990
    Census
  • Bush 266 Gore 272
  • Using Hill-Huntington on the 2000 Census
  • Bush 280 Gore 258
  • Using Jefferson on the 2000 Census
  • Bush 277 Gore 261
  • Under all variations above, Gore wins on the
    basis of House electoral votes only, because
    Bush has an 18 vote advantage based on Senate
    electoral votes only.

25
Districting
  • Article I, Section 4, Clause 1
  • The times, places and manner of holding elections
    for Senators and Representatives, shall be
    prescribed in each state by the legislature
    thereof but the Congress may at any time by law
    make or alter such regulations, except as to the
    places of choosing Senators.
  • Since 1967 (and at various earlier times as well)
    Congress has pre-scribed that the manner of
    holding elections for Representative shall be by
    Single-Member Districts (SMDs), thereby producing
    single-winner elections in each district.
  • All states with two or more Representatives are
    therefore required to divide themselves into a
    number Congressional Districts (CDs) equal to
    their House seat apportionment.
  • Districting is either done by the state
    legislature or by another body prescribed by
    state law (or by courts when legal issues arise).

26
Districting (cont.)
  • In Maine and Nebraska, Presidential electors are
    elected by district, rather than statewide.
  • Any state is free to adopt such a system and
    several other states (including Florida) have
    considered the district system.
  • Under the Maine/Nebraska system, the two
    Senatorial electors are elected statewide,
    while the remaining House electors are elected
    from CDs (on an SMD basis).
  • Thus creating CDs is relevant to Presidential
    selection in Maine and Nebraska and potentially
    in other states as well.

27
Districting Controversies
  • Since 1964 Supreme Court rulings have required
    that CDs within each state have (virtually) equal
    populations.
  • District boundaries must cut across natural and
    jurisdictional boundaries to comply with these
    court rulings.
  • Computer technology and geographic informa-tion
    systems make it possible to readily deter-mine
    the likely political effects of alternative
    districting plans.
  • As a result, district boundaries have been drawn
    in increasing weird ways.

28
Such gerrymandering can produce undoubtedly
weirdly shaped districts
29
Closer to home
30
  • It is commonly claimed that such
    gerry-mandering produces districts that are
    safe for one or other party and therefore
    non-competitive.
  • If this is true, and if CDs were used to elect
    Presidential electors, then presi-dential
    election campaigns would focus on a relatively
    few battleground CD.
  • However, CDs are not nearly as safe for one party
    or the other as the outcomes in House elections
    seem to suggest.
  • House elections vs. Presidential vote by CD

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