mosquitobite
Member
- Joined
- Nov 21, 2007
- Messages
- 4,821
In order to keep the House in a "MANAGEABLE" number...
http://history.house.gov/Institution/Apportionment/Determining-Apportionment/
While the Constitution laid out a number (no more than one rep per 30,000 people) it was a way of setting a minimum, not a maximum.
Now, our population has tripled since 1929! Now our representatives "represent" close to or well over a million people in most districts.
Not only does this mean our representation suffers - because there's no way a representative can be all things to that many people... but it is also cheaper for lobbyists to "buy" legislation.
Think about it. They only need to "buy" 220 representatives and 51 senators to get their way. If the states still elected the senators, it would cost much more to buy the senate.
And if we had more reps, more in line with population growth, it wouldn't be so easy for crony capitalists or socialists to get their legislation through.
Our government would most likely look more like some other democracies with multiple parties forming coalitions.
The Reapportionment Act made Congress "manageable" alright...
http://history.house.gov/Institution/Apportionment/Determining-Apportionment/
While the Constitution laid out a number (no more than one rep per 30,000 people) it was a way of setting a minimum, not a maximum.
Now, our population has tripled since 1929! Now our representatives "represent" close to or well over a million people in most districts.
Not only does this mean our representation suffers - because there's no way a representative can be all things to that many people... but it is also cheaper for lobbyists to "buy" legislation.
Think about it. They only need to "buy" 220 representatives and 51 senators to get their way. If the states still elected the senators, it would cost much more to buy the senate.
And if we had more reps, more in line with population growth, it wouldn't be so easy for crony capitalists or socialists to get their legislation through.
Our government would most likely look more like some other democracies with multiple parties forming coalitions.
The Reapportionment Act made Congress "manageable" alright...