So expanding departments and government is good, because then there will be less corruption.![]()
They are suppose to represent the people, not political beliefs.
The biggest problem for me is that congressmen have designated areas (districts) that vote for them. That means that if a person gets elected to be in congress and gets 51% of the vote while the other person got 49%, then that means that a huge portion of the population is without representation. Maybe there should be a limited amount of seats available for each state based on the population and people can vote for someone who represents their political interests. If there were atleast 200 seats per state, then i am SURE that atleast a few TRUE conservatives would get int per state. And if you add up the numbers on a national level then we could get some pretty good representation in congress.
Basically, i wouldn't mind having more congressmen as long as they don't have "districts" that they represent. I'd rather they represent a political belief.
More politicians, more corruption.
Yeah, but the critical reform in all this is abolishing House salaries too. If they still get paid you are basically just creating a whole new Department of Homeland Security. Get rid of the salaries and the annual legislative session won't last more than a week or so, which is what our founders intended. I think secession is a lot more important movement than this one, but no harm in advancing both.
and what's the problem with rich people in the House of Representatives? the idea behind no-pay for government workers is they have to do productive work in the market outside of the state.
There is no problem with some rich people in the House. The problem is that the people in the House are supposed to REPRESENT the average person from their district. Most people aren't rich. So if you have all rich people, then the middle class is not represented.
If the House had no pay, only people wealthy enough to take off two years from work could be representatives, not including the time and money they need to campaign for the job in the first place.
Have you actually read through the website that is the subject of this thread?
Representatives of the House are supposed to represent their constitutes -- not their pocket book.
The founding fathers understood this and it was expected of representatives to have a full time job while serving in Congress.
A lawsuit has been filed in U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Mississippi alleging that instead of following the U.S. Constitution, Congress has allowed a system of representation where a vote in Mississippi is worth only about half that of a vote in Rhode Island or Iowa.
The action filed by an organization called Apportionment.us explains that because of the growth of the population in the U.S. to more than 300 million now, combined with a turn-of-the-last-century decision setting the number of U.S. representatives at 435, voters across the U.S. are treated far differently.
"The inequality today is severe and unjust," the organization states on its website. "The primary measure that the Supreme Court has used to determine voter equality is to compare the largest and the smallest districts. According to the 2000 census, Montana was the most under-represented and Wyoming was the most over-represented. In simple terms, it took 1.83 Montana voters to equal just 1 Wyoming voter, which is grossly unfair."
The U.S. Supreme Court, in the "Karcher" case, already has ruled that a deviation of 0.6984 percent, which is "over 90 times smaller" is unconstitutional, the organization said.
The case was filed on behalf of voters in the most under-represented states, including John Tyler Clemons of Oxford, Miss.; Jessica Wagner of Kalispell, Mont.; Krystal Brunner of Nisland, S.D.; Lisa Schea of Newark, Del.; and Frank Mylar of Sandy, Utah.
Galileo said:The House does not adequately represent the people.