lolmap
Sorry, that's the only useful comment I have. Which is 746% more useful than that map was.
I'm trying to dig up a 2024/2028 election map based on population projections for the 2020 census, and I can't find one. Does anybody know what the method is that's used is to allot representatives to states?
Well,
here's an analysis and projection for 2020 reapportionment based on 2010 census trends.
In short:
Losing 1 seat:Rhode Island
New York
Pennsylvania
West Virginia
Ohio
Michigan
Illinois
Minnesota
Gaining 1 seat:California
Oregon
Colorado
Florida
North Carolina
Gaining 3 seats:Texas
I, for one, welcome our new ten-gallon overlords. (Wait, no I don't.....)
So the lost electoral votes are coming mostly from blue states (though Ohio and Pennsylvania are more swing than blue, and West Virginia is somewhat red at the Presidential level), and the gains are in two blue states (CA, OR), three swing states (CO, NC, FL) and one big honkin' red state (TX). Tiny advantage to Team Red there, but only by 1-2 electoral votes. And the demographic shifts in Texas, combined with the Republican Party's inability to reconcile itself to immigration reform....if they stick with the hardline "build a wall and deport" stance, you might see Texas turn into a swing state, which would be tectonic to the electoral landscape. With Florida becoming a bonafide swing state, Texas was the last great bastion of secure red votes in large number in the Electoral College. You just can't scrape together enough votes from the Midwest and Deep South to pull a hardcore conservative to victory without Tejas. If the Democrats were to run some Hispanic rising star candidate FROM Texas in 2024...