Every ten years, the Census is conducted for a lot of reasons, but right in the lobby of the Census Bureau, is the Constitutional requirement - for reapportionment of representatives in Congress. It's a small comfort that whatever else happens, they can't eliminate my agency, although they can certainly try and downsize (I believe, at their peril).
But I am pretty sure that, with all of the gerrymandering and disputes - districts are SUPPOSED to have the same number of residents. Right now, that's somewhere in the vicinity of 710,000 people. That translates typically to between 350 to 500 thousand VOTES.
So how is it that SOME districts have closer to ONE hundred thousand votes cast? Is it extreme lack of voter interest? Or are there districts that just don't have many VOTERS? I've been watching as the final districts complete their counting - amazingly, after more than a week - and some of these districts - well, CAL 13 has just around 130,000 total votes cast.
How come?
But I am pretty sure that, with all of the gerrymandering and disputes - districts are SUPPOSED to have the same number of residents. Right now, that's somewhere in the vicinity of 710,000 people. That translates typically to between 350 to 500 thousand VOTES.
So how is it that SOME districts have closer to ONE hundred thousand votes cast? Is it extreme lack of voter interest? Or are there districts that just don't have many VOTERS? I've been watching as the final districts complete their counting - amazingly, after more than a week - and some of these districts - well, CAL 13 has just around 130,000 total votes cast.
How come?