Rhode Island keeps both its House seats
By Terry H.
Schwadron, DCReport Opinion Editor
Admittedly, I like data. For me,
they are the evidence in the trial.Rhode Island's census efforts paid off, saving the seats of
both of our Congressmen
You get a much better idea of the
baseball game in the box score than in the final score.
You get a better understanding of
unemployment by looking at the original Bureau of Labor Statistics report than
at the overall rate.
And you can move beyond emotion to
the facts through sifting through trial evidence.
All of which brings us to the
topline U.S. Census reports released Monday. Summaries show that the nation’s
population growth has slowed over the last 10 years, and that a few
Congressional seats will be shifted. As soon as state legislators can legally
do so more South and West states that have voted Republican in the past
but are starting to show purple roots will be favored.
The Census should be a source of
learning for us to understand more about who we are.
Besides apportioning power and
proportion of federal funds, however, the Census should be a source of learning
for us to understand more about who we are. The really interesting demographics
that are yet to be released may show a much richer view of change than this
topline.
And, like any compilation of
records, the fundamental question of data collections like the Census is whether
they represent good data – especially since pandemic, a series of natural
disasters, immigration limits and border crossings and the growth of estimated
population counts all have had a deleterious effect on the accuracy of the
decennial count.
Do you think New York State is going
to roll over with a loss of a Congressional seat over a reported difference of 89 people in
its count during a year in which Census workers did not go house to house? (An
assessment of undercounts and overcounts is due in December.)
Naturally, accuracy should matter,
since the data inform what policies we adopt as a country. If we are an aging
nation, need we tilt more resources toward eldercare, for example?
If we don’t have enough people to
sustain economic growth, might we have a different, more liberal view of
immigration, legal and not, for another?
What We Know
There are more Americans than 10
years ago, but the rate of growth is the lowest of recent decades. As of last
April 1, 2020, we have 331.5 million Americans, an increase of 7.4% since
2010, the lowest rate of expansion since the 1930s, the Great
Depression. Statisticians see this drop as part of a longer-term trend, tied to
aging, decreased fertility rates, particularly among whites, and lagging immigration.
In dozen states, including Texas,
Florida, Arizona, New Mexico and Nevada, those self-identifying as Hispanic
accounted for about half the gains.
And we easily see from data maps
there has been movement to the South and West, as well as to Washington, D.C.
Of course, the attention, as usual,
immediately is on partisan politics rather than on the broader image projected
for the country.
So, we’re told, Texas, Florida,
Colorado and Montana will add seats in Congress that come from decreased counts
in New York and, for the first time, California – along with federal funds that
follow the same pattern. Rhode Island, which has been losing population for
decades, will keep its two seats.
If you wanted to draw one political
conclusion, it might be that Washington, D.C., continues to draw more and more
government employees and lobbyists – growth of the most contentious business in
the nation.
Here’s the part I found interesting:
“In a preliminary report on quality metrics released, Census Bureau
demographers said the initial population counts from the 2020 Census were
‘generally aligned with benchmark data’ and added that their analysis should
not be taken as ‘an assessment of the accuracy or reasonableness of the 2020
Census results.’ They said further assessments would follow.”
That’s data-speak for less-than-full
trust in what’s been put out there.
As Commerce secretary launching this
Census effort, Wilbur Ross, at Donald Trump’s behest, tried to get a
citizenship question included. That would discourage undocumented individuals
from reporting.
There were other efforts, federal
and state, in voting rolls as well as Census counts to avoid counting prison
populations or universities. The coronavirus pandemic alone prompted
relocations and got in the way of the actual count. The Pew Research Center
says 5 percent of U.S. adults said they moved because of the
pandemic.
In New York, where I live, officials
were practically begging residents to return mail Census forms since responses
were way, way short of 100 percent.
You don’t have to be a demographer
to understand that small changes in counting techniques can affect the
bottom-line numbers.
Heeding the Trends
The biggest effect we should be
noticing is that we will be running out of workers – a trend already being
reported by big employers. The Census is as much a mirror of Trump policies to
halt immigration as it is later decisions to marry and have fewer children. We
also have seen estimates of life expectancy dropping in recent years, fueled by
suicides, drug overdoses and diseases, including 547,000 Covid deaths.
These trends also spell a need for a
review of health policies and Social Security, as well as immigration. We’re
growing old people, and just how we will support the requirements of the
workplace and extended benefits is unclear. That should be the value of
studying demographics.
Also murky is just what these topline numbers say about race, about the nature of cities, about the need for services in areas away from cities.
We expect those numbers to show faster growth
of non-whites, for example, which seems at odds with the growth of states that
have traditionally voted Republican. It sounds like a formula for a heavy
season of gerrymandering to match the anti-voter rights legislation we’ve
witnessed this year in most states.
We have the constant beat of politics in the Census results. Actually, as Washington Post political writer Aaron Blake notes, it was surprising that we saw seven states shift seats rather than 10, most moving from blue states to redder states. The biggest winners were smaller states: Montana not only gains a seat in Congress but an Electoral College vote.
Moving seats to states where
Republicans control the legislature that draws voting districts will have an
obvious advantage to the GOP. But in states like Texas, there also has been
growth among Democratic voters. The Cook Political Report estimates the shifts are worth about 3.5 seats which, if no other seat shifted
in the coming midterm election, would put the House near-even, Blake reported.
I’d say the safe forecast is for
more partisan bickering at every level of political behavior, including a
tighter Electoral College vote in 2024.