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Texas Redistricting Sparks Chaos: Trump’s Census Push Change Congress Forever?
Texas’ mid-decade redistricting battle is reshaping the U.S. political landscape, driven by a GOP push to redraw congressional maps before the 2030 Census. Democrats’ walkout in protest failed to stop the special session from passing new maps, potentially securing five GOP seats. Trump’s call for a new census excluding undocumented immigrants, blocked by the Supreme Court in 2020, reignites debates over apportionment. With 30 million additional people potentially adding 39 congressional seats, Texas’ fight could shift power before the next president takes office. Explore why redistricting now overshadows 2030 and impacts election integrity.
Why is Texas redistricting in the middle of the decade? We have to thank Texas because the conversation now is not 2030. Everyone that talks about the board of elections and the voting system, if you don’t correct redistricting it is irrelevant. If you fight to get two republicans on the board of elections and let this go it is irrelevant.
The special session in Texas passes the redistricting map after democrats walk out in protest.
Trump is asking for a new census to be taken. But he has asked for a new census before and the Supreme court blocked the Trump administration's attempt to add a citizenship question to the 2020 census. Texas brought up the fight. Trump demands census excluding undocumented immigrants amid redistricting fight. If we don’t do it now, the next census falls under the next president of the United States.
Ask AI if all the illegals that came across the border: Yes, the 2030 Census will count all people residing in the United States, including undocumented immigrants, as it has historically done. The Census Bureau is mandated to count everyone living in the country, regardless of citizenship or legal status, according to the US Constitution. While there have been discussions and attempts to change this, the current legal framework and historical practices support the inclusion of all residents in the census count for apportionment purposes. — the population per congressional district in the US averages around 761,169. If 30 million people get counted that were not counted last time that adds 39 more seats.
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