Colonel William A. Phillips

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English: Diagram of the US House of Representatives showing all 435 voting seats grouped by state. Largest-to-smallest states are shown in a generally left-to-right clockwise flow.

- The 9 largest states have a majority of the seats/votes, with the other 41 having less than half.

- The four largest states (CA, TX, NY & FL) have more combined votes than 34 of the smallest states.

- California by itself has more votes than 21 of the smallest states combined.

- Texas by itself has more votes than 17 of the smallest states put together.

These facts can be understood as a straightforward matter of larger populations requiring a greater number of seats to represent them, per the principles of representative democracy. What this image also illuminates is the converse situation, the problem of the Senate, where states are given two votes each regardless of the number of people that a single Senator represents. At the time the Senate was created, the most populous state (Virginia) had roughly 10 times as many people as the least populous state (Delaware). This imbalance has been greatly magnified to the current situation where the most populous state today (California) has nearly 70 times as many people as the least populous state (Wyoming). See Malapportionment. This Washington Post article from 2013 has a graph that shows how grossly imbalanced the Senate representation is:
https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/wonk/wp/2013/03/11/if-youre-from-california-you-should-hate-the-senate/.

Seat apportionment presented in this diagram can be verified at this table.
Date
Source File:112USHouseStructure.svg
Author ChrisnHouston

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6 October 2013

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current20:00, 20 October 2013Thumbnail for version as of 20:00, 20 October 20132,000 × 1,053 (417 KB)ChrisnHoustonSubtle tweak for color uniformity.
03:34, 7 October 2013Thumbnail for version as of 03:34, 7 October 20132,000 × 1,053 (377 KB)ChrisnHoustonUser created page with UploadWizard
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