Should the United States uncap the House of Representatives and add more seats to better reflect population growth?
The Apportionment Act of 1929 permanently capped the US House of Representatives at 435 members, meaning that as the US population has tripled, the number of constituents per representative has surged from roughly 280,000 to over 760,000 today. Proponents argue that uncapping the House would restore the founders' vision of localized representation, make gerrymandering harder, and fix Electoral College imbalances. Opponents argue that a massively expanded House would be logistically chaotic, financially burdensome, and politically unwieldy, turning the chamber into a disorganized mob.
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Federal issues should be devolved to states where elected officials represent a smaller constituency. In 1789 one representative stood for 30,000 citizens. That’s the way it should be today at the state level. Only defense diplomacy trade policy and immigration should be determined at the federal level.
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