Is making Congress bigger worth the cost?
See the lawsuit here
If a federal complaint filed here on Thursday is successful, the U.S. House of Representatives could drastically increase to give Mississippi and other states more representation, but at a cost of millions of dollars to taxpayers.
Oxford native John Tyler Clemons filed the suit with registered voters from Montana, South Dakota, Delaware and Utah. Defendants are the U.S. Commerce Secretary Gary Locke; Robert Groves, director of the Census Bureau; and Lorraine Miller, clerk of the U.S. House of Representatives.
The lawsuit comes as promotional plans are in the works for the upcoming census. Census Day is April 1, 2010.
In the last census count, in 2000, Mississippi lost a U.S. House seat because its pace of growth didn’t match that of other states, according to the census.
According to the lawsuit, Mississippi is under represented by 10.24 percent. For example, there are four districts each averaging 713,232 persons in Mississippi, while West Virginia has three districts averaging 604,359 persons.
“This under representation violates the constitutional standards for one-person, one-vote,” the lawsuit, filed by Washington-based attorney Michael Farris, argues.
The number of representatives in the House currently is fixed at 435.
Two proposed apportionment plans based on the 2000 census are suggested in the lawsuit. Both would change the “ideal” size of a district from 646,952 people to either 159,809 or 301,957 people. Plan A would make the current number of representatives 1,761; while Plan B would increase the number of representatives to 932.
Clemons, a University of Mississippi student and former editor of the school newspaper, said he wants to fight for the under represented people in his state.
“Our Constitution was crafted around the idea that all citizens deserve an equal voice in the decisions of their government,” Clemons said. “… If someone’s vote in Iowa or Wyoming counts for more than mine, how is that equality?”
A spokesperson for the clerk of the U.S. House said his office had received the complaint, but would not comment on it.
Spokesmen for the Bureau of Census and the Department of Commerce did not return calls for comment.
Some, including 3rd District Republican Rep. Gregg Harper of Pearl, think the restructuring would cost too much money.
With rank-and-file members earning $174,000 per year, taxpayers pay more than $75 million per year total in salaries. If there were 932 congressmen, the overall amount would increase to more than $162 million. If there were 1,761 representatives, the total taxpayer cost could be more than $300 million.