Posted on 06/19/2009 5:36:12 AM PDT by gusopol3
The Hoover law took effect automatically after the 1930 Census, effective for the Congress elected in 1932. This resulted in big increases in House members for states with large numbers of immigrants in 1910-30, like New York and Illinois, and decreases for interior states with low population growth, like Missouri and Iowa. In several states that lost House members the legislatures could not agree on redistricting plans, and all members therefrom were elected statewide at-large. But the increases in immigrant-heavy states and the at-large elections in interior states augmented what would have been even without these factors huge Democratic gains.
The House that Franklin Roosevelt faced in 1933 was the only House between 1899 and the present day in which a majority of members were freshmen. (Many years ago I actually went back and did the numbers; the fact that the 1898 election was the first in which a majority of House members were reelected tells you something interesting about the Progressive period, but Ill save that for a later post.)
(Excerpt) Read more at washingtonexaminer.com ...
Ping.
Michael Barone is awesome.
Michael Barone is awesome. For example, he was the first to note that every Obama statement came with an expiration date.
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