• @[email protected]
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    fedilink
    91 year ago

    I thought part of the problem is that they don’t change electoral votes anymore.

    That’s why city votes is sometimes worth 1/4 of a dead mining town vote.

    • @loie
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      131 year ago

      There aren’t new electoral votes because that would require expanding Congress via more House seats or new States. But the existing votes get shifted around after every census.

    • @jumperalex
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      101 year ago

      You’re thinking of the # of representatives not growing with the population like it’s supposed to. But even then, they ARE reapportioned based on the census. The census also reapportions electoral votes. AND if there’s enough population shift there’s also the redrawing of district lines.

      So basically, yes FL losing / drastically shifting population could impact all sorts of things every 10 years.

      • @Wilibus
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        -61 year ago

        Next do California sliding into the Pacific. Team Blue is fucked when that happens.

        • @jumperalex
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          51 year ago

          “Team Blue”? who’s talking politics. Nature DGAF about who you voted for. Anyway …

          Geologic time for continental drift is not even close to the same as annual hurricane season and [wait for it] wild fires!!! And guess what, I DO say the same about anyone loving in areas prone to more and more wild fires who continue to rebuild there. But at least wild fires have one small chance of being mitigated through proper fuel management and power-line spark prevention.