Both Texas major parties bracing for showdown spark to court action.
Texas Insider Report: Austin TX With Texas Republicans using recent elections to fortify their already solid control of the state Legislature in Austin the political process of redrawing the states Congressional map would seem to benefit the GOP. But Democrats say not so fast.
Texas is gaining four seats in the U.S. House twice as many as Florida the only other state to pick up multiple ones according to new population figures announced Tuesday by the U.S. Census Bureau.
Starting early next year most state governments will use detailed computer-generated data on voting patterns to carve neighborhoods in or out of newly drawn House districts tilting them more to the left or right.
All told Republican-leaning states will pick up at least a half dozen House seats thanks to the 2010 census which found the nations population growing more slowly than in past decades but still shifting to the South and West.
Sometimes politicians play it safe quietly agreeing to protect Republican and Democratic incumbents alike. But sometimes the party in control will gamble and aggressively try to reconfigure the map to dump as many opponents as possible.
A surge of Hispanic residents and other population gains have Texas poised to add more congressional clout than any other state but a partisan fight now looms over exactly where the new seats should go.
Boyd Richie chairman of the Texas Democratic Party said Hispanic and black population growth account for the additional seats and he vowed to

fight for a redistricting plan that takes their numbers into account.
A legal and fair redistricting process must produce new congressional districts that reflect the Hispanic and African American population growth Richie said. Our Democratic numbers may be down but we are not out. Democrats cannot and will not allow our voices to be silenced in this critical process.
The Census Bureau said:
- The nations population on April 1 was 308745538 up from 281.4 million a decade ago.
- The growth rate for the past decade was 9.7 the lowest since the Great Depression.
- The U.S. population grew by 13.2 from 1990 to 2000.
- Michigan was the only state to lose population during the past decade.
- Nevada with a 35 increase was the fastest-growing state.
The new numbers are a boon for Republicans with Texas leading the way among GOP-leaning states that will gain House seats mostly at the Rust Belts expense. Following each once-a-decade census the nation must reapportion the Houses 435 districts to make them roughly equal in population with each state getting at least one seat.
In all the census figures show a shift affecting
18 states taking effect when the 113th Congress takes office in 2013. The political power follows the high population growth shifting toward the south and west and away from the industrial Midwest and northeast.
With reapportionment settled the far more politically divisive process of redistricting is set to begin. In Texas both major parties were bracing for a showdown over the states new residents beginning a fight that is sure to spark court action.
But with Republican supermajorities in the Legislature the temptation to run

the table will be strong.
Rep. Pete Gallego D-Alpine said if the federal courts dont intervene to compel fairness Republicans will likely produce a map that gives their party the advantage in three or perhaps even all four of the new seats.
It is very easy to overreach when youre holding the map and have the pen in your hand he said.
Despite the partys recent gains in the November legislative elections Republicans wont have unchecked authority to draw the states congressional map to benefit themselves.
Civil rights laws require that the interests of minority voters be protected as district boundaries are redrawn and Texas is one of the states whose redistricting plans require pre-clearance by federal authorities under the Voting Rights Act.
Democrats are also counting on an assist from the
Obama administration which could have a significant voice in the pre-clearance process. It is the first time since the Voting Rights Act passed that the
Justice Department will be in Democratic hands during the redistricting process.
Hispanic growth doesnt automatically translate into Democratic growth though. Two heavily Hispanic congressional seats in South Texas flipped to Republicans this year. There also are several new Latino GOP members about

to be sworn into legislative seats.
South Texas Rep. Aaron Pena who recently left the Democrat Party and became a Republican said Texas Latinos are more conservative than their counterparts in western states such as California and Nevada.
Pena who sits on the
Texas House Redistricting Committee said his educated guess was that Republicans would get three of the four seats.
The Hispanic community is increasingly up for grabs Pena said. Its truly a swing population.
Texas already had the largest Republican delegation in Congress holding 20 of the states 32 seats. In the 2010 elections the party picked up another three seats two of them in heavily Latino districts in South Texas. With all the new growth Texas will now have 36 seats and 38 presidential electoral votes.
Federal lawsuits are essentially guaranteed as part of the process and if the past is any guide the courts will have a major say in how the lines are finally drawn.
- In 2001 the Texas Legislature deadlocked on Congressional redistricting leaving the federal courts to redraw all the districts.
- In 2006 the U.S. Supreme Court ordered that new lines be drawn in several districts to protect the rights of Hispanic voters in South Texas.
The 2010 census results also are used to distribute more than $400 billion in annual federal aid and will change each states Electoral College votes beginning in the 2012 presidential
election.
Apart from the respective four- and two-seat gains in Texas and Florida:
- Arizona Georgia Nevada South Carolina Utah and Washington are all picking up one new U.S. House seat.
- Ohio and New York will lose two House seats each.
- Losing one House seat are Illinois Iowa Louisiana Massachusetts Michigan Missouri New Jersey and Pennsylvania.
Each House district represents an electoral vote in the presidential election process meaning the political map for the 2012 election will tilt somewhat more Republican.