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  1. Apr 27, 2021 · Texas, Colorado, Florida, Montana, North Carolina and Oregon all gained seats in Congress, while California, Illinois, Michigan, New York, Ohio, Pennsylvania and West Virginia each lost one.

    • The 2010s Saw The Second-Lowest Population Growth in U.S. History
    • Most States Showed Slowdowns in Growth
    • Washington, DC’s High Growth Rate Could Be Emblematic of Other Cities
    • Sun Belt States Now Comprise 62% of The Nation’S Population
    • Electoral College Gains May No Longer Favor Republicans
    • Looking Ahead to The Next Decade

    The 331,449,281 U.S. residents counted in the 2020 census represent a population increase of 7.4% from the 2010 count of 308,745,538. This is the second-smallest decade-long growth rate since the first census was taken in 1790—only slightly higher than the 7.3% growth rate from the 1930s in the aftermath of the Great Depression (Download Table A). ...

    The low rate of national population growth is reflected in the slow growth or population declines across states. Three states lost population from 2010 to 2020: West Virginia, Mississippi, and Illinois. This is the highest number of population-losing states since the 1980s. In the prior two decades, only one state (Michigan, from 2000 to 2010) lost...

    One area—not a state—which did well growth-wise in the last decade is Washington, D.C. The District registered an 14.6% growth rate from 2010 to 2020, far surpassing its 5.2% growth from 2000 to 2010, which had followed population losses in each of the previous five decades (Download Table B). Like other major cities, Washington, D.C. benefitted fr...

    The slow national growth of the 2010s came alongside an increasing population shift to the nation’s South and West “Sun Belt” regions. Just over 50 years ago, the 1970 census showed that less than half (48%) of the U.S. population resided in the South and West. The West housed just 17% of the population then, and the South’s 31% was only slightly g...

    The new reapportionment pattern puts recent Sun Belt population gains in historical perspective. Over the 100-year period from 1920 to 2020, three Sun Belt states—California, Florida, and Texas—have gained the most congressional seats due to reapportionment, with additions of 41, 24, and 20 seats, respectively (Download Table F). However, in the mo...

    These first results from the 2020 census show a nation that is growing as tepidly as any time in its history. While some of this growth slowdown may be related to the impacts of the Great Recession, reduced immigration, and the COVID-19 pandemic (which started just weeks before the Census Bureau’s enumeration began), much of it reflects the continu...

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  3. Apr 26, 2021 · The Census Bureau says New York lost its seat by a mere 89 people. The loss of one seat reduces its House delegation from 27 to 26 members. OHIO — Sluggish population growth over the past decade causes Ohio to lose a single congressional seat, continuing its streak of losses every decade since 1960.

  4. states that gained seats following the 2020 Census also gained seats following the 2010 Census: Florida and Texas (Table 2a). Five of the seven states that lost seats following the 2020 Census also lost seats follow-ing the 2010 Census: Illinois, Michigan, New York, Ohio, and Pennsylvania (Table 2b). Like 2010, however, the

  5. Apr 26, 2021 · The U.S. population has topped 331 million people, with political power shifting from the Northeast and Midwest to the West and South, the Census Bureau reportedly found on Monday. The map released by the Census Bureau showed Texas gaining two seats. Florida, North Carolina, Colorado, Montana, and Oregon each gained one.

  6. Oct 21, 2022 · Which states gained and lost seats. In addition to Texas gaining two seats, five states gained one seat: Colorado, Florida, Oregon, Montana, and North Carolina. Seven states lost seats: California, Illinois, Michigan, New York, Ohio, Pennsylvania, and West Virginia.

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