Posted by
TheTrucker on Sunday, January 13, 2008 12:10:12 AM
In 1911 the House of Representatives was enlarged to 425 members. And now in 2008 the membership is still 425 members even though the number of voters doubled with women's suffrage and increased with the lowering of the voting age and has tripled on top of that due to the increase in population. In 1911 the number of voters per representative was about 80 thousand (only the men over the age of 21 voted). The number of people per representative is now seven hundred thousand and all of them over the age of 18 can vote. That works to something like 525 thousand voters sharing one lousy representative. Which is about one sixth of the power "we the people" had over our government in 1911.
It also means that it costs a lot of money to run for office and once there the incumbent is very difficult to get rid of.
The Congress is Stagnant.
The problem has historically been what James Madison spoke of in Federalist 10 where he was concerned with the size of the electoral districts being too small (the districts in England and in the colonies were then 5000 people and Madison was arguing for 30,000) as versus the problems of a "A Multitude" that would be created in the House as population increased. (at one for every 30 thousand as stated in the Constitution the House would have 10 thousand members). Winston Churchill remarked that "We form our buildings and then they form us". There is no reason, of course, why additional representatives of the people that are not actually members of the committee structure of the House need to be hanging around inside the beltway where they are easy prey for the lobby and the other special interests. The 22
Committees of the House are composed of 230 actual representatives. The rest of the people just hang around collecting campaign funds from the lobby to insure their royal incumbency. With well proven and readily available
inexpensive technology, members not actually needed in the committees can be officed in the districts they represent where they are less accessible to the lobby and more accessible to the people they are actually supposed to be representing (and no -- I don't own any stock in any videoconferencing companies).
Anyone who has every tuned in to C-Span will note the emptiness of the House chamber. There is a fellow at the podium "debating" a bill and the membership are in their offices watching and listening on a TV monitor just like you are at home. Unlike you, the members have a copy of the bill and they got it off of their PC's in their offices which are connected to the central system where all the bills reside. When it comes time to vote on the bill you will notice that the House Chamber remains quite empty. There is simply no good reason for these representatives who are doing the voting (your representatives) to be in Washington DC; not unless they have an appointment with a committee to present a bill for consideration. Gee... JUST EXACTLY AS IT IS DONE RIGHT NOW.
The objective of "extended representation" is to insure that the people get a reasonable chance at maintaining representatives that vote as the people would want as opposed to the way the lobby wants. So how many representatives should there be that just vote and how many representatives should there be on the committees? And how many need to be in Washington and how many can office next to the people they are supposed to represent? The full membership decides who will make up the committees in any case.