
Late on Monday evening, the House Rules Committee may consider a motion that would change the distribution of parliamentary seats and electoral college votes to stop illegal aliens and other foreign nationals from rigging primaries.
Beginning in 2030, the” Equal Representation Act” would change the Census Bureau’s survey, which requires people to provide evidence of their citizenship position, and use that information to exclude foreigners from the count used to identify parliamentary and electoral college distribution. Although the proportion of residents in a given area is determined by the number of residents, legal citizens are not now distinguished from foreigners who are frequently considered to be illegal immigrants. Based on the population’s size, a position you win or lose both parliamentary chairs and electoral college votes.
This means that thousands of illegal foreigners who have invaded the country can increase the population density of Americans who are bred there even as they flee those same says, lowering the representation of those citizens.
A burst of challenges followed when previous president Donald Trump signed a letter in July 2020 that prohibited illegal aliens from being included in the survey. President Joe Biden later reversed the policy after a few judges blocked the letter.
When Democratic New York Rep. Yvette Clark stated in 2021 that her district was “absorb a significant amount of these workers” because” I need more persons in my area, just for redistricting reasons,” she made it abundantly clear why Democrats are in favor of including illegal creatures in their distribution tallies. Democrats are determined to reimburse their population loss in order to preserve their political benefits as Californians and New Yorkers flee to red states like Florida and Texas. Democrats have encouraged a boom in illegal immigration to blue areas through policies like sanctuary cities, which drain money from the government and frequently lead to violence. This in turn boosts the popularity of the Democrats ‘ census data.
In advance of Monday’s hearing, several Democrats submitted amendments to gut the bill. Rep. Harriet Hageman, a republican, proposed a change that would “prohibit] ] the executive branch from issuing any rule or policy that would circumvent or waive the requirements” of the bill.
The Federalist’s election correspondent, Brianna Lyman.