Low census returns could hurt Texas representation

Texas Could Lose Out After Census Deadline

When the U.S. Census Bureau began a campaign to increase participation in this year’s decennial headcount, hopes were high the statewide response would translate into four additional congressional seats for Texas.

Now it looks like skeptics who remembered Texas’ lackluster effort in decades past might have been right. On Wednesday the bureau released its mail-in participation rates for the country, with Texas’ effort coming in at 69 percent. That falls below the national average of 72 percent, which the Associated Press reports could mean Texas gains less than it anticipated.

According to the report: “Of the five states on the cusp, the biggest potential losers are California and New York, which could have a net loss of one and two House seats, respectively. Texas may end up gaining just three House seats instead of four.”

The original four-seat prediction could still emerge correct, however. Census workers will now go knocking on doors, asking residents who didn’t participate the same basic information requested from the 10-question mail form.

A major concern for state officials has been the response rate along the border, specifically in the low-income and hard-to-count areas known as “colonias.” Residents in those areas, they fear, could have concerns about their residency status and what the repercussions of filling out the forms could be. Time will tell what actually knocking on their doors next month will bring.

And if you’re curious how each of Texas’ 254 counties participated, we’ve updated our county-by-county participation map.

credit: Texas Tribune

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Grand Prairie hosts Tea Party rally

Tea Party protesters stir things up in Grand Prairie

With signs, American flags and yellow “Don’t Tread on Me” banners by the hundreds, Tea Party activists packed QuikTrip Park for a tax day rally Thursday night.

Participants said they were protesting against a government that spends too much and reaches too far into Americans’ lives.

“I don’t like the way the Congress is spending our money,” Vincent Bustamante of Dallas said. “We need to get people in office who are fiscally conservative. I’m trying to educate people. That’s why I’m here.”

Similar rallies across the country also attracted thousands of Tea Party supporters with conservatives speaking. Former House Speaker Newt Gingrich addressed an event in Austin.

Republican candidates and officials touted the tea parties, billed as a resurrection of the 1773 Boston Tea Party, as a sign their party will see a surge of support in the November midterm elections.

Although the Tea Party movement, which is not its own political party, is strongly conservative, many organizers have stressed unhappiness with Democratic and Republican incumbents alike.

At the Grand Prairie event, organizers estimated attendance at 18,000, though no count from police was available. The ballpark has a seating capacity of about 5,400, but thousands more crowded the outfield.

Speakers included talk radio host Mark Davis, who was the rally’s emcee. He rebutted accusations that the Tea Party movement is intolerant of minorities, immigrants and others.

Instead, he listed things that he said he and Tea Party activists oppose.

“We will not tolerate spending so high and a debt so massive that it threatens our children’s future,” Davis said.

He added to that list people who disregard the Constitution and government that does things individuals should do on their own, among others. Davis also had a jab for the Republican Party.

“We will not tolerate Republicans who talk a good game … but who betray the voters when they go to Washington,” Davis said.

People at the rally signed a 50-foot-long “postcard” that Tea Party organizers said would be delivered to the White House. Messages included “Shame on you!” “November is coming,” and “Throw the bums out!”

Signs related to economic issues dominated, such as “The Obama recession continues,” but others had messages such as “This is the first time I am scared of my own government.”

Marci Bucklaew of Hurst said she attended the rally Thursday night because she is mad. Mad at Congress, mad at the president and mad at how the media portrays the Tea Party movement as a group of extremists.

“I want the health care bill repealed,” she said. “Let the people take care of each other.”

Bucklaew said she is more politically engaged this year than ever before. She’s pushing people to write their elected officials and keep the Tea Party movement energized.

“To change things, we need to stay unified,” she said.

Radio host Chris Krok rallied the crowd late into the evening, railing against President Barack Obama and urging people to make a difference at the ballot box.

“He has tried to make us look like the enemy,” Krok said. “He has awakened a sleeping giant. That giant is you.”

credit: Dallas News

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