Even if they don’t vote, immigrants give Democrats another fourteen electoral votes

The influx of millions of migrants has shifted political power in the country to Democrats, even though they are not allowed to vote, according to a new analysis by the Electoral College and constitutional representation.

Although they may be considered non-citizens, illegal and legal migrants are included censusand those numbers are used to shift congressional districts, affecting electoral votes, according to two new studies from the Center for Immigration Studies.

“Immigration shifts political power in the United States – without a single immigrant having to vote. The seats in the U.S. House of Representatives and therefore the votes in the Electoral College are distributed among the states based on their total population – not on the number of citizens or legal residents,” CIS said.

In two just-released reports, CIS says the 2020 census shifted 17 seats in the House of Representatives and resulted in a gain for Democrats of 14 seats and electoral votes, which are based on seats in the House of Representatives.

Since that census and during the Biden-Harris administration 10 million More legal and illegal migrants have entered the U.S., a number that alone could shift an additional thirteen electoral votes.

“If the total population of legal and illegal immigrants continues to grow at the current rapid rate, immigrants would redistrict about 22 seats in the 2030 census,” said Steven Camarota, the center’s research director.

“Illegal immigrants caught in the 2020 census redistricted two seats. “If the illegal immigrant population continues to grow at the current rate, it will redistribute seven seats by 2030,” he said.

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Republicans have long argued that Biden and Harris’ open border agenda was aimed at strengthening Democratic power in Washington. Most people entering the country legally and illegally move into Democratic-controlled cities, strengthening and expanding the party’s position on the Electoral College used to select presidents.

“Districts where non-residents make up a large portion of the population tend to vote Democratic, while districts with high citizenship tend to vote Republican. Of the 24 districts where 1 in 5 adults is not a U.S. citizen, 20 were won by a Democrat in 2022. In contrast, the Democrat won in only five of the 54 districts where 98% of adults are citizens,” CIS added.