Illegals could elect Hillary

‘ILLEGALS COULD ELECT HILLARY’ — Not Because They Vote, But Because Of Apportionment

By James Fulford

10/03/2015

ILLEGALS COULD ELECT HILLARY is the screaming headline on the Drudge Report right now — I’ve toned it down a little, typographically. He’s right, and it’s not because of the illegal alien vote. It’s because of apportionment.

The story in POLITICO, Illegal Immigrants Could Elect Hillary | How noncitizens decrease Republican chances of winning the White House next year, by Paul Goldman and Mark J. Rozell (October 3, 2015) makes this clear. The Constitution apportions Electoral College votes to the states by population. Some quite large number of America’s population is composed of illegal aliens. An even larger number are legal aliens, who also can’t vote, but whose presence is counted for electoral votes.

We call this the Rotten Borough effect, from the old British parliamentary districts where as few as seven actual voters could send one Member to the British House of Commons. There are 538 total electoral votes in the U.S., and ~435 of them are apportioned by population. That means there is one electoral vote for every three quarters of a million residents in the United States, and many of them go to areas where immigrants are in the minority. The total foreign born population is 42.1 million (helped along by a rebounding Mexican immigrant population) so that means that at least 56 electoral votes are caused by immigrant presence. That means that not only could illegals elect Hillary, so could legals.

This was the subject of one of the earliest things I wrote for VDARE.com: Immigration’s Rotten Borough dynamic …, February 23, 2001, where I quoted Fred Siegel’s 1997 book The Future Once Happened Here (p. 147) about what this does to local politics:

Most Latino pols in L.A. are classic ethnic operatives — with a twist. What’s different is most represent rotten boroughs, districts where, because of recent immigration and the youth of the average Latino, the percentage of voters in the total population is tiny.

This means that the real voting base is that small fraction of the population already eligible to vote and sometimes directly dependent on government employment programs. In practice this means that Latino-elected officials, like county commissioner Gloria Molina and City Councilman Richard Alarcon, support the failed bilingual education programs for the same patronage reasons they oppose charter school reform.

Their support is based on getting their group’s cut of the local government and social service jobs.

On the national level it means more Democrats, period. For more, see my Obama, Immigration’s Rotten Borough Effect, And The Small White States, June 6, 2014.

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