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The US government is divided into federal and state levels, with state politicians mirroring the organizational structure of federal representatives. Each state has two senators and a variable number of House of Representatives members. There are also state politicians at the local level, with an estimated 178,525 local divisions of government administration. The number of state politicians varies greatly from state to state and is based on boundary lines for counties, cities, and congressional districts that change as the population grows. The reason for so many state politicians is due to the way districts were set up when states were formed in the 18th and 19th centuries.
In the United States, government at large is divided into the federal and state levels, and state politicians who represent each state at the local level were originally designed to mirror the organizational structure of representatives that states send to serve at the federal level at the State Capitol United in Washington, DC This means that each state had two senators it sends to Washington, DC and a variable number of members of the House of Representatives depending on the population of each state, for a total of 100 senators and a fixed total of 435 members of the U.S. House of Representatives serve in Washington, DC on behalf of their states.
Federal representation by state politicians is just the tip of the iceberg, however, for the actual number of state politicians each state represents overall. Each state also generally has one senator and two members of the House or Assembly per congressional district working within the boundaries of the state government itself, as well as one governor per state. These total numbers vary greatly from state to state depending on how many congressional districts it has. The national total of state senators and members of the House or Assembly as of 2003 was 7,382 state congressional representatives, with California having the most at 424 and Nebraska having the smallest number at 49.
The law for the number of state representatives varies slightly from state to state. Examples illustrating the breakdown are Arizona, with as many as 30 congressional districts and 90 representatives from 30 senators and 60 house members, and Washington state with 147 congress representatives from 49 senators and 98 house members. Nebraska, however, has neither an Assembly nor a House of Representatives chamber and is represented statewide by only 49 Senators.
State-level policy governance is further divided in the United States by individual states with representatives for local counties, municipalities, municipalities, and school districts. These representatives are often referred to as members of the assembly and, in many cases, serve together in groups known as councils, such as local school boards that are designated to direct public education policy. Local governance also has state politicians that mirror the role of the state governor, such as elected mayors who control city government and city councils who advise the mayor.
All together, it’s hard to count the total number of state politicians that exist in the United States at any one time, as they’re based on boundary lines for counties, cities, and congressional districts that change as the population grows. Overall, there are an estimated 178,525 local divisions of government administration in the United States, ranging from counties to municipalities, townships and school districts. Each region has its own state politicians who act as local representatives.
The reason there are so many state politicians is because of the way districts were set up when states were formed. In the early 18th and 19th centuries congressional districts were sized based on the distance a horse and buggy could travel in a day and with the understanding that the average large city had a population of 18 or fewer. This made each district very small by 19 standards. Each Senator, House or Assembly representative was elected to have a local affiliation with their own cities and congressional districts of a population of 30,000, but, starting since 2011, these areas have grown to an average population closer to 30,000. Despite population growth and rapid transit capabilities, most of the state’s congressional districts have maintained the overall size assigned to them over a century ago.
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