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The court has been asked before to intervene in district reapportioning.
Are they a means of merely reapportioning the existing cake?
The difference, the report said, would be made up either by reapportioning the gasoline tax or raising it.
But it was unclear whether this involved new money or reapportioning existing aid budgets.
Reapportioning is expected to cost Montana one of its two House seats in 1992.
The coalition is expected this month to consider readjusting its policies and reapportioning power among the sometimes competing parties in the government.
New York eliminated the at-large seat in 1875, reapportioning all of its representatives by geographic districts.
The exact method of reapportioning votes can vary (see Differing counting methods).
Reapportioning costs makes military and budgetary sense.
Because of not having nationwide reapportioning every after the census since the Constitution was made, many populous provinces and cities are underrepresented.
Yes, it's the basis for reapportioning the 435 seats in the House and reallocating $50 billion in Federal funds.
After that, he and the Legislature will face off on reapportioning Congressional districts in California, which is to gain seven seats in 1992.
The National Elections Commission is responsible for reapportioning the seats among the counties following the conclusion of the national census every ten years.
Regional leaders have been heartened by Mr. Kiriyenko's talk about reapportioning tax revenues so the provinces get more.
A spokesman for Mr. Miller said that reapportioning the seats allocated to the mayor would require negotiations with the governor to change the corporation's charter.
Boundary revisions may involve changing the number of constituencies, reapportioning the number of representatives returned from them, or adjusting their borders.
His stands and independence resulted in the Democratic and Republican leadership twice reapportioning him so his home was outside his district.
These overseas counts are used solely for reapportioning seats in the U. S. House of Representatives."
Mr. Betts argued that the only constitutionally mandatory purpose of the census is to count the population for reapportioning Congressional districts.
The Rhode Island General Assembly had consistently failed to liberalize the constitution by extending voting rights, enacting a bill of rights, or reapportioning the legislature.
And he argued that a society could prevent mental disorders on a mass scale by reapportioning its resources to address problems in education, housing, drug abuse and nutrition among underprivileged children.
But the fund left to a later day the broader and far more politically tricky task of fundamentally reapportioning the vote shares among countries to fully recognize their evolution within the global economy.
That role started for the data center on Jan. 1, 1981, when preliminary results of the 1980 census were channeled through the center to begin the process of reapportioning Congressional districts.
However, the power rests with the legislature to change or adjust the apportionment during the interim and in 1845, the tradition in Ohio of reapportioning following the decennial census was broken.
The California race is considered the most important in the nation because the state will gain at least six Congressional seats with the 1990 census, and the governor has a significant voice in reapportioning the districts.