Circulating on social media is an image that reads:
“If Trump deports every illegal in California, the state will lose 3 congressional seats and 2 electoral votes. Now you know.”
Except, now you know. . .what, exactly? The meme suggests that undocumented immigrants inflate political power in California and that removing them would reshape Congress overnight. It rests on incorrect assumptions about how population, representation, and apportionment work in the United States.
Let us be blunt: This claim is not only misleading—it is deliberately framed to weaponize immigration rhetoric for political ends. Let us unpack the real facts with a blend of research, law, and civic education.
Who Gets Counted? The Law and the Constitution
First, it is essential to understand how congressional seats and electoral votes are determined. The U.S. Constitution, in Article I, Section 2, and later reinforced by the 14th Amendment, mandates that congressional apportionment be based on the total number of “persons” residing in each state—not just citizens.
The decennial census, conducted every ten years by the U.S. Census Bureau, counts everyone living in the United States, regardless of citizenship status. This includes:
- U.S. citizens
- Legal permanent residents
- Refugees and asylum seekers
- Undocumented immigrants
- Children and other non-voting residents
As the Pew Research Center notes, undocumented immigrants are routinely counted in the census, and California is home to more than 2 million of them (Passel & Cohn, 2021). These individuals live in communities, pay rent, shop at local businesses, and many pay taxes through payroll or consumption.
Any attempt to exclude them from apportionment would be not only unconstitutional but practically unworkable.
The Trump Administration Tried—And Failed
In 2020, the Trump administration issued a memo attempting to exclude undocumented immigrants from the apportionment count. That directive led to a Supreme Court case: Trump v. New York (2020).
In that case, the Court declined to rule on the substance of the exclusion, noting the claim was “not ripe” because the data did not yet exist. But the Census Bureau still counted undocumented immigrants, and they were ultimately included in the apportionment delivered to Congress.
If deportations were carried out en masse—an ethically, logistically, and legally problematic prospect—it would not impact apportionment until the next census in 2030. This is not a real-time lever. It is a once-a-decade mechanism.
There is no legal or operational pathway to remove electoral votes or congressional seats between censuses.
What Would Actually Happen?
Assume, for argument’s sake, that California’s undocumented population vanished before the 2030 census and future counts excluded them. What would the impact be?
According to a study by the Brookings Institution and data modeled by Center for Immigration Studies, California could lose 1 to 2 seats in such a scenario—not 3 (Frey, 2020).
Electoral votes are tied to House seats plus two Senators. If California dropped from 52 seats to 49 or 50, its electoral votes would go from 54 down to 51 or 52. That is a reduction of 1 or 2 electoral votes, not guaranteed, and certainly not immediate.
The meme’s claim of 3 congressional seats and 2 electoral votes is an exaggerated upper-bound scenario, and still would not take effect until 2031, after new census numbers were used in congressional reapportionment.
📢 Fact Check Summary: The claim is inaccurate, misleading, and misinformed. Deportations do not alter apportionment in real-time. California could, at most, lose 1–2 seats after a future census—if undocumented individuals were excluded from it.
So, Why the Meme?
This kind of meme is not just wrong. It is dangerous disinformation, designed to:
- Inflame anti-immigrant sentiment
- Undermine public trust in democratic institutions
- Promote the false idea that undocumented people “steal” representation
It turns complex constitutional processes into political bludgeons. The reality is that people—documented or not—make up the communities where we live, learn, work, and worship. They are part of the civic ecosystem, whether nativist memes like it or not.
Expert Commentary
“Apportionment is based on total population, not on voter eligibility or immigration status. That is what the Constitution requires, and it has been upheld across multiple censuses.”
— Dale Ho, former Director of the ACLU Voting Rights Project
“The claim that excluding undocumented immigrants would dramatically shift representation is rooted in political fearmongering, not census methodology.”
— Dr. William Frey, Senior Fellow, Brookings Institution
What This Teaches Us
This meme offers a lesson in civic literacy: representation is about who lives in a community, not who votes. That includes children, incarcerated individuals, permanent residents, and yes—undocumented people. Apportionment is not a reward for citizenship. It is a constitutional obligation based on residence.
If this meme fooled you, it is not your fault. That is the power of viral disinformation. But once you have the facts, the responsibility becomes yours.
Turn Knowledge into Power
📍 Register to Vote
Even if the Census counts everyone, only citizens can vote. Are you registered? If not, visit https://vote.gov to get started.
📍 Push Back on Propaganda
When you see claims like this one—stop, read, and verify. Do not share memes that lie.
📍 Share the Truth
If you found this breakdown helpful, share this post. Let us replace misinformation with facts and make civic truth go viral.
References
Frey, W. H. (2020). How 2020 census undercount of immigrants could affect states’ power and funding. Brookings Institution. https://www.brookings.edu/blog/the-avenue/2020/07/27/how-2020-census-undercount-of-immigrants-could-affect-states-power-and-funding/
Passel, J. S., & Cohn, D. (2021). U.S. unauthorized immigrant population estimates by state, 2016. Pew Research Center. https://www.pewresearch.org/fact-tank/2021/04/23/unauthorized-immigrant-population-trends-for-states/
Trump v. New York, 592 U.S. ___ (2020). https://www.supremecourt.gov/opinions/20pdf/20-366_i4dk.pdf
U.S. Census Bureau. (2021). Frequently Asked Questions About Census and Apportionment. https://www.census.gov
