Demographers also expect the data to show that the country's
white population is declining for the first time in history,
with people of color representing virtually all population
growth.
The release will arrive months later than originally expected
after the census took longer to complete due to the coronavirus
pandemic. The delay has forced some states to go to court to
postpone their redistricting deadlines.
States use the data to redraw district lines for the U.S. House
of Representatives after each decennial census, based on where
people now reside.
In April, the bureau published state-level figures, showing that
Texas, Florida and North Carolina - all states controlled by
Republicans - will gain congressional seats next year based on
increased populations.
Electoral analysts have said Republicans could potentially erase
the Democrats' thin advantage in the House through redistricting
alone.
Thursday's more detailed data will show how and where the
country's white, Black, Hispanic and Asian communities grew.
(Reporting by Joseph Ax; Editing by David Gregorio)
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