New U.S. census data shows white population shrank for first time
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[August 13, 2021]
By Joseph Ax
(Reuters) - New U.S. census data released
on Thursday show the white population declined for the first time in
history last decade, with significant increases among people who
identify as multi-racial, Hispanic and Asian driving much of the
population growth between 2010 and 2020.
The release from the U.S. Census Bureau also marks the start of what
will be a fierce partisan battle over redistricting, as states use the
local data to begin drawing congressional and state legislative
districts for the next 10 years.
The data offered a portrait of an increasingly diverse nation. The
non-Hispanic white population, which remains the largest race or ethnic
group, shrank by 8.6% over the decade and now accounts for 57.8% of the
U.S. population - the lowest share on record.
People who identify as multi-racial increased by 276%, from 9 million in
2010 to 33.8 million in 2020.
For the first time as a U.S. state, California's largest ethnic group is
Hispanic, at 39.4% of the population, according to the data. In Texas,
another large state, the non-Hispanic white population stood at 39.7%,
just slightly larger than the Hispanic population at 39.3%.
The figures also offered new details on the country's slowing rate of
population growth, which was the lowest of any 10-year period save the
Great Depression in the 1930s.
More than half of all U.S. counties lost population from 2010 to 2020,
census officials said, and almost all growth occurred in metropolitan
areas. As in recent decades, the South and West saw more growth than the
Midwest and Northeast.
New York, Los Angeles, Chicago, Houston and Phoenix are the five largest
U.S. cities; Phoenix, which grew faster than any other city in the top
10, pushed Philadelphia down to No. 6.
The fastest-growing cities across the U.S. are in suburban areas, data
showed. Buckeye, a suburb of Phoenix, saw its population increase by
nearly 80% to lead the nation.
The Villages, a retirement community in Florida, is the fastest-growing
metro area in the country, the census said.
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The data, which offers demographic and racial details
of every community down to the block level, arrived 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 totals, showing that six
states will gain congressional seats next year based on increased
populations, as well as additional Electoral College votes starting
with the 2024 presidential election. Another seven states will lose
seats next year.
Electoral analysts have said Republicans, who control more
statehouses than Democrats, could potentially erase the Democrats'
thin advantage in the House through redistricting alone.
Some experts have questioned whether the census data may have
undercounted certain populations, given both the pandemic as well as
the Trump administration's unsuccessful effort to add a citizenship
question to the survey. Civil rights groups had expressed concern
that the failed attempt could nevertheless have dissuaded some
immigrants from filling out census forms.
"While no data is perfect, we are confident that today's
redistricting results meet our high data quality standards," Ron
Jarmin, the bureau's acting director, said on Thursday.
(Reporting by Joseph Ax; Editing by David Gregorio and Alistair
Bell)
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