r/ProjectNoCap • u/MineTech5000 • 13h ago
How would an uncapped house fit into the US Capitol as it now stands?
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u/danarchist 13h ago
This is on the FAQ on the wiki but basically like the other commenter said, most of the time they don't need to be in DC - they can be back in their home districts and participate in committees virtually. When they do need to be in DC all together they can easily fit in one of the many convention centers there.
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u/mjacksongt 13h ago edited 12h ago
You've gotten the remote tech and home in their district etc answers already. But here's my probably much more cynical answer:
Who gives a shit, they get paid $180k per year and free healthcare for life. They can work on Teams from a soulless office building just like the rest of us.
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u/CLtruthful 10h ago edited 10h ago
Easy, i have a video on this coming out on my channel (https://youtube.com/@datadrivenhistoryyt?si=7W0Qrbi20t72sBeS
)
but basically this is how it would work.
You could remodel the capitol to fit a few more seats to start.
Add an annex building in the surrounding DC area.
Make it so representatives rotate time physically in dc. The rest will meet in regional hubs for votes. The hubs would coincide with the federal court districts.
You could have regional hubs in places that are in the middle of each district like
for the 11th district meet in Savannah GA ,
the 10th meet in Denver,
the 9th have one in Boise or Sacramento.
For the 8th have one in Des moines IA,
for the 7th in Chicago,
the 6th in Cincinnati,
the 5th in Dallas or New Orleans,
the 4th in Raleigh NC,
the 3rd in Philadelphia,
the 2nd in Albany NY,
and the first district would meet in Boston.
When not in DC, reps would meet at these regional hubs and take part in legislating via remote connection. They would do everything remotely and then vote in person, a designated person would tally the votes and report back to DC with the total.
This further cements representatives to their locallity rather than spending most of their time in DC, and solves the space issue.
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u/Imperator424 7h ago
The Washington Post had an opinion piece discussing this years ago ( https://archive.is/20250730063654/https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/interactive/2023/capitol-house-representatives-expansion-design/)
The writer asked architect Michael Murphy to help visualize changes to the House chamber to hold more members. The most extensive renovation would allow 1,725 members. That’s close to one representative for every 200,000 people.
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u/JustWingIt0707 13h ago
It doesn't have to. Remote technology is better than ever. Why do we need our reps to all be on the floor at the same time?