27 or 29.... not too sure...
From,
My Moon
2 Representatives
New York has 27 representatives in the House of Representatives; the state lost two Congressional Districts as a result of the 2010 US Census population count. All states have two representatives in the Senate.
The New York State Assembly is similar to the lower house of the legislative branch in other states, such as the State House of Representatives. It is responsible for creating and passing laws, as well as representing and advocating for the interests of their constituents.
They can’t have more members in the senate because everyone gets 2 members. In the House it is based on population and NY all ready has more members than Rhode Island.
New York has 27 representatives in the U.S. House of Representatives.
in the house of representatives it depends on population, the senate has two to each state, but in the house it it either California or Texas.
They can’t have more members in the senate because everyone gets 2 members. In the House it is based on population and NY all ready has more members than Rhode Island.
Type: Bicameral (House, Senate) Assembly Leadership : President Pro Tempore, Speaker of the Assembly Political groups: Democratic Party, Independence Party of New York, Republican Party Salary $79,000 Meeting place: New York State Capitol, Albany NY
It can be for two years of four years depending on which cycle the district he is representing is in. An Illinois Senate cycle can be 2-4-4, 4-2-4 or 4-4-2 years with one third of the districts in each cycle to insure that all of the senators will not be replaced during a single election.
Every state has 2 senators so no state will have more. Representatives are based on population and the states are divided into districts from which a representative is chosen. Some states do have more representatives than others.
Since 2013 New York has had 27 representatives in the House of Representatives and 2 Senators, for a total of 29 representatives in the US Congress.
The representatives for New York grew in the 1792 elections due to the results of the 1790 census. In 1792 New York went from having six to ten representatives.