Two. The Max is 2 and the min is 2. The House of Rep. Is based on population
The number of senators from a state is two. The minimum number of representatives is 1.
1
Each state gets 2 senators. That number does not change. The number of members of the House of Representatives will change, based on population changes- but Senators will stay at 2 per state.
Each state has electoral votes equal to the total of the 2 representative the state has in the U.S. Senate plus the number of representative the state has in the House of Representatives. Since every state has two senators and at least one representative to the House, every state has at least 3 electoral votes.
No. All states have the same number of senators: 2. 100 senators total (50*2=100)
Mississippi has the lowest income of any state.
All Senators take part in rule-making (law-making). Given that the number of Senators for any state is based on that state's population, it would be impossible to make such a list in the space here.
Two for each state, ergo 100, since there are 50 states. The Constitution (in Article I, Section 3, Clause 1) explicitly sets the number at 2 senators per state. As to why 2 were chosen (instead of 1 or 3 or any other number), there's no good answer, other than 2 being a reasonable number.
There are two senators in every and any US State.
The lowest multiple of any number is the number itself.
The lowest multiple of any number is the number itself.
If the United States were to add a 51st state, the senate would increase. There are 2 senators for every state, so with 50 states, the U.S Senate currently holds 100 senators. If Puerto Rico, for example, were to become a state, they would be able to elect two senators to represent them in the U.S Senate, making the U.S Senate consist of 102 senators.