In Article 1, Section 2 it sets a lower limit of 30,000 citizens per Representative. The Constitution sets no upper limit on the number of people each congressman represents.
In the United States each person can vote for one congressman and two senators.
Congressional districts are apportioned on the basis of population. The U.S. population is divided by the 435 seats in the House of Representatives and the result is the number of individuals to be represented by one congressman. (Each state has at least one congressman, no matter how lightly populated it may be.)
Each Congressman represents an approximately equal number of people as determined by the latest Census.
This can't be answered. We don't know the district number. There are 535 people in congress and each has a district.
One vote for each state
There is two people from each state. However, the House bases its attendance on state population.
Each and every state has two senators. That way, all the states are represented equally. Each and every state has a certain number of representatives for "so many" people in the state. That way, all the people are represented equally.
Each runs for office, people vote for them, and they are elected. They get the seat because people feel they will be represented in congress.
Each element is represented by a one or two-letter symbol.
Each element is represented by a one or two-letter symbol.
Congressmen are allowed a small staff and how many each has depends on the seniority of the Congressmen. Generally, they have a Chief of Staff, Communications Director, Legislative Director, and several interns.