Albuquerque Journal

Legal way for citizenshi­p query?

Barr, new team to act on census question

- ASSOCIATED PRESS

EDGEFIELD, S.C. — Attorney General William Barr said Monday he sees a way to legally require 2020 census respondent­s to declare whether or not they are citizens, despite a Supreme Court ruling that forbade asking the question.

In an interview with the Associated Press, Barr said the Trump administra­tion will take action in the coming days that he believes will allow the government to add the controvers­ial census query. Barr would not detail the plans, though a senior official said President Donald Trump is expected to issue a memorandum to the Commerce Department instructin­g it to include the question on census forms.

The Supreme Court recently blocked the question, at least temporaril­y, saying the administra­tion’s justificat­ion “seems to have been contrived.” That was a blow to Trump, who has been pressing for the government to demand informatio­n about citizenshi­p.

The U.S. Census Bureau’s experts have said requiring such informatio­n would discourage immigrants from participat­ing in the survey and result in a less accurate count. That in turn would redistribu­te money and political power away from Democratic-led cities where immigrants tend to cluster to whiter, rural areas where Republican­s do well.

Democratic House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said Monday that Trump wants to add the demand for citizenshi­p informatio­n because he wants to “make America white again.”

Pelosi also said in a letter to colleagues that the full House would be moving forward with a vote to hold Barr and Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross in contempt of Congress after the administra­tion failed to comply with subpoenas regarding the census question.

Meanwhile, the Justice Department is replacing the legal team that has been pursuing Trump’s efforts, putting in place a new team consisting of both career and politicall­y appointed attorneys.

The new team, named in court papers, includes Deputy Assistant Attorney General David Morrell, a former Trump White House lawyer and law clerk to Justice Clarence Thomas; Christophe­r Bates, who previously worked for Republican Sen. Orrin Hatch of Utah; and four career Justice Department attorneys, Glenn Girdharry, Colin Kisor, Christophe­r Reimer and Daniel Schiffer.

James Burnham, a top lawyer in the department’s civil division who had been leading the team, had told Barr that a number of people who had been litigating the case preferred “not to continue during this new phase,” the attorney general said.

The new team may find it easier to argue the administra­tion’s new position, said an administra­tion official.

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William Barr

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