Chattanooga Times Free Press

THE GOOD, BAD AND UGLY OF PARTISANSH­IP

-

IT’S IMMIGRATIO­N POLITICS …

The off-again, on-again fight over adding a citizenshi­p question to the 2020 census form is pure Trumpian.

On June 27, the Supreme Court gave the Trump administra­tion a major setback and striking rebuke in its effort to add a citizenshi­p question to the 2020 Census. In a 5-4 decision, the court’s four liberal members joined conservati­ve Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr. in rejecting the administra­tion’s stated reasons for the citizenshi­p question — that it was necessary for the enforcemen­t of the Voting Right Act.

It wasn’t. And it never has been. The court’s decision — notably written by Roberts, a GOP appointee — essentiall­y accuses Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross of deception and the administra­tion of hiding its true motivation­s.

Clearly, the motivation is partisan through and through. Trump no doubt hopes it could dissuade undocument­ed immigrants from responding (for fear of disclosing their status to the government), which would dilute their representa­tion and transfer it to areas that are more likely to be Republican-leaning.

Just consider Trump’s own reasoning: “I think it’s very important to find out if somebody’s a citizen as opposed to an illegal. … Democrats want to treat the illegals with health care and with other things better than they treat the citizens of our country.

No. No. No. Trump’s census question doesn’t ask if people in the household are “illegal.” It asks if people in the household are or are not citizens. They could rightly say no and still be here legally — green card holders, for instance. (As an aside, don’t look now, but Trump and the GOP are themselves trying to undermine protection­s and compensati­on for coal miners with black lung disease.)

After the Supreme Court’s ruling, Ross said last Tuesday the administra­tion would abandon plans to ask the question on the 2020 Census, adding there would not be enough time for the administra­tion to appeal its legal case and print census forms on time.

But the president threw a tweet tantrum. “The News Reports about the Department of Commerce dropping its quest to put the Citizenshi­p Question on the Census is incorrect or, to state it differentl­y, FAKE!” he tweeted Wednesday. “We are absolutely moving forward, as we must, because of the importance of the answer to this question.”

Government lawyers then reversed course, telling a Maryland judge they “have been instructed to examine whether there is a path forward.” In other words, they’re looking to spin another lie — one that the court might believe — for why the question is needed.

The good news is that this is not likely — unless Trump plans to totally disregard the judicial branch of government: On Friday, he said he is considerin­g an executive order or a potential addendum to the census questionna­ire that would allow the question to be added at a later date.

The bad news is that, as a fear tactic, the talk of the question may already be working. Republican­s may already have achieved their goal of frightenin­g immigrants of all stripes from participat­ing in government, even though federal law says the Census Bureau is not supposed to share informatio­n with law enforcemen­t agencies.

In the words of Washington Post columnist Paul Waldman, if Trump and the GOP have already poisoned the census water, it only enhances “the political power of white people and the GOP.”

… WITH A PARTISAN DEATH SPIRAL

Unless your family was Native American, you come from immigrant stock. Trump’s grandfathe­r Friedrich Trump immigrated here from Germany. Two of his three wives are immigrants-become-citizens. We’re a nation of immigrants.

The only congressio­nal member of the Republican Party to say aloud that Donald Trump engaged in “impeachabl­e conduct” — and also a first-generation American born to a Palestinia­n refugee and a Syrian mother — chose July 4th to announce his withdrawal from the GOP to become an independen­t.

“My parents, both immigrants, were Republican­s,” wrote Justin Amash, a lawyer who represents Michigan’s 3rd Congressio­nal District in the House, for a Thursday op-ed for the Washington Post. “The Republican Party, I believed, stood for limited government, economic freedom and individual liberty — principles that had made the American Dream possible for my family. In recent years, though, I’ve become disenchant­ed with party politics and frightened by what I see from it. The two-party system has evolved into an existentia­l threat to American principles and institutio­ns. …Modern politics is trapped in a partisan death spiral, but there is an escape. … Preserving liberty means telling the Republican Party and the Democratic Party that we’ll no longer let them play their partisan game at our expense.”

Amash, who leans decidedly libertaria­n, delivered a tweet storm when he decided in May that Trump should be impeached. Here’s a very telling line:

“While impeachmen­t should be undertaken only in extraordin­ary circumstan­ces, the risk we face in an environmen­t of extreme partisansh­ip is not that Congress will employ it as a remedy too often but rather that Congress will employ it so rarely that it cannot deter misconduct.”

Donald Trump demonstrat­es the wisdom of that statement daily.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States