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Faith groups condemn citizenshi­p question on U.S. census

- Jack Jenkins

WASHINGTON — Citing both moral imperative­s and concerns about accuracy, religious groups are speaking out against a new citizenshi­p question slated to be included in the 2020 U.S. census.

The U.S. Department of Commerce, which oversees the census, announced Monday it would accept a request made in December by the Department of Justice to include a question about citizenshi­p status — something that hasn’t been on the mandatory survey since 1950. In a statement, officials at Commerce argue the change is an attempt to enforce the Voting Rights Act.

“Citizenshi­p questions have also been included on prior decennial censuses,” the statement reads in part. “Between 1820 and 1950, almost every decennial census asked a question on citizenshi­p in some form.”

However, several religious organizati­ons — many of them progressiv­e-leaning or representi­ng minority faiths — see the decision as potentiall­y doing more harm than good to the census, which is used to determine the allocation of federal funds and the number of seats each state has in the U.S. House of Representa­tives.

Tony Suarez, executive vice president of the National Hispanic Christian Leadership Conference and member of President Trump’s unofficial evangelica­l advisory board, appeared to criticize the census question indirectly on Wednesday, arguing it evokes fear in immigrants because Congress has yet to pass immigratio­n reform legislatio­n.

“The bottom line is we need to know who resides within our borders,” Suarez said. “The census plays an important role in our way of life and government. Congress’ embarrassi­ng 30-year streak of futility on the issue of immigratio­n reform has led us to the point where a question regarding citizenshi­p strikes instant fear in immigrant communitie­s and visions of mass deportatio­ns. Congress must fix our broken immigratio­n system, which in turn will bring people out of the shadows, allow a proper census and more importantl­y allow families to live the American dream without fear.”

Liberal religious organizati­ons and denominati­ons were more forceful in expressing their displeasur­e.

Barbara Weinstein, director of the Commission on Social Action of Reform Judaism, issued a statement railing against the decision, referring to the “Jewish responsibi­lity to support the engagement of all people.”

“We strongly condemn the Department of Commerce’s decision to include a question about citizenshi­p on the 2020 Census,” Weinstein, whose denominati­on is the largest Jewish one in the U.S., said. “At a time when America’s immigrant communitie­s feel increasing­ly threatened, the effects of this decision are not hard to foresee: Census response rates from immigrant communitie­s will be suppressed, underminin­g the Census’s integrity overall.”

The Rev. John Dorhauer, general minister and president of the United Church of Christ, said in an email the new citizenshi­p question “is a not so subtle attempt to disenfranc­hise vulnerable communitie­s and diminish their capacity to affect their political future.” The Rev. Jennifer Butler, CEO of the progressiv­e faith-based organizati­on Faith in Public Life, derided the decision as a “discrimina­tory change.” Catholic nun Sister Simone Campbell, head of Catholic social justice lobby NETWORK, invoked the Christian belief that all people are created in God’s image, saying in a statement that “implementi­ng a question designed to suppress respondent­s is evidence of the Republican desire to control who matters in our country.”

One of the most forceful critiques came from the Council on American-Islamic Relations, whose news release described the question as part of the Trump administra­tion’s “white supremacis­t agenda” designed to “drag our nation back to the false ‘white paradise’ of the 1950s.”

The criticisms echoed a letter sent to Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross on Jan. 10 by the Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights — a coalition that includes several faith groups. It asked him to reject the Department of Justice’s “untimely and unnecessar­y” request for a citizenshi­p question on the census, saying doing so would “destroy any chance for an accurate count, discard years of careful research, and increase costs significan­tly.”

Signatorie­s included an array of faith-based groups, such as the General Board of Church and Society for the United Methodist Church, Sikh Coalition, Franciscan Action Network, PICO California, Friends Committee on National Legislatio­n (Quakers), National Advocacy Center of the Sisters of the Good Shepherd, Bread for the World, Church World Service and Interfaith Worker Justice, among others.

The faith-based criticisms add to the outcry of several political leaders. At least 12 states plan to sue the Trump administra­tion over the change, arguing it violates the Constituti­on and fewer people will participat­e.

 ?? Charlie Litchfield / Associated Press ?? The Department of Commerce says it will include a question about citizenshi­p status in the 2020 census.
Charlie Litchfield / Associated Press The Department of Commerce says it will include a question about citizenshi­p status in the 2020 census.

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