News briefs
DOJ attorney in census citizenship dispute to leave department
WASHINGTON – The Justice Department official at the center of the push to add a citizenship question to the 2020 census has left the department, a person familiar with the decision confirmed Friday.
John Gore, who served as the Civil Rights Division’s principal assistant attorney general, authored a letter on enforcement of the Voting Rights Act that the Commerce Department used to justify adding a citizenship question to the census.
Supreme Court Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr. later wrote in a 5-4 opinion blocking the citizenship question that the rationale provided by the government was “contrived” and a “distraction” in the case.
Gore “plans to spend time with family before deciding his next steps after DOJ,” said the person familiar with his departure.
Gore has factored into the House Oversight and Reform Committee’s escalating struggle with the administration to obtain records related to the citizenship question. In April, he defied a committee subpoena for his testimony after a row over whether department counsel could be present for the deposition.
The committee also cited that episode in its report recommending contempt of Congress for Attorney General William Barr and Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross, which the House passed last month.
Republicans have argued that Democrats’ demands in the probe, like the incident with Gore, have gone beyond Congress’ oversight responsibilities.
Challengers to the citizenship question have included Gore’s conduct in a motion for sanctions against the DOJ in litigation in a New York federal court. They have alleged that Gore and others hid the involvement of the late Republican redistricting strategist Thomas Hofeller in the formation of the citizenship question.
Hofeller, challengers say, funneled the question to the Commerce Department, intending to use it to draw congressional maps based on citizenship rather than population.
Gore and the Trump administration have pushed back on that argument in court. In a deposition filed last week, Gore said he never met Hofeller and rejected the idea that an outside adviser had served as a basis for the Justice Department request.
–Cq-roll Call
California Gov. Gavin Newsom pardons man facing deportation
SAN JOSE, Calif. – A Santa Clara County man who came to the United States from Vietnam as a child refugee but now could be deported because of a more than decade-old criminal offense received a pardon from Gov. Gavin Newsom this week.
The 2007 assault with a deadly weapon conviction was 37-year-old Quoc Nguyen’s only offense since he came to the U.S. with his family when he was 10.
As President Donald Trump has sought to remove deportation protections for Vietnamese Americans with criminal records, Nguyen is among thousands who are at risk of being sent back to the country they fled as refugees.
That risk may have diminished this week, when Newsom issued seven pardons on Wednesday, one of which was for Nguyen. Most of the other pardons were for drug offenses.
Newsom, who frequently spars with Trump over protections for immigrants, wrote in his pardon order that Nguyen’s “impending deportation” and the potential that he could be separated from his family “further justifies” the clemency order. Newsom has continued a practice, begun by former Gov. Jerry Brown, of using his pardon authority to protect refugees at risk of deportation.
Nguyen was convicted of assault with a deadly weapon for joining several other people in attacking a man in 2004, according to the governor’s office. The charge carried an enhancement for being in a street gang.
Nguyen spent a year and a half in prison and nearly three more years on parole, but has since then “has demonstrated that he is living an upright life,” the governor’s office wrote.
–The Mercury News