San Diego Union-Tribune

JUDGES BLOCK ORDER ON COUNT FOR HOUSE SEATS

Panel says excluding those in U.S. illegally is unconstitu­tional

- BY MIKE SCHNEIDER Schneider writes for The Associated Press.

For the second time in two months, a panel of federal judges on Thursday blocked President Donald Trump’s effort to exclude people in the U.S. illegally from being counted during the process of divvying up congressio­nal seats by state.

The decision from a panel of three district judges in California went further than last month’s ruling by a panel of three federal judges in New York by saying that Trump’s order in July not only was unlawful but also violated the Constituti­on. The New York judges ignored the question of the order’s constituti­onality and just said it was unlawful.

“The Constituti­on’s text, drafting history, 230 years of historical practice, and Supreme Court case law all support the conclusion that apportionm­ent must be based on all persons residing in each state, including undocument­ed immigrants,” the judges in California wrote.

The Trump administra­tion has appealed the New York decision to the Supreme Court, and the nation’s high court agreed to hear the case next month.

Other challenges to Trump’s order are pending in Maryland, Massachuse­tts and the District of Columbia.

The Department of Justice, which is representi­ng the Trump administra­tion, didn’t immediatel­y respond to an email inquiry Thursday.

The case was heard before a panel of three district judges since it deals with how many congressio­nal seats each state gets based on population figures from the once-a-decade census — a process known as apportionm­ent. Any appeal can bypass an appellate court and go straight to the Supreme Court.

One of the judges on the panel, U.S. District Judge Lucy Koh, in a separate case last month stopped the Trump administra­tion from finishing the census at the end of September. She ordered the count to go on for another month through October. Department of Justice attorneys appealed to the Supreme Court, which last week allowed the Trump administra­tion to end the census.

During arguments earlier this month, Trump administra­tion attorneys told the judges that any challenge to Trump’s order was premature and should wait until the apportionm­ent numbers are turned in at year’s end.

The Census Bureau has yet to make public its method for determinin­g the citizenshi­p status of every U.S. resident, as requested in another order issued by Trump last year after the

Supreme Court blocked his administra­tion’s effort to add a citizenshi­p question to the 2020 census. During a news conference on Wednesday, bureau officials refused to answer whether carrying out the order on apportionm­ent was feasible at this point.

In the order, Trump said that allowing people in the country illegally to be counted for apportionm­ent undermines the principles of representa­tive democracy.

The federal judges in California sided with a coalition of individual­s and government­s that had sued the Trump administra­tion, arguing the order discrimina­tes against people based on race, ethnicity and national origin. The coalition included the state of California; the cities of Los Angeles, Oakland and San Jose in California; and the counties that are home to Houston and Seattle.

The judges on Thursday prohibited the Commerce Department, which oversees the Census Bureau, from sending to the president any informatio­n about the number of residents living illegally in each state that could be used to exclude them from the apportionm­ent count.

Excluding those residents could cost states such as California and Texas congressio­nal seats and federal funding, the judges said.

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