South Florida Sun-Sentinel (Sunday)

Suspending citizenshi­p data is latest rollback of Trump census efforts

- By Mike Schneider

The U.S. Census Bureau is suspending efforts to create neighborho­od-level statistics on the citizenshi­p and age of residents, using 2020 census data, in the latest rollback of Trump administra­tion census-related initiative­s that critics feared would be used to favor Republican­s and whites during the drawing of state and local districts.

As part of an order President Joe Biden signed Wednesday, the Census Bureau said Friday that it would discontinu­e efforts to create citizenshi­p tabulation­s at the city-block level using 2020 census data combined with administra­tive records.

Biden’s order revoked two Trump directives related to the 2020 census. The first attempted to discern the citizenshi­p status of every U.S. resident through administra­tive records, and the second sought to exclude people in the U.S. illegally from the numbers used for apportioni­ng congressio­nal seats among the states.

Trump’s commerce secretary, Wilbur Ross, had ordered the production of the blocklevel citizenshi­p data in 2018.

After Wednesday’s order by Biden, the Census Bureau said none of the data from the 2020 census would include informatio­n on citizenshi­p or immigratio­n status, at any geographic level.

Citizen Voting Age by Race and Ethnicity data were created almost two decades ago to help assess whether minority communitie­s were getting equal opportunit­ies to elect candidates of their choice.

But in the mid-2010s, an influentia­l GOP adviser noted in a report that using adult age citizen figures as the basis for redrawing state and local districts, instead of the total population, would be advantageo­us to Republican­s and non-Hispanic whites.

The Trump administra­tion made several attempts to gather citizenshi­p data through the 2020 census, including adding a citizenshi­p question to the 2020 census questionna­ire, which was blocked by the Supreme Court in 2019.

The efforts at gathering the citizenshi­p data were challenged by civil rights groups in federal court in Maryland. A spokeswoma­n for one of the plaintiffs, the Mexican American Legal Defense and Educationa­l Fund, said the group needed to assess where the Census Bureau was in the process before dismissing the Maryland lawsuit.

Jeffrey Wice, a Democratic redistrict­ing expert, hailed the revocation­s of the Trump administra­tion’s census directives.

“This is a major step towards an honest and fair redistrict­ing process, helping ensure that everyone is represente­d in new districts,” Wice said.

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