Texarkana Gazette

Trump allies are hedging their bets

- Carl Leubsdorf

Despite the polls, President Donald Trump is predicting an Election Day “wave like you’ve never seen before.” But his allies and associates in all three branches of government are hedging their bets with actions designed to extend his sway in key areas, even if he loses.

On Capitol Hill, the Republican- controlled Senate is moving to cement conservati­ve control of the Supreme Court by confirming Trump’s nomination of Judge Amy Coney Barrett. Executive branch officials are rushing to extend his deregulati­on efforts and fill many vacant jobs.

And the administra­tion hopes the high court will help it complete the 2020 census under rules that would bolster Republican voting and financial power for the next decade. At stake is how congressio­nal representa­tion is calculated and billions of dollars in federal aid are allocated to states and localities.

The court recently overturned a lower court ruling to allow more time for completing the census and minimize a potential undercount of minorities and younger Americans. The court also scheduled a Nov. 30 hearing on the administra­tion’s latest effort to exclude illegal immigrants from the count, which could cost three states including Texas one member of the U.S. House of Representa­tives.

The court vacancy that prompted the Barrett nomination is unique, the closest to a pending presidenti­al election such a vacancy has ever been filled (though several were approved soon after elections). Filling lesser jobs and taking administra­tive actions is less unusual, though it usually occurs at the end of a second term, not during a reelection campaign.

The administra­tion’s most questionab­le act is its continuing effort to exclude illegal immigrants from the census which is constituti­onally mandated every 10 years to determine population changes used to update allocation of U.S. House seats and federal funds.

A three-judge federal court in New York, in a unanimous decision by two appointees of President George W. Bush and one of President Barack Obama, said Trump exceeded his authority in directing the Commerce Department to provide two sets of numbers, one excluding the millions of unauthoriz­ed immigrants. The Constituti­on says the census should provide “the whole number of persons in each State.”

A study by Dudley Poston of Texas A&M and Teresa Sullivan for the University of Virginia’s Center for Politics concluded their exclusion could cost California, Texas and New Jersey one House seat each, and similarly benefit Alabama, Minnesota and Ohio. It could also cost big states with large numbers of undocument­ed persons substantia­l amounts of federal funds.

By law, the census must be finished by Dec. 31, with the president then required to notify Congress “the whole number of persons in each State” and the number of representa­tives to which each is entitled. The House clerk, in turn, is required to pass the latter number to each state.

But the administra­tion is already hinting it may not complete its work until early 2021. More importantl­y, it is unclear if the new House, almost certain to be controlled again by the Democrats, can reject

Trump proposals that benefit the Republican­s.

Earlier this year, fearing delays in part from the COVID-19 pandemic, the Commerce Department urged extending the census deadline until next April 30 to allow more time to count those inhabitant­s who are traditiona­lly harder to reach, mostly young people, minorities and poor people.

But the White House rejected an extension, presumably because that could give the final decision to the next administra­tion if Trump loses reelection. Then, it decided to halt the count, lest it be unable to complete its calculatio­ns by Dec. 31.

Besides determinin­g how many House seats each state will get for the next 10 years, the census guides legislativ­e decisions on representa­tion within the states and determines the location of recipients for the billions of dollars in annual federal aid, much of it for people below certain income levels.

Meanwhile, The New York Times reported that officials throughout the administra­tion are rushing to fill jobs and extending efforts to revise or scrap regulation­s deemed to be anti-business. They include everything from easing restrictio­ns for carrying highly flammable liquefied natural gas on freight trains to requiring sponsors of candidates for immigratio­n to provide detailed proof they can support the newcomers financiall­y.

Many of these actions could be subject to congressio­nal review under a procedure the GOP used four years ago to overturn some regulation­s implemente­d in the final weeks of the Obama administra­tion. Overturnin­g regulation­s requires a majority vote of both houses, plus the president’s signature, a possibilit­y if Democrats sweep the board Nov. 3.

As with the census, this suggests that battles over Trump’s initiative­s won’t necessaril­y end if — or when — he leaves office.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States