Texarkana Gazette

Census numbers delayed further

- MIKE SCHNEIDER

A Trump administra­tion attorney said Monday that the numbers used for deciding how many congressio­nal seats each state gets won’t be ready until mid-February at the earliest.

The U.S. Census Bureau has found new irregulari­ties in the head count data that determines congressio­nal seat allocation­s and the distributi­on of $1.5 trillion in federal spending each year, John Coghlan, a deputy assistant attorney general, said during a court hearing.

The numbers could be delayed even further into February than the expected Feb. 9 date, Coghlan said.

“It’s a continuous­ly moving target,” he said.

Under federal law, the Census Bureau is required to turn in the numbers used for allocating congressio­nal seats by Dec. 31, but the bureau announced last week that the numbers wouldn’t be ready. At the time, the Census Bureau said it would finish the apportionm­ent numbers in early January, as close to the end-of-year deadline as possible.

Not having the apportionm­ent numbers finished before President-elect Joe Biden is sworn in Jan. 20 will jeopardize an effort by President Donald Trump to exclude unauthoriz­ed migrants from the apportionm­ent count.

The new date was made public during a hearing for a federal lawsuit in San Jose, Calif.

The California lawsuit was originally brought by a coalition of municipali­ties and advocacy groups that had sued the Trump administra­tion in order to stop the census from ending early out of concerns that a shortened head count would cause minority communitie­s to be undercount­ed. The coalition is seeking data and documents to help assess the accuracy of the 2020 census.

Attorneys for the coalition had argued that the head count, as well as the data processing schedule, was shortened in order to make sure that Trump was still in office so that his apportionm­ent order to exclude migrants was enforced. An influentia­l GOP adviser had advocated excluding them from the apportionm­ent process in order to favor Republican­s and non-Hispanic whites.

Trump’s July order on apportionm­ent was challenged in more than a half-dozen lawsuits around the U.S., but the Supreme Court ruled last month that any challenge was premature.

Meanwhile, attorneys for the coalition said they plan to seek court sanctions against Trump administra­tion attorneys for refusing to turn over the data and documents they are seeking.

Attorneys for the coalition said Monday in a court filing that the Department of Justice has produced data reports for only half of the requests they have made. When Trump administra­tion attorneys did provide informatio­n, it was buried in thousands of pages of irrelevant material such as emails for pizza and handbag advertisem­ents and LinkedIn notificati­ons, according to the court filing.

The attorneys described the Trump administra­tion’s playbook as “deny informatio­n and the existence of documents; produce dribs and drabs only when ordered or uncovered; attempt to hide as many documents as possible under exaggerate­d and improper claims of privilege; and do everything to try and run out the clock.”

In the same court filing, the Trump administra­tion attorneys said they haven’t violated any orders to produce documents, adding that any blame should be on the coalition’s attorneys for making their requests too broad.

In some cases, the government attorneys said they are still working to provide the requested informatio­n. In other cases, the requests would require the Census Bureau to write new code in order to make data inquiries that would be “unduly burdensome as the employees needed to search for this data are the same employees who are trying to finish the census,” the government attor

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States