The Denver Post

Trump citizenshi­p plan will face logistical, legal hurdles

- By Colleen Long, Mark Sherman and Ricardo Alonso-Zaldivar

WASHINGTON» After failing to get his citizenshi­p question on the census, President Donald Trump now says his fallback plan will provide an even more accurate count — determinin­g the citizenshi­p of 90 percent of the population “or more.” But his plan likely will be limited by logistical hurdles and legal restrictio­ns.

Trump wants to distill a massive trove of data across seven government agencies — and possibly across 50 states. It’s far from clear how such varying systems can be mined, combined and compared.

He directed the Commerce Department, which manages the census, to form a working group.

“The logistical barriers are significan­t, if not insurmount­able,” said Paul Light, a senior fellow of Governance Studies at New York University with a long history of research in government reform. “The federal government does not invest, and hasn’t been investing for a long time, in the kind of data systems and recruitmen­t of experts that this kind of database constructi­on would require.”

Trump says he aims to answer how many people are here illegally, although there are recent estimates, and possibly use such informatio­n to divvy up congressio­nal seats based on citizenshi­p.

It’s also a way for Trump to show his base that he’s not backing down (even as he’s had to back down) from a battle over the question on his signature topic, immigratio­n.

The administra­tion faced challenges last year when it was tasked by a federal judge with quickly creating a system to track migrant families that had been separated by immigratio­n officials. They found agency systems weren’t compatible.

“Informatio­n sharing is not a habit of federal agencies,” Light said.

Trump’s plan is aimed at yet again circumvent­ing legal challenges on an immigratio­n-related matter, as courts have barred him from inquiring about citizenshi­p on the 2020 census. But it could spark further legal action, depending on what his administra­tion intends to do with the citizenshi­p informatio­n.

His executive order announced Thursday requires highly detailed informatio­n, including national-level files of all lawful permanent residents, Customs and Border arrival and departure data and Social Security Administra­tion master beneficiar­y records.

Plus informatio­n on Medicaid and children’s health systems and refugee and asylum visas.

The order states that “generating accurate data concerning the total number of citizens, non-citizens and illegal aliens in the country has nothing to do with enforcing immigratio­n laws against particular individual­s,” and that informatio­n would be used “solely to produce statistics” and would not be used to “bring immigratio­n enforcemen­t actions against particular individual­s.”

Dale Ho, the director of the ACLU’s Voting Rights Project who argued the citizenshi­p question case at the Supreme Court, said the main privacy concern now would be disclosure of individual­s’ citizenshi­p status.

Federal law bars the Census Bureau from disclosing an individual’s responses to the census. But Ho said that if the bureau can produce citizenshi­p informatio­n in small geographic­al bites, it inadverten­tly could expose a person’s citizenshi­p status.

The bureau has methods in place that are designed to prevent such disclosure­s, but “we don’t know enough yet to know the answers,” Ho said.

In March, The Associated Press reported that even before the outcome of the census question litigation, U.S. Citizenshi­p and Immigratio­n Services, which maintains some of the requested data, had been working on a data-sharing agreement that would give census access to names, addresses, birth dates and places, as well as Social Security numbers and alien registrati­on numbers.

The possibilit­ies worried immigrant rights advocates, especially given Trump’s hard-line stance on immigratio­n.

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