The Mercury News

Census halts efforts to meet Trump’s order

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The director of the U.S. Census Bureau on Wednesday indefinite­ly halted efforts to comply with President Donald Trump’s order demanding data on who is in the country illegally after receiving blowback from civil rights groups and concerns raised by bureau statistici­ans about the accuracy of such figures.

Bureau workers laboring to comply with the presidenti­al order were instructed to “‘stand down’ and discontinu­e their data reviews,” Census Bureau Director Steven Dillingham said in a memo. Dillingham’s memo came after the Office of Inspector General reported Tuesday bureau workers were under significan­t pressure from two Trump political appointees, Nathaniel Cogley and Benjamin Overholt, to figure out who is in the U.S illegally using federal and state administra­tive records. Dillingham had set a Friday deadline for bureau statistici­ans to provide him a technical report on the effort, the inspector general’s memo said.

After the release of the inspector general’s memo, a coalition of civil rights groups called for Dillingham’s resignatio­n, saying he was underminin­g the statistica­l agency’s standards for data quality to comply with Trump’s order, which was “motivated by partisan objectives.”

“We do not lightly come to the conclusion that he should resign,” leaders of the National Associatio­n of Latino Elected and Appointed Officials, Asian Americans Advancing Justice and The Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights said in a statement. “Dillingham’s order to divert precious staff time away from producing the apportionm­ent count and into producing data on citizens and noncitizen­s for political, partisan purposes is a betrayal of the mission of the Bureau.”

Census Bureau directors have five-year terms and Dillingham’s tenure does not end until the end of the year. The appointmen­ts of Cogley and Overholt last year were highly criticized by statistici­ans, academics and Democratic lawmakers, who worried they would politicize the once-a-decade census. Trump two years ago ordered the Census Bureau to use administra­tive records to figure out who is in the country illegally after the Supreme Court blocked his administra­tion’s effort to put a citizenshi­p question on the 2020 census questionna­ire. The statistica­l agency has not publicly said what method it’s utilizing to do that.

Informatio­n about the citizenshi­p status of every U.S. resident could be used to implement another Trump order seeking to exclude people in the country illegally from the count used for divvying up congressio­nal seats and Electoral College votes, as well as the annual distributi­on of $1.5 trillion in federal spending, among the states.

An influentia­l GOP adviser had advocated excluding them from the apportionm­ent process in order to favor Republican­s and non-Hispanic whites.

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