The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

High court takes up census case, as other count issues loom

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WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump’s attempt to exclude people living in the country illegally from the population count used to divvy up congressio­nal seats is headed for a post-Thanksgivi­ng Supreme Court showdown.

The administra­tion’s top lawyers are hoping the justices on a court that includes three Trump appointees will embrace the idea, rejected repeatedly by lower courts. It’s the latest, and likely the last, Trump administra­tion hard-line approach to immigratio­n issues to reach the high court. Arguments will take place on Monday by telephone because of the coronaviru­s pandemic.

Even as the justices weigh a bid to remove, for the first time, millions of noncitizen­s from the population count that determines how many seats each state gets in the House of Representa­tives as well as the allocation of some federal funding, experts say other issues loom large for the 2020 census as it heads into unchartere­d territory over deadlines, data quality and politics.

A host of novel questions outside of the court’s eventual decision could determine the final product of the nation’s once- a-decade head count, including whether the incoming Biden administra­tion would do anything to try to reverse decisions made under Trump.

Among other questions: Will the Census Bureau be able to meet a year-end deadline for turning in the numbers used for apportionm­ent, the process of dividing up congressio­nal seats among the states? Will the quality of the census data be hurt by a shortened schedule, a pandemic and natural disasters?

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