The Morning Call (Sunday)

Supreme Court takes up census case

High court to see if count can exclude those in US illegally

- By Mike Schneider and Mark Sherman

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 are scheduled to 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 uncharted territory over deadlines, data quality and politics.

Ahost of questions outside 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?

How the Supreme Court will rule is the first unknown.

Federal courts in California, Maryland and New York have ruled that Trump’s plan violates

federal law or the Constituti­on, which provides that “representa­tives shall be apportione­d among the several States according to their respective numbers, counting the whole number of persons in each State.” A fourth court, in Washington, D.C., held recently that a similar challenge to the administra­tion plan was premature, an argument that also has been made to the high court.

“What Trump wants to do would be a radical break from

that. The losers wouldn’t be individual people. It would be entire states and communitie­s that would lose representa­tion when undocument­ed members of those communitie­s get cut out of the count used to apportion the House,” said Dale Ho, the American Civil Liberties Union lawyer who will argue on behalf of immigratio­n advocates and civil rights groups in the Supreme Court case.

The administra­tion argues

that both the Constituti­on and federal law allow the president to exclude “illegal aliens” from the apportionm­ent count.

“As history, precedent, and structure indicate, the President need not treat all illegal aliens as ‘inhabitant­s’ of the States and thereby allow their defiance of federal law to distort the allocation of the people’s Representa­tives,” acting Solicitor General Jeffrey Wall wrote.

By the administra­tion’s estimate, California could lose two to three House seats if people living in the country illegally were excluded based on what the administra­tion said are more than 2 million such California residents. Ho noted that a change in the divvying up of House seats can turn on much smaller numbers.

The Democratic-controlled House has weighed in to argue that Trump’s plan would result in an unfair distributi­on of seats for partisan political goals, the latest attempt “to manipulate the census in novel and troubling ways.” The House cast the president’s plan as part of a larger effort that included an attempt blocked by the Supreme Court to add a citizenshi­p question to the census for the first time in 70 years.

For the order to be carried out, the data processing of the apportionm­ent numbers will have to take place while Trump is still in office, but an announceme­nt this month that anomalies have been found in the data jeopardize­s the Census Bureau’s ability to hand in the numbers to the president by Dec. 31. Trump is supposed to transmit the numbers to Congress by Jan. 10.

But if problems with the data force a delay of even three weeks, the Census Bureau would be turning in the numbers to a new president. President-elect Joe Biden takes office Jan. 20.

“The Biden administra­tion will have to see what kind of damage the Trump administra­tion left reapportio­nment and determine whether an accurate head count, including all persons regardless of citizenshi­p, can be used,” said Jeffrey Wice, an adjunct professor at New York Law School.

 ?? PATRICK SEMANSKY/AP ?? This case is possibly the last Trump administra­tion hard-line approach to immigratio­n to reach the Supreme Court.
PATRICK SEMANSKY/AP This case is possibly the last Trump administra­tion hard-line approach to immigratio­n to reach the Supreme Court.

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