The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)

3rd court blocks order to not count those undocument­ed in census

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A panel of three judges on Friday became the third federal court to rule that President Donald Trump’s effort to exclude people in the country illegally from the numbers used for dividing up congressio­nal seats is unlawful.

The federal court in Maryland prohibited the Commerce Department, which oversees the Census Bureau, from sending to the president any figures that include the number of people in the country illegally in each state when transmitti­ng the apportionm­ent count at the end of the year.

Federal courts in New York and California already have issued similar orders. The Trump administra­tion has appealed the New York case, and the Supreme Court is hearing arguments on it at the end of the month.

The Maryland decision was more like the New York ruling in that it merely found Trump’s order unlawful, rather than unconstitu­tional. The California court decided that Trump’s order violated the Constituti­on and federal law.

The Maryland lawsuit was brought by several advocacy groups and individual­s who said Trump’s order discrimina­tes against Hispanic people and immigrant communitie­s of color, and that they will be harmed because the states they live in will lose congressio­nal seats if the order is enforced.

The census determines not only how many congressio­nal seats each state gets, but also the distributi­on of $1.5 trillion a year in federal spending.

The Justice Department, which is representi­ng the Trump administra­tion, didn’t immediatel­y respond to an email inquiry.

Department of Justice attorneys had argued the challenge to Trump’s order was premature since it was impossible to know its impact until the apportionm­ent numbers are released at the end of the year.

The judges in Maryland wrote that Trump’s order upends 230 years of history and violates federal law by completely excluding people in the country illegally from the apportionm­ent count and by requiring the Commerce Department to provide the president with data collected outside the once-adecade census.

A year before Trump issued the memorandum on the apportionm­ent count, the president had ordered the Census Bureau to collect data from administra­tive records in order to figure out the number of people illegally residing in the U.S.

The judges in Maryland said the Census Bureau can continue collecting that data.

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