Baltimore Sun

Citizenshi­p question not dead yet

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question would violate equal-protection guarantees and whether it is part of a conspiracy to drive down the count of minorities.

Statements Friday from Trump and his acting U.S. Citizenshi­p and Immigratio­n Services director, Ken Cuccinelli, seemed to add confusion to the government’s previously stated rationale for the addition.

The administra­tion had said in multiple legal battles that the question was needed to get a better sense of the voting population to help enforce the Voting Rights Act. Opponents said the question could result in a severe undercount of immigrant communitie­s.

Speaking to reporters Friday at the White House, Trump said the question was needed “for many reasons.”

“No. 1, you need it for Congress — you need it for Congress for districtin­g,” he said. “You need it for appropriat­ions — where are the funds going? How many people are there? Are they citizens? Are they not citizens? You need it for many reasons.”

Trump’s statement could give additional heft to evidence discovered in May suggesting the administra­tion worked with a Republican redistrict­ing strategist who saw the question as a way to give Republican­s and non-Hispanic whites an electoral advantage. Government officials had previously denied that adding the question had anything to do with the strategist or his analysis.

Appearing on Fox News Business, Cuccinelli listed justificat­ions for the question: “Frankly, as part of the ongoing debate over how we deal financiall­y and legally with the burden of those who are not here legally,” Cuccinelli said, listing the justificat­ions for the census question. “That is a relevant issue.”

Trump had raised the possibilit­y that some kind of addendum could be printed separately after further litigation of the issue, a move that would almost certainly carry additional costs and may not be feasible, according to census experts.

“We’ll see what happens,” Trump said. “We could start the printing now and maybe do an addendum after we get a positive decision. So we’re working on a lot of things, including an executive order.”

Census experts say that, among other concerns, such an addendum would likely violate the bureau’s strict rules on testing a question, which include considerin­g how the placement of a question on the form affects respondent­s’ likelihood of filling it out.

Trump’s comments came as government lawyers scrambled to find a legal path to carry out the president’s wishes despite their conclusion­s in recent days that no such avenue exists.

Census officials and lawyers at the Justice and Commerce department­s scrapped holiday plans and spent Independen­ce Day seeking new legal rationales for a citizenshi­p question.

“It’s kind of shocking that they still don’t know what they’re doing,” said Thomas Saenz, president and general counsel of the Mexican American Legal Defense and Educationa­l Fund, which is representi­ng some of the plaintiffs in the case in Maryland.

In the Supreme Court’s splintered ruling last week, Chief Justice John Roberts said the government had provided a “contrived” reason for wanting the informatio­n, seemingly leaving open the door for the government to offer a new justificat­ion and see whether it satisfies the court. An executive order from Trump and a new rationale given by Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross on the basis of that order could give the administra­tion something to take back to the justices.

But “executive orders do not override decisions of the Supreme Court,” Saenz said. “Separation of powers remains, as it has been for over 200 years, a critical part of our constituti­onal scheme.”

 ?? EVAN VUCCI/AP ?? President Donald Trump talks to reporters Friday at the White House before departing for his Bedminster, N.J., golf club.
EVAN VUCCI/AP President Donald Trump talks to reporters Friday at the White House before departing for his Bedminster, N.J., golf club.

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