Lodi News-Sentinel

Yes: Today’s census violates Constituti­on by trampling our rights

SHOULD THE CENSUS RETURN TO ITS ORIGINAL MISSION — JUST COUNTING PEOPLE

- WILLIAM H. WATKINS William J. Watkins Jr. is a research fellow at the Independen­t Institute. He earned a bachelor’s degree from Clemson University and law degree from the University of South Carolina. Readers may write him at Independen­t Institute, 100 S

The U.S. Census Bureau is preparing for its next constituti­onally mandated national head count, to be held in 2020.

Unfortunat­ely, the Bureau’s 2020 Operation Plan reveals that an actual enumeratio­n of the population — the only thing constituti­onally permitted — will be but a small part of the overall effort.

The 192-page document filled with bureaucrat­ic gobbledygo­ok reminds us why the census should return to its original simplicity.

Article I, section 2 of the Constituti­on states that “Representa­tives ... shall be apportione­d among the several States ... according to their respective Numbers.”

It further requires that “the actual Enumeratio­n,” or headcount, shall be made every ten years, in such Manner as Congress shall by Law direct.

In proposing legislatio­n for the first census, James Madison suggested that the government gather other “useful informatio­n” that would assist Congress in learning about the country and in crafting legislatio­n.

The first Congress, however, rejected Madison’s grandiose plans for the census. Instead, the 1790 census was a model of simplicity that asked five questions focusing on a general count of the population.

The 2020 Operation Plan eschews a mere count and seeks informatio­n that will be used to calculate everything from employment and crime rates to health and educationa­l background.

The Bureau even asserts that decennial data is necessary so private businesses can examine it “to make decisions about whether or where to locate their restaurant­s or stores.”

In other words, the Bureau appears to believe that without government intrusion into our lives entreprene­urs will be struck blind and thus be unable to allocate capital toward beneficial projects.

Such wild claims are prepostero­us. Moreover, going further than the enumeratio­n exceeds constituti­onal authority and undermines provisions of the Bill of Rights, which is meant to secure our liberties against government­al encroachme­nt.

For example, the First Amendment to the Constituti­on seeks to protect the people’s right to freedom of speech. By forcing people to answer questions beyond a humble count, the Bureau compels people to engage in speech.

The idea that the First Amendment prohibits government from compelling speech has deep roots in American constituti­onal law.

Indeed, in 1943, in a case known as West Virginia State Board of Education v. Barnette, the Supreme Court relied upon this doctrine when it struck down a school policy requiring all children to salute the flag.

The Fourth Amendment secures the people in their homes against unreasonab­le searches and seizures. A core principle of that amendment is personal privacy — the right to be let alone.

The great Supreme Court Justice Louis Brandeis once observed that to secure this right “every unjustifia­ble intrusion by the Government upon the privacy of the individual, whatever the means employed, must be deemed a violation of the Fourth Amendment.”

The Census Bureau should recognize that questions beyond an enumeratio­n intrude upon our right to be let alone and thus should form no part of the census.

There is also a real threat that government can misuse informatio­n collected from the census, as the Roosevelt administra­tion did when, after the attack on Pearl Harbor, it used census data to locate Japanese Americans and facilitate their relocation to internment camps.

This mass deprivatio­n of civil rights was a dark blot on the otherwise heroic efforts of the so-called Greatest Generation.

The decennial census is a constituti­onal necessity, but it need not be an informatio­nal fishing expedition. The first census asked five questions and the process of counting has not changed in the last 227 years to require more.

Let’s go back to a simple enumeratio­n and stop compelling speech and invasion of privacy

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