Los Angeles Times

TRUMP MAY ADD CITIZEN QUERY TO CENSUS

He continues to look for ways to get around the Supreme Court’s ruling against the contentiou­s question.

- By David G. Savage and Noah Bierman

WASHINGTON — President Trump said on Friday that he was considerin­g several ways to add a citizenshi­p question to the 2020 census, including by executive order, despite legal and logistical hurdles that could stop him.

The aim is to persuade Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr. to change his mind on the issue and clear the way for Trump to proceed.

“We have four or five ways we can do it,” Trump told reporters at the White House. “We are working on a lot of different things, including an executive order.”

The president has been scrambling to revive the issue since the Supreme Court, by a 5-4 vote, blocked the new question on the grounds that Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross failed to honestly explain why he sought to change census forms to ask all households about the citizenshi­p of occupants for the first time since 1950.

Joined by the court’s four liberal justices, Roberts said Ross’ explanatio­n, which focused on enforcing the Voting Rights Act, “seems to have been contrived.”

Government lawyers saw the ruling as a defeat because they had told courts the deadline to begin printing the census forms was July 1.

However, the president said the chief justice’s opinion left the door open to try again, and that’s what he plans to do.

“I have a lot of respect for Justice Roberts. He did say: ‘Come back.’ Essentiall­y, he said: ‘Come back.’ So we’ll see what happens. We can add an addition on. So we can start the printing now and maybe do an addendum after we get a positive decision,” Trump said.

It’s unclear whether the Commerce Department could actually add a citizenshi­p question later this year — as Trump suggested — and what that might cost.

His comments came at the end of an extraordin­ary week that saw Justice Department lawyers and the Commerce secretary tell judges on Tuesday that the census would move ahead without the citizenshi­p question.

The next day, they were overruled by the president.

The issue carries broad ramificati­ons for California and other states. Census experts predict millions of households — particular­ly those with immigrants — would refuse to fill out the form if the citizenshi­p question were included.

That would lead to a severe undercount in California and other states with a high percentage of immigrants.

The Constituti­on calls for the “actual enumeratio­n” of the population every 10 years and says the members of Congress will be allotted to the states “by counting the whole number of persons in each state.” It also says the census should be conducted “in such manner as [members of Congress] shall direct.”

Conservati­ves outside the administra­tion, including former federal appeals court Judge J. Michael Luttig, have urged Trump to issue an executive order that reinstates the citizenshi­p question.

“The census belonged to the president. Until [the Supreme Court decision], it did. He needs to get it back,” Hugh Hewitt, a former Justice Department lawyer, wrote in a Washington Post column two days after the Supreme Court’s decision.

It is not clear what new rationale the administra­tion could cite as justificat­ion for adding the new question.

Some former officials have argued the government could say it needs better data on the number of immigrants who entered the country illegally, but the new census question would not supply that. It would ask residents to check a box if they are not a citizen of the United States. It is estimated that half of the noncitizen­s living in the United States are legal residents. Many are in the process of becoming citizens.

A more realistic possibilit­y is the administra­tion could say it needs citizenshi­p data so states could redraw their election districts for the next decade based on the number of eligible voters, not the whole population. The Supreme Court in a 2015 case from Texas left open the question whether this was a legal option for states.

Trump on Friday also mentioned redistrict­ing as one of the reasons the government needs to ask about citizenshi­p.

But until recently, administra­tion lawyers did not discuss this rationale, in part because its impact would favor Republican­s in states such as Texas, Florida and Arizona and hurt Democrats.

Three federal judges — in New York, San Francisco and Maryland — have heard lawsuits challengin­g the Commerce Department’s plan, and all three issued orders that blocked the administra­tion from proceeding. Those orders remain in place.

The legal advocacy group MALDEF represente­d immigrants rights activists in the Maryland case, and its president, Thomas A. Saenz, said Friday that he doubted Trump’s latest gambit would succeed.

“There is nothing magical about an executive order,” he said. “It still has to present a legitimate rationale. I think they are going through the motions, and ultimately they won’t be allowed to add the question.”

U.S. District Judge George Hazel in Maryland said he plans to consider further evidence that Ross and the Trump administra­tion intended to discrimina­te against Latinos by undercutti­ng their voting power. The Supreme Court did not rule on this issue, but Hazel could rule that adding the new question amounted to unconstitu­tional racial discrimina­tion.

Saenz said such a ruling could further complicate Trump’s plans. “A finding of racial intent would override” the earlier rulings, which were based on federal procedural law, he said. “It is difficult to see how the Supreme Court would weigh in on that now.”

 ?? Evan Vucci Associated Press ?? PRESIDENT TRUMP greets supporters on the South Lawn of the White House before departing for his New Jersey golf club Friday.
Evan Vucci Associated Press PRESIDENT TRUMP greets supporters on the South Lawn of the White House before departing for his New Jersey golf club Friday.

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