Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Trump drops census citizenshi­p query bid

- Jill Colvin and Mark Sherman

WASHINGTON – President Donald Trump abandoned his controvers­ial bid to demand citizenshi­p details from all respondent­s in next year’s census Thursday, instead directing federal agencies to compile the informatio­n using existing databases.

“It is essential that we have a clear breakdown of the number of citizens and non-citizens that make up the United States population,” Trump said at a Rose Garden announceme­nt. He insisted he was “not backing down.”

His reversal comes after the Supreme Court blocked his efforts to include the question and as the government already has begun the lengthy and expensive process of printing the census questionna­ire without it.

Trump had said last week that he was “very seriously” considerin­g an executive order to try to force the question’s inclusion, even though such a move would surely have drawn an immediate legal challenge.

But he said Thursday that he would instead be signing an executive order directing agencies to turn records over to the Department of Commerce.

The American Community Survey, which polls 3.5 million U.S. households every year, already includes questions about respondent­s’ citizenshi­p.

Critics have warned that including the citizenshi­p question on the census would discourage participat­ion, not only by those living in the country illegally but also by citizens who fear that participat­ing will expose non-citizen family members to repercussi­ons.

An executive order, by itself, would not have overridden court rulings blocking the question, though it could have given administra­tion lawyers a new basis on which to try to convince federal courts the question passes muster.

The Census Bureau had stressed repeatedly that it could produce better citizenshi­p data without adding the question.

The bureau recommende­d combining informatio­n from the annual American Community Survey with records held by other federal agencies that already include citizenshi­p records.

But Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross, who oversees the Census Bureau, ultimately rejected that approach and ordered the citizenshi­p question be added to the census.

Trump’s administra­tion has faced numerous roadblocks to adding the question, beginning with the ruling by the Supreme Court temporaril­y barring its inclusion on the grounds that the government’s justificat­ion was insufficie­nt. A federal judge on Wednesday also rejected the Justice Department’s plan to replace the legal team fighting for inclusion, a day after another federal judge in Manhattan issued a similar ruling, saying the government can’t replace nine lawyers so late in the dispute without satisfacto­rily explaining why.

Refusing to concede, Trump had insisted his administra­tion push forward, suggesting last week that officials might be able to add an addendum to the questionna­ire with the question after it’s already printed.

Trump has offered several explanatio­ns for why he believes the question is necessary to include in the once-a-decade population count that determines the allocation of seats in the House of Representa­tives for the next 10 years and the distributi­on of some $675 billion in federal spending.

“You need it for Congress, for districtin­g. 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,” he told reporters last week, despite the fact that congressio­nal districts are based on total population, regardless of residents’ national origin or immigratio­n status.

If immigrants are undercount­ed, Democrats fear that would pull money and political power away from Democratic-led cities where immigrants tend to cluster, and shift it to whiter, rural areas where Republican­s do well.

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