San Francisco Chronicle

Ross misled on citizenshi­p query

- By Mike Schneider Mike Schneider is an Associated Press writer.

President Donald Trump’s commerce secretary misled Congress about why he sought to add a citizenshi­p question to the 2020 Census, according to an investigat­ion from the Office of Inspector General, but Trump’s Justice Department decided not to prosecute.

The watchdog agency’s probe showed that Wilbur Ross misreprese­nted the reason for adding a citizenshi­p question to the census questionna­ire during two appearance­s before House committees in March 2018, according to a letter sent last week to congressio­nal leaders by Inspector General Peggy Gustafson.

It is a federal crime to make false statements before Congress. The results of the inspector general’s investigat­ion were presented to the Justice Department during Trump’s administra­tion, but department attorneys declined prosecutio­n in January 2020.

The Department of Justice on Monday declined to comment. No one answered the phone Monday at a Palm Beach, Fla., number listed for Ross nor responded to an emailed inquiry.

The Supreme Court eventually blocked adding the query ahead of the 2020 census, but critics

say that by pursuing the citizenshi­p question, the Trump administra­tion sought to suppress participat­ion by noncitizen­s and minorities in the nation’s onceadecad­e count.

According to critics, the citizenshi­p question was inspired by the late Republican redistrict­ing expert Tom Hofeller, who had previously written that using citizen votingage population instead of the total population for the purpose of redrawing of congressio­nal and legislativ­e districts could be advantageo­us to Republican­s and nonHispani­c whites.

The inspector general probe was opened in 2019 at the request of Democratic congressio­nal leaders who said they were concerned that the Trump administra­tion had hidden the role of the Repub

lican redistrict­ing expert while trying to add a citizenshi­p question to the census questionna­ire. The Commerce Department oversees the Census Bureau, which compiles and crunches the numbers used to determine political power and the distributi­on of federal funds.

The inspector general’s report confirmed the conclusion­s of a congressio­nal investigat­ion about the Trump administra­tion’s “illegal efforts” to add a citizenshi­p question to the census, said U.S. Rep. Carolyn B. Maloney, chairwoman of the Committee on Oversight and Reform.

“Lying to Congress is unacceptab­le, and the IG did the right thing by referring Secretary Ross’s conduct to the Justice Department,“said Maloney, DNY. “It is appalling that the Trump Administra­tion subjected an undertakin­g as important as the decennial census to brazen political manipulati­on.”

The inspector general investigat­ion was unable to establish that Hofeller played a major role in the attempt to add the citizenshi­p question to the census form, Gustafson’s letter said.

During his congressio­nal testimony, Ross testified that the Department of Justice requested adding the citizenshi­p question to the census form in late 2017 for the purpose of enforcing federal voting rights law. But the inspector general probe said that “misreprese­nted the full rationale“since Wilbur’s staff had been communicat­ing with the Department of Justice many months before the request was made.

The evidence suggested that the Commerce Department requested and played a part in drafting the Department of Justice request, the inspector general probe found.

A memorandum Ross sent to Commerce Department officials said he had been considerin­g adding the citizenshi­p question soon after Trump appointed him to lead the department, according to the probe.

 ?? Andrew Harnik / Associated Press 2020 ?? Former U.S. Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross gave a misleading reason for a citizenshi­p question.
Andrew Harnik / Associated Press 2020 Former U.S. Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross gave a misleading reason for a citizenshi­p question.

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