Santa Fe New Mexican

Census, redistrict­ing among issues high court will decide

- By Mark Sherman

WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court enters its final week of decisions with two politicall­y charged issues unresolved, whether to rein in political line-drawing for partisan gain and allow a citizenshi­p question on the 2020 census.

Both decisions could affect the distributi­on of political power for the next decade, and both also may test Chief Justice John Roberts’ professed desire to keep his court of five conservati­ves appointed by Republican presidents and four liberals appointed by Democrats from looking like the other branches of government. Decisions that break along the court’s political and ideologica­l divide are more likely to generate criticism of the court as yet another political institutio­n.

In addition, the justices could say as early as Monday whether they will add to their election-year calendar a test of President Donald Trump’s effort to end an Obama-era program that shields young immigrants from deportatio­n. The court’s new term begins in October.

Twelve cases that were argued between November and April remain to be decided. They include disputes over: a trademark sought by a clothing line, control of a large swath of eastern Oklahoma that once belonged to Native American tribes and when courts should defer to decisions made by executive branch agencies.

But the biggest cases by far involve the citizenshi­p question the Trump administra­tion wants to add to the census and two cases in which lower courts found that Republican­s in North Carolina and Democrats in Maryland went too far in drawing congressio­nal districts to benefit their party at the expense of the other party’s voters.

The Supreme Court has never invalidate­d districts on partisan grounds, but the court has kept the door open to these claims. The court has struck down districts predominan­tly based on race.

Now though, the justices are considerin­g whether to rule out federal lawsuits making claims of partisan gerrymande­ring. Conversely, the court also could impose limits on the practice for the first time. It was not clear at arguments in March that any conservati­ve justices were prepared to join the liberals to limit partisan gerrymande­ring.

In the census case, the Census Bureau’s own experts say that Hispanics and other immigrants are likely to be undercount­ed if the census questionna­ire asks everyone about their citizenshi­p status. The last time the question appeared on the once-a-decade census was in 1950, and even then it wasn’t asked of everyone.

Democratic-led states and cities, and civil rights groups challengin­g the citizenshi­p case, have argued that the question would take power away from cities and other places with large immigrant population­s and reward less populated rural areas. They have more recently pointed to newly discovered evidence on the computer files of a now-dead Republican consultant that they say shows the citizenshi­p question is part of a broader plan to increase Republican power. The administra­tion has said the new allegation­s lack merit.

When the case was argued in April, it appeared that the conservati­ve justices were poised to allow the question to be asked.

Census results determine how seats in the House of Representa­tives are allocated among the 50 states and how billions of dollars in federal money is distribute­d. The population count also forms the basis for the redrawing of districts from Congress to local government­s that takes place every 10 years.

The court’s decisions in the redistrict­ing cases will affect the tools state lawmakers can use to draw those districts, especially in states in which one party controls the governor’s office and both houses of the state legislatur­e.

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