The Guardian (USA)

Trump orders undocument­ed immigrants excluded from key census count

- Sam Levine in New York

Donald Trump signed a memorandum on Tuesday instructin­g the US Census Bureau to exclude undocument­ed immigrants from the population totals that determine how many seats in Congress each state gets. It’s an unpreceden­ted move that seems to be an attempt to preserve white political power.

The American Civil Liberties Union said immediatel­y that it would sue and the action is likely to be met with a flood of legal challenges. The Trump administra­tion appears to be on shaky legal ground – the US constituti­on requires seats in Congress to be apportione­d based on the “whole number of persons” counted in each state during each decennial census. The constituti­on vests Congress with power over the census (though Congress has since designated some of that authority to the executive).

Republican­s in recent years have been pushing to exclude non-citizens and other people ineligible to vote from the tally used to draw electoral districts. In 2015, Thomas Hofeller, a top Republican redistrict­ing expert, explicitly wrote that such a change “would be advantageo­us to Republican­s and non-Hispanic whites”.

The White House memo, titled “Excluding Illegal Aliens From the Apportionm­ent Base Following the 2020 Census,” argues that the term “person” in the constituti­on really means “inhabitant” and that the president has discretion to define what that means. The memo also argues that allowing undocument­ed people to count rewards states with high numbers of undocument­ed people.

“My administra­tion will not support giving congressio­nal representa­tion to aliens who enter or remain in the country unlawfully, because doing so would create perverse incentives and undermine our system of government,” Trump said in a statement. “Just as we do not give political power to people who are here temporaril­y, we should not give political power to people who should not be here at all.”

Nancy Pelosi, the House speaker, said the House would “vigorously contest” the order.

“By seeking to exclude undocument­ed immigrants from being counted in the 2020 census, the president is violating the constituti­on and the rule of law,” Pelosi said in a statement.

The White House’s interpreta­tion is likely to be strongly challenged in court. Experts have said that the idea of illegal immigratio­n didn’t exist when the constituti­on was written. Immigratio­n early in America was relatively “free and open”. US Customs and Immigratio­n Services says on its website the federal government began to regulate it in the 19th century.

“If those are the best arguments they have, they’re dead in the water,” said Thomas Wolf, a lawyer at the Brennan Center for Justice who works on census issues. “There’s no way to get around the fundamenta­l command of the constituti­on, on the plain text of the constituti­on, to count everyone.”

The legal rationale for the memo is so specious, Wolf said the motivation behind the memo might not be to enact it. He speculated the Trump administra­tion may be trying to create uncertaint­y or confusion among immigrants already wary of responding to the census.

It is not clear how the Trump administra­tion will exclude undocument­ed people from the decennial census, which is being conducted right now, and does not ask about citizenshi­p. The decision doesn’t directly affect the day-to-day operations of the ongoing census, already facing significan­t challenges because of Covid-19, but it is likely to cause more headaches for officials and advocates trying to convince Americans that it is safe to respond to the census after the Trump administra­tion unsuccessf­ully sought to add a question asking about citizenshi­p to the census last year, saying

the data was needed to enforce the Voting Rights Act.

The supreme court blocked the question from appearing on the survey, saying the rationale “seems to have been contrived”. But advocates said they still faced obstacles convincing immigrants it was safe to trust the census, which must keep individual informatio­n private for 72 years. Many households may have mixed immigratio­n status, and the Trump administra­tion’s efforts could make those people more fearful of responding. And the administra­tion has instructed federal agencies to use existing federal records to determine citizenshi­p status. The Census Bureau has also begun collecting some driver’s license records to aid in that effort, according to NPR.

There are an estimated 10.5 million unauthoriz­ed immigrants in the United States, according to the Pew research center. Many Republican­friendly states, such as Texas, Florida and Georgia, have considerab­le population­s of undocument­ed immigrants and could be negatively impacted by Trump’s order.

“The constituti­on requires that everyone in the US be counted in the census. President Trump can’t pick and choose,” said Dale Ho, the director of the ACLU’s voting rights project, who argued the citizenshi­p question case to the supreme court. “His latest attempt to weaponize the census for an attack on immigrant communitie­s will be found unconstitu­tional. We’ll see him in court, and win, again.”

In 2016, the supreme court said that states were not required to draw districts based only on the population of eligible voters, ruling against a group of voters, backed by a prominent conservati­ve strategist, who said the state was required to do so. The supreme court left an open question as to whether states could choose to draw districts just based on eligible voters. The issue is expected to return to the supreme court in the coming years.

While Republican­s argue that counting the entire population in the basis for electoral districts dilutes the influence of eligible voters, a fundamenta­l part of American democracy has long been that elected officials should serve roughly the same number of constituen­ts, regardless of whether those constituen­ts can vote or not.

 ??  ?? Demonstrat­ors rally at the US supreme court in Washington DC, to protest a proposal to add a citizenshi­p question in the 2020 census. Photograph: Mandel Ngan/AFP/Getty Images
Demonstrat­ors rally at the US supreme court in Washington DC, to protest a proposal to add a citizenshi­p question in the 2020 census. Photograph: Mandel Ngan/AFP/Getty Images

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States