Trump Administration Backs Off Census Citizenship Question After Supreme Court Defeat

by Kevin Daley

 

The Trump administration will not include a citizenship question on the 2020 census form, the Justice Department said Tuesday.

The decision comes after the Supreme Court found Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross concealed his reasons for adding the citizenship question and cleared the way for further proceedings. The Commerce Department supervises the Census Bureau.

“The decision has been made to print the 2020 Decennial Census questionnaire without a citizenship question,” a Justice Department lawyer wrote in an email shared on Twitter. “The printer has been instructed to begin the printing process.” A Department spokesperson confirmed the government’s plans to the Daily Caller News Foundation.

The case proceeded through the federal courts on an expedited basis due to time constraints. Government lawyers said the Census Bureau needed to finalize the questionnaire by July 1 to ensure timely printing and distribution. The Supreme Court agreed to hear the case in an accelerated procedural posture given the press of time.

However, some census officials suggested the government could delay printing until October, raising the prospect that the government could ultimately add the citizenship question if it prevailed in another round of litigation.

President Donald Trump suggested he would delay the 2020 census until the dispute is resolved in a pair of tweets following Thursday’s decision.

The Constitution requires a census once per decade to apportion seats in Congress among the states. Federal funding is also awarded on the basis of population.

The American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU), which helped lead a large plaintiffs coalition to challenge the citizenship question, said Tuesday’s decision struck a blow for fair play.

“In light of the Supreme Court’s ruling, the Trump administration had no choice but to proceed with printing the 2020 census forms without a citizenship question,” said ACLU lawyer Dale Ho, who argued the census case before the Supreme Court. “Everyone in America counts in the census, and today’s decision means we all will.”

The government’s announcement came shortly before a scheduled conference in a separate legal challenge to the citizenship question before a federal court in Maryland. That case addresses late-breaking allegations that top Trump officials conspired with a Republican redistricting consultant to include the citizenship question for partisan reasons. That issue, likely mooted by Tuesday’s decision, never reached the Supreme Court.

The Commerce Department said it was collecting citizenship data to help the Justice Department improve enforcement of the Voting Rights Act (VRA). In his opinion for the high court, Chief Justice John Roberts called that explanation “a distraction,” saying government officials must give legitimate reasons for their actions to ensure proper supervision by courts.

“Unlike a typical case in which an agency may have both stated and unstated reasons for a decision, here the VRA enforcement rationale — the sole stated reason — seems to have been contrived,” Roberts wrote.

“If judicial review is to be more than an empty ritual, it must demand something better than the explanation offered for the action taken in this case,” he wrote elsewhere in the decision.

The high court’s conservatives joined portions of Roberts’s opinion rejecting other complaints the plaintiffs lodged, while the liberals formed a majority with the chief to find that Ross was concealing his rationale.

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Kevin Daley is a reporter for the Daily Caller News Foundation.
Photo “U.S. Census Worker” by U.S. Census.

 

 

 

 

 


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