U.S. to add citizenship question in 2020
Census: Commerce Dept
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[March 27, 2018]
By Brendan O'Brien
(Reuters) - A question about citizenship
status will be included on the 2020 Census to help enforce the Voting
Rights Act, federal officials said on Monday, but California sued to
block the move arguing that it would discourage immigrants from
participating.
Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross decided to add the question to the count
after a Department of Justice request based on the desire for better
enforcement of the voting law, the U.S. Department of Commerce said in a
statement.
"Secretary Ross determined that obtaining complete and accurate
information to meet this legitimate government purpose outweighed the
limited potential adverse impacts," it said.
The census, which is mandated under the U.S. Constitution and takes
place every 10 years, counts every resident in the United States. It is
used to determine the allocation to states of seats in the U.S. House of
Representatives and to distribute billions of dollars in federal funds
to local communities.
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Ross said in a memo that the Voting Rights Act requires a tally of
citizens of voting age to protect minorities against discrimination, and
that getting this information as part of the census would make it more
complete.
Opponents of a Census question about citizenship status say it could
further discourage immigrants from participating in the count,
especially when they are already fearful of how information could be
used against them.
The State of California, which has a large immigrant population,
responded early on Tuesday by filing a lawsuit in federal court against
the commerce department and census bureau.
California Attorney General Xavier Becerra asked the U.S. District Court
in the Northern District of California to issue a preliminary injunction
and rule that the move violates the constitution by interfering with the
obligation to conduct a full count of the U.S. population.
The announcement came as President Donald Trump tries to keep his
campaign promise to build a border wall between Mexico and the United
States and to crack down on illegal immigration.
He ordered stricter immigration enforcement and banned travelers from
several Muslim-majority countries soon after taking office in January
2017.
"This untimely, unnecessary, and untested citizenship question will
disrupt planning at a critical point, undermine years of painstaking
preparation, and increase costs significantly, putting a successful,
accurate count at risk," the Leadership Conference on Civil and Human
Rights said in a statement.
Test surveys showed in late 2017 that some immigrants were afraid to
provide information to U.S. Census workers because of fears about being
deported.
"This decision comes at a time when we have seen xenophobic and
anti-immigrant policy positions from this administration," said Kristen
Clarke, President and Executive Director of the Lawyers' Committee for
Civil Rights Under Law.
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U.S. Secretary of Commerce Wilbur Ross testifies to the House
Appropriations Commerce, Justice, Science, and Related Agencies
Subcommittee on the Commerce Department's FY2019 budget request on
Capitol Hill in Washington, U.S., March 20, 2018. REUTERS/Joshua
Roberts
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CONFIDENTIALITY
Immigrants and those who live with immigrants are troubled by
confidentiality and data-sharing aspects of the count, Mikelyn
Meyers, a researcher at the Census Bureau's Center for Survey
Measurement, told a meeting of the bureau's National Advisory
Committee in November.
Census researchers have said immigrants they interviewed
spontaneously raised topics like the travel ban and the dissolution
of Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals, a program that has
protected from deportation young immigrants brought to the country
illegally as children.
One person, Meyers said, told government interviewers: "The
possibility that the Census could give my information to internal
security and immigration could come and arrest me for not having
documents terrifies me."
Citizen questions have appeared on the census in the past and are
included on more frequent population surveys that are administered
by the census bureau.
Ross said he met Census officials and considered arguments for and
against the change made by interest groups, members of congress and
state and local officials.
He said no evidence was provided to the agency that showed a
citizenship question would decrease response rates among those who
already "generally distrusted government and government information
collection efforts, disliked the current administration, or feared
law enforcement."
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However, Ross said the commerce department was unable to determine
how the citizen question would affect responsiveness.
"Even if there is some impact on responses, the value of more
complete and accurate data derived from surveying the entire
population outweighs such concerns," he said in the memo.
(Reporting by Brendan O'Brien in Milwaukee; Editing by Eric Meijer,
Paul Tait and Peter Graff)
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