In losing legal battles over census,
Trump may win political war
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[July 08, 2019]
By Tom Hals
(Reuters) - The Trump administration has
few realistic options to get a citizenship question onto next year's
census, but by keeping the issue in the public eye it could still
trigger an undercount of residents in Democratic-leaning areas, legal
and political experts told Reuters.
Constant media coverage linking citizenship and census forms could scare
undocumented immigrants away from responding and rally U.S. President
Donald Trump's base to participate, they said. That, in turn, would help
redraw voting districts across the country in favor of his Republican
party, encouraging the president to pursue a legal battle that he has
little chance of winning.
The latest parlay came on Sunday evening, when the U.S. Department of
Justice installed a new team of lawyers to handle the last iterations of
litigation that has been going on for more than a year.
"Even if the question is (taken) off, if people are tweeting as if it
may be a real possibility, it continues to raise fears and depress the
count," said Thomas Wolf, a lawyer who focuses on census issues at the
Brennan Center for Justice.
The U.S. Constitution requires the government to count all residents -
whatever their legal status - every 10 years. The information collected
becomes the basis for voting maps and distributing some $800 billion in
federal funds each year.
It is illegal for the Census Bureau to share information about
individuals with law enforcement or immigration authorities. But the
idea of asking residents about citizenship status has nonetheless stoked
fears that the survey would become a tool for the Trump administration's
hardline immigration policies.
The president and his allies have said it is important to know about
citizenship status, and characterized the question as something that
should not draw controversy.
"So important for our Country that the very simple and basic 'Are you a
Citizen of the United States?' question be allowed to be asked in the
2020 Census," the president tweeted on July 4.
A Reuters poll earlier this year also showed 66% of Americans support
its inclusion.
But demographers, advocacy groups, corporations and even the Census
Bureau's own staff have said the citizenship question threatens to
undermine the survey.
Communities with high immigrant and Latino populations could have low
response rates. Researchers have estimated that more than 4 million
people out of a total U.S. population of some 330 million may not
participate.
That would benefit non-Hispanic whites, a core part of Trump's support,
and help Republicans gain seats in Congress and state legislatures,
critics have said.
The question seemed dead in June, when the Supreme Court blocked it,
saying the administration had given a "contrived" rationale for its
inclusion.
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T-shirts are displayed at a community activists and local government
leaders event to mark the one-year-out launch of the 2020 Census
efforts in Boston, Massachusetts, U.S., April 1, 2019. REUTERS/Brian
Snyder
However, the high court left open the possibility that the
administration could offer a plausible rationale. Department of
Justice lawyers said on Friday that they were exploring other
explanations. Trump also said he may try to force it into the survey
through an executive order.
Legal experts immediately slapped down the ideas. It will be hard to
convince justices that a new explanation is not also contrived, and
an executive order would not override the Supreme Court decision or
undo other court orders blocking the citizenship question, they
said.
"There is nothing talismanic about an executive order," said a
statement from Thomas Saenz, the president and general counsel of
MALDEF, a Latino rights group pursuing one of the cases against the
administration. "Our government is not a dictatorship."
Trump also said on Friday that although census forms are already
being printed, the government could later produce "an addendum."
It is not clear how that might work, but census experts said it
would be an unprecedented disruption to a process that has been in
motion for years.
"Any suggestion that on a moment's notice the Census Bureau could
add an extra piece of paper with an additional question to a census
that it has been planning literally for a decade demonstrates a
breathtaking ignorance of what it takes to pull off a census," said
Terri Ann Lowenthal, a census consultant.
An addendum would also likely be challenged in courts for running
afoul of various administrative laws.
On Friday, the American Civil Liberties Union filed a motion
https://www.aclu.org/legal-document/motion-amend to prevent the
citizenship question from being added.
In the meantime, attention surrounding the legal debacle may already
be hurting the census and helping Trump achieve his goals, said
Jessica Levinson, a professor at Loyola Law School in Los Angeles.
"The longer he has this conversation, the worse it is for an
accurate census count," she said.
(Reporting by Tom Hals in Wilmington, Delaware; Additional reporting
by Lawrence Hurley in Washington; Editing by Lauren Tara LaCapra and
Rosalba O'Brien)
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