States urge halt to Trump plan excluding millions of immigrants from
representation
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[August 08, 2020]
By Jonathan Stempel
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Dozens of U.S. states,
cities and counties on Friday urged a federal court to block President
Donald Trump from carrying out what they called a "flagrantly
unconstitutional" directive to exclude undocumented immigrants when
apportioning congressional seats.
Led by New York state, the mostly Democratic-leaning plaintiffs said in
a Manhattan federal court filing the July 21 directive should be
declared unconstitutional, or that a preliminary injunction be entered
against its enforcement.
They called the directive the latest in a string of White House attacks
on immigrant communities, and alleged that a "plainly xenophobic and
discriminatory purpose" animated the administration's "exclusionary
policy."
The White House was not immediately available for comment. Trump's
response is due by Aug. 17.
At stake is the makeup of the 435-member House of Representatives, now
controlled by Democrats.
While the Census Bureau estimates the U.S. population at 330.1 million,
the plaintiffs said the directive could exclude several million people
from being counted, potentially shifting a few House seats to
Republican-leaning states.
The plaintiffs have said everyone in the United States must be counted,
saying the Constitution requires a count based on the "whole number of
persons" in each state.
They have also said Trump's directive could also distort the decennial
census by deterring immigrants from responding.
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Protesters with group Poder in Action demand a relief fund for
undocumented people in the city budget during the coronavirus
disease (COVID-19) crisis outside Phoenix City Hall in Phoenix,
Arizona, U.S. May 18, 2020. REUTERS/Caitlin O'Hara/File Photo
But Trump has said "person" had never been understood to include
anyone physically present in a state, and called alleged efforts to
conceal undocumented immigrants "part of a broader left-wing effort"
to erode Americans' rights.
Census data are also used to allocate hundreds of billions of
dollars in federal funds annually, and in redistricting.
Illinois, Massachusetts, Michigan, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, New
York City, Chicago, Philadelphia, San Francisco and several
immigrants' rights advocates are among the nearly four dozen
plaintiffs. California has filed a similar, separate lawsuit.
The judge now overseeing the case on Friday asked that a three-judge
panel be designated to address the complaint, citing laws requiring
such panels in some apportionment cases.
(Reporting by Jonathan Stempel in New York; Additional reporting by
Eric Beech in Washington, D.C.; Editing by Aurora Ellis)
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