Conservative justices wary of blocking Trump immigrant census plan
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[December 01, 2020]
By Lawrence Hurley and Andrew Chung
WASHINGTON (Reuters) -Conservative U.S.
Supreme Court justices on Monday appeared reluctant to block a vaguely
defined plan by President Donald Trump's administration to exclude
immigrants living in the United States illegally from the population
totals used to allocate congressional districts to states.
The court's conservatives, who hold a 6-3 majority, signaled such a
ruling might be premature based on the administration's admission that
it does not yet know how or if it will be able to implement the
proposal, a facet of Trump's hardline policies on immigration being
pursued in his final weeks in office.
Challengers led by New York state and the American Civil Liberties Union
have argued that Trump's proposal would dilute the political clout of
states with larger numbers of such immigrants, including heavily
Democratic California, by undercounting state populations and depriving
them of House seats to the benefit of his fellow Republicans.
The administration has yet to disclose what method it would use to
calculate the number of people it proposes to exclude or which subsets
of immigrants may be targeted. Acting Solicitor General Jeffrey Wall
told the justices the administration could miss a Dec. 31 statutory
deadline to finalize a Census Bureau report to Trump containing the
final population data including the number of immigrants excluded.
The number of House districts in the 50 states is based on a state's
population count in the decennial national census, which was conducted
this year. Democrat Joe Biden is set to become president on Jan. 20 and
could reverse course if the apportionment numbers have not been
finalized by then.
"We don't know what the president is going to do," conservative Chief
Justice John Roberts said. "We don't know how many aliens will be
excluded. We don't know what the effect of that will be on
apportionment. All these questions would be resolved if we wait until
the apportionment takes place. Why aren't we better advised to do that?"
The U.S. Constitution requires apportionment of House seats to be based
upon the "whole number of persons in each state." Until now, the
government's practice was to count all people regardless of their
citizenship or immigration status.
The justices were expected to decide the case on a expedited basis, with
a ruling before the end of the year. The court potentially could dismiss
the current legal challenge, a move that would leave open the
possibility of subsequent lawsuits after the administration actually
takes action.
Lawyers for the challengers urged the court not to toss out the lawsuit
now, asking the justices to wait for a few weeks until more information
is available on what data the Census Bureau intends to submit to the
president.
There are an estimated 11 million immigrants living in the United States
illegally. The challengers have argued that Trump's policy violates both
the Constitution and the Census Act, a federal law that outlines how the
census is conducted.
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A general view of the U.S. Supreme Court building at sunset in
Washington, U.S. November 10, 2020. REUTERS/Erin Scott/File Photo
The justices focused less on the underlying question of whether
Trump's plan was lawful but conservative Justice Amy Coney Barrett,
a Trump appointee, noted that the government during the entire
history of the United States has included illegal immigrants in the
population count.
"A lot of the historical evidence and longstanding practice really
cuts against your position," Barrett told Wall.
Barrett also challenged Wall on the administration's position that
an immigrant in the country illegally cannot be considered an
inhabitant for the purposes of House apportionment.
CERTAIN GROUPS MAY BE TARGETED
By statute, the president is required to send Congress a report in
early January with the population of each of the states and their
entitled number of House districts.
Wall told the justices that it is "very unlikely" the administration
will amass data to exclude all immigrants in the country illegally.
Instead, Wall said, it may propose excluding certain groups, such as
the fewer than 100,000 in federal detention, and the total number
may not be high enough to affect apportionment.
The administration's lack of detail on whether it could implement
Trump's plan prompted justices including Trump appointees Neil
Gorsuch and Brett Kavanaugh to wonder if was premature to rule on
the issue because the harm alleged by the challengers is
speculative.
Conservative Justice Samuel Alito said that for the administration
to exclude all of the immigrants living illegally in the United
States from the population count "seems to me a monumental task."
"I would think you would be able to tell us whether that remains a
realistic possibility at this point," Alito told Wall.
The challengers have argued that Trump's plan could leave several
million people uncounted and cause California, Texas and New Jersey
to lose House seats.
A three-judge panel in New York ruled against the administration in
September.
(Reporting by Lawrence Hurley in Washington and Andrew Chung in New
York; Additional reporting by Ted Hesson; Editing by Will Dunham)
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