U.S. Supreme Court mulls Trump bid to exclude illegal immigrants from
population count
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[November 30, 2020]
By Lawrence Hurley
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. Supreme Court
justices on Monday are set to consider President Donald Trump's move to
exclude illegal immigrants from the population totals used to allocate
congressional districts to states, a facet of his hardline stance toward
immigration being pursued in his final weeks in office.
The court, which has a 6-3 conservative majority including three
justices appointed by Trump, is scheduled to hear an 80-minute oral
argument by teleconference. The justices are deciding the case on a
expedited schedule, with a ruling due before the end of the year. That
would make it difficult for Democratic President-elect Joe Biden, set to
take office on Jan. 20, to revisit Trump's plan if it is upheld.
The challengers to Trump's July directive include various states led by
New York, cities, counties and immigrant rights groups. They have argued
that the Republican president's move could leave several million people
uncounted and cause California, Texas and New Jersey to lose seats in
the U.S. House of Representatives.
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House districts are based on a state's population count in the decennial
national census.
The challengers have said Trump's plan would dilute the political clout
of states with larger numbers of illegal immigrants, including heavily
Democratic California, by undercounting their true populations and
depriving them of House seats. If California loses House districts, that
likely would mean Democrats lose House seats, benefiting Republicans.
There are an estimated 11 million immigrants living in the United States
illegally. Until now, the government's practice was to count all people
regardless of their citizenship or immigration status. The U.S.
Constitution requires the apportionment of House seats to be based upon
the "whole number of persons in each state."
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. Trump's lawyers said in court papers that he acted
within his authority and that the challengers lacked the necessary legal
standing to bring the case.
A three-judge panel in New York ruled against the administration in
September. Federal courts in California and Maryland have reached the
same conclusion in other cases though one court in Washington ruled for
Trump.
By statute, the president is due to send Congress a report in early
January with the population of each of the states and their entitled
number of House districts.
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President Donald Trump waves as he walks on the South Lawn of the
White House upon his return to Washington from Camp David, U.S.,
November 29, 2020. REUTERS/Yuri Gripas
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Once states are allocated their districts, they themselves draw the
boundaries for the districts, which will be used first in the 2022
congressional elections. The number of House seats for each state
also determines how many votes that state gets in the Electoral
College, the system used to determine the winner of presidential
elections. In a close election, one or two electoral votes could
swing the outcome.
Census data also guides the allocation of billions of dollars a year
in federal funding to states.
The census itself does not gather data on a person's citizenship or
immigration status. Trump's administration would base its numbers on
data gathered elsewhere, though it has not explained the methods
being used. The U.S. Census Bureau, a spokesman said, "will make
public the methods used to provide state-level counts once we have
them finalized."
The Supreme Court last year ruled 5-4 against Trump's effort to add
a citizenship question to the census. Critics said the question was
intended to frighten immigrants from taking part in the population
count and artificially reduce population numbers in heavily
Democratic areas, also to benefit Republicans.
Conservative Chief Justice John Roberts joined the liberal justices
in that ruling. But the addition of Trump's third appointee Amy
Coney Barrett to the court changes its dynamics, as seen in action
by the justices on Wednesday in a case in which they backed
Christian and Jewish houses of worship that challenged New York
state's latest restrictions in novel coronavirus hot spots.
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Roberts dissented along with the court's three liberals but
Barrett's vote in favor of the religious groups proved decisive.
(Reporting by Lawrence Hurley; Editing by Will Dunham)
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