Last month, a bipartisan group of 161 American mayors pleaded with the Trump administration to pursue a more responsible course with decennial census. The list of concerns raised by the mayors wasn’t short: it included everything from management issues to methodology decisions to budgetary concerns.
Around the same time, William Galvin, the Massachusetts secretary of state, warned that the Trump administration may “politicize” the census process, possibly “sabotaging” the national count.
Those concerns grew even more serious late yesterday.
The Commerce Department said Monday that the 2020 U.S. Census would include a question about citizenship status.
The Commerce Department said in a statement that the citizenship data would help the Justice Department enforce the Voting Rights Act, which protects minority voting rights. Opponents have said the question will discourage immigrants from responding to the census.
This is, of course, one of the specific things the bipartisan group of mayors urged the administration not to do.
I can appreciate why stories like these may seem obscure and overly technical, but the Trump administration’s latest move in this area is likely to have significant, real-world consequences.
The Washington Post had a good piece on why “this is a big deal.”
…Republicans already have a significant edge on the congressional and state legislative maps, thanks to how our population is distributed and to the GOP having earned the power to redraw lots of the new maps after the 2010 Census. And [yesterday’s Commerce Department announcement] could significantly increase their advantages for two reasons:









