Trump ends drive to add census question - 2 minutes read
Trump ends drive to add census question
WASHINGTON—President Donald Trump ended his effort to add a citizenship question to the 2020 census Thursday, announcing in a news conference that he would instead sign an executive order to count U.S. citizens. The order would direct every federal department and agency to give all records related to the number of citizens and noncitizens to the Department of Commerce. “It is essential that we have a clear breakdown of the number of citizens and noncitizens that make up the U.S. populations,” he said. Trump predicted that the administration could find 90 percent or more of the U.S. population’s citizenship status through this order. “Ultimately, this will allow us to have a more complete count of citizens than through asking the single question alone,” he said.
The president’s decision ends a long fight over next year’s census questionnaires, which the Commerce Department is already printing. Attorney General William Barr and Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross told Trump that the logistics and timing of trying to add a citizenship question would not work.
The Supreme Court had temporarily barred the question, and a U.S. District judge on Wednesday stopped the Justice Department from changing much of its legal team close to a deadline for further written arguments on the matter.
Source: Wng.org
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Keywords:
Washington (state) • Donald Trump • Citizenship of the United States • 2020 United States Census • News conference • Executive order (United States) • Citizenship of the United States • Federal judiciary of the United States • Independent agencies of the United States government • Alien (law) • United States Department of Commerce • Citizenship • Alien (law) • Public administration • Demography of the United States • Citizenship • Social status • Citizenship • Census • United States Department of Commerce • Attorney general • William P. Barr • United States Secretary of State • Wilbur Ross • Donald Trump • Supreme Court of the United States • United States district court • United States Department of Justice •
WASHINGTON—President Donald Trump ended his effort to add a citizenship question to the 2020 census Thursday, announcing in a news conference that he would instead sign an executive order to count U.S. citizens. The order would direct every federal department and agency to give all records related to the number of citizens and noncitizens to the Department of Commerce. “It is essential that we have a clear breakdown of the number of citizens and noncitizens that make up the U.S. populations,” he said. Trump predicted that the administration could find 90 percent or more of the U.S. population’s citizenship status through this order. “Ultimately, this will allow us to have a more complete count of citizens than through asking the single question alone,” he said.
The president’s decision ends a long fight over next year’s census questionnaires, which the Commerce Department is already printing. Attorney General William Barr and Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross told Trump that the logistics and timing of trying to add a citizenship question would not work.
The Supreme Court had temporarily barred the question, and a U.S. District judge on Wednesday stopped the Justice Department from changing much of its legal team close to a deadline for further written arguments on the matter.
Source: Wng.org
Powered by NewsAPI.org
Keywords:
Washington (state) • Donald Trump • Citizenship of the United States • 2020 United States Census • News conference • Executive order (United States) • Citizenship of the United States • Federal judiciary of the United States • Independent agencies of the United States government • Alien (law) • United States Department of Commerce • Citizenship • Alien (law) • Public administration • Demography of the United States • Citizenship • Social status • Citizenship • Census • United States Department of Commerce • Attorney general • William P. Barr • United States Secretary of State • Wilbur Ross • Donald Trump • Supreme Court of the United States • United States district court • United States Department of Justice •