Federal court blocks Trump effort to exclude undocumented immigrants when congressional seats are
Federal court blocks Trump effort to exclude undocumented immigrants when congressional seats are divvied up
by Alexa Ura, Texas Tribune
A three-judge federal panel in New York has ruled that the Trump administration cannot keep undocumented immigrants from being counted when lawmakers reapportion congressional districts next year an effort that could have potentially cost Texas several seats in Congress.
In a significant departure from the way representation is typically divided up, President Donald Trump signed a memorandum in July directing Secretary of Commerce Wilbur Ross to exclude undocumented immigrants from the base population used to distribute seats in Congress. But in its Thursday ruling, the panel of judges deemed the memo an unlawful exercise of authority granted to the President.
The constitutionally mandated count each 10 years of every person residing in the country is used to determine congressional representation from each state. Excluding undocumented residents from the counts used to parcel out congressional districts would likely lead to a drastic realignment of political power throughout Texas.
Trump pursued the change by arguing that the U.S. Constitution does not define which persons must be included in that base population. But the New York panel of judges blocked Ross, who oversees the census, from providing any information on the number of undocumented people in each state.
Read more:
https://www.texastribune.org/2020/09/10/trump-undocumented-immigrants-redistricting/