The topic of discussion for this
Constitution Monday concerns the rationality of putting a citizenship question
on the 2020 US Census. President Donald Trump wants to know how many people
living in our nation are actually citizens of the United States. Democrats/Liberals/
Leftists/Communists do not want this information to be gathered, and they fight
the very idea. However, the President has a firm foundation on which to base
his claim. The Supreme Court recently ruled on this case, but the Justices did
not say that it is unconstitutional. They merely wanted a clearer understanding
of why the question is needed.
The Enumeration Clause (also known as the Census Clause) in the U.S Constitution (Article 1, Sections 1&2) says:
“Representatives … shall be apportioned among several states … according to
their respective numbers … the actual enumeration shall be made within three
years and the first meeting of the Congress of the United States of America,
and within every subsequent term of ten years in such manner as they shall by
law direct.” This basically means that a census is to be held every ten years
with the first one being held within three years from the ratification of the
Constitution.
The first census was conducted in
1790 to take the first head count. This number determined how the
Representatives in the U.S. House would be distributed. The census was first
performed by U.S. Marshalls, then census workers, and then by U.S. Postal
Service with help from census workers.
The last year that a question about
citizenship appeared on the actual census was 1950. The census form for that
year asked for the birthplace of each person. A follow-up question asked, “If
foreign born, Is he naturalized?” The citizenship question was dropped for the
1960 census, but the birthplace question remained. The last time a citizenship
question appeared on the census form was 1950. However, it was not the last
time that the question was asked. National Public Radio (NPR) gives this bit of
historical data.
In 1970, the Census Bureau began sending
around two questionnaires: a short-form questionnaire to gather basic
population information and a long form that asked detailed questions about
everything from household income to plumbing. The short form went to most
households in America. The long form was sent to a much smaller sample of
households, 1 in 6. Most people didn’t get it.
Starting in 1970, questions about
citizenship were included in the long-form questionnaire but not the short
form. For instance, in 2000, those who received the long form were asked, “Is
this person a CITIZEN of the United States?”
The short form kept it simple: name, relationship,
age, sex, Hispanic origin, race, marital status and whether the home is owned
or rented.
Later, the census added the American
Community Survey, conducted every year and sent to 3.5 million households. It
began being fully implemented in 2005. It asks many of the same questions as
the census long-form surveys from 1970 to 2000, including the citizenship
question….
But if the 2020 census form does
ultimately ask about citizenship status, it will be the first time the U.S. census has directly asked for the
citizenship status of every person living in every household.
The Enumeration Clause declares that
the people are to be counted in order to know how the 435 members of the U.S.
House should be distributed, but it does not indicate whether the
representation is based on number of citizens or number of residents. However,
other sources do.
Amendment Fourteen, Section 1, gives
greater clarification: “No state shall make or enforce any law which shall
abridge the privileges or immunities of citizens of the United States; nor
shall any state deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due
process of law; nor deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal
protection of the laws.”
David B. Rivkin Jr. and Gilson B.
Gray at The Wall Street Journal say that
“The Constitution itself requires the collection of citizenship information”
and that “The president should issue an executive order” to put the citizenship
question back on the census form. They base their ideas on the Fourteenth
Amendment.
Section 2 of the 14th Amendment provides
that if a state denies the franchise to anyone eligible to vote, its allotment
of House seats shall be “reduced in the proportion which the number of such . .
. citizens shall bear to the whole number of . . . citizens . . . in
such state.” This language is absolute and mandatory. Compliance is impossible
without counting how many citizens live in each state.
The 14th
Amendment was adopted in 1868, and this provision meant to secure the voting
rights of newly freed slaves. But it wasn’t limited to that purpose. An earlier
version of Section 2, introduced in 1865, specifically referred to limits on
suffrage based on “race or color,” but the Senate rejected that limitation. The
amendment forbids state interference with the rights of all eligible voters
(then limited to males over 21).
Section 2 also
applies to every state, a point Rep. John Bingham, the amendment’s principal
drafter, emphasized during the floor debate: “The second section
. . . simply provides for the equalization of representation among
all the States in the Union, North, South, East, and West. It makes no
discrimination.”
Congress has
dealt with suffrage-abridgement problems through other constitutional and
statutory means, especially the Voting Rights Act. But that doesn’t change the
constitutional obligation to obtain citizenship data….
The president should issue
an executive order stating that, to comply with the requirements of Section 2
of the 14th Amendment, the citizenship question will be added to the 2020
census. In addition, he can order the Commerce Department to undertake, on an
emergency basis, a new Census Act rulemaking.
A new Harvard CAPS/Harris Poll says that “Sixty-seven percent of voters said the census
should be able to ask whether people living in the U.S. are citizens.” It also
says that the “inclusion of the question was supported among members of both
parties, with 88 percent of Republicans and 52 percent of Democrats supporting
its inclusion. Sixty-three percent of independents said they supported
including the question on the census.”
I do not know
if the President reads The Wall Street Journal, but I hope that his advisors
know what the Constitution and its Amendments say. I appreciate the fact that
they have not yet ended the search for a solution for putting the citizenship
question on the census. I was not polled, but I am among those Americans who
believe that the citizenship question should be on every census.
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