Attorney General Calls Out Judge on Census Citizenship Question

US. Attorney General Jeff Sessions reads from prepared answers in response to a question from one of the members of the Senate Intelligence Committee during his testimony Washington DC, June 13, 2017.

US. Attorney General Jeff Sessions reads from prepared answers in response to a question from one of the members of the Senate Intelligence Committee during his testimony Washington DC, June 13, 2017. Shutterstock

 

Connecting state and local government leaders

States have sued the U.S. Census Bureau and Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross to stop the federal agency from using a question about citizenship in the 2020 census.

Attorney General Jeff Sessions on Monday took aim at a judge who ruled against the Justice Department in allowing litigation by 18 states to proceed in challenging the Trump administration’s controversial plan to restore a long-abandoned question on citizenship to the 2020 decennial census.

“An increasing number of district judges are using purely legal disputes—which should be resolved by legal arguments alone—to depose executive branch officials and order disruptive and extensive disclosure of their internal deliberations and documents,” Sessions said in a speech to the conservative Heritage Foundation. In blasting what he called “judicial encroachment,” he said, “These judges contend that all this information is necessary for the judge to decide whether the executive branch official had—in the judge’s view—the wrong 'motives' in taking what otherwise would be a lawful administrative action.”

The dig is an apparent reference to Judge Jesse Furman of the Southern District of New York, who ruled on Sept. 30 that the litigation over Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross’ evolving statements on why he overruled Census specialists to add the citizenship question can continue. On Oct. 7, the Supreme Court paused the case, scheduled to be heard next month in New York, to consider the Trump administration’s argument that Ross should be shielded from giving a deposition.

“When a private party makes a legal challenge to executive action, the final decisions made by the president and members of his Cabinet are fair game for litigation,” Sessions acknowledged. “But internal deliberations within the executive branch are legally irrelevant in the vast majority of cases.”

Addressing the merits of the case, the attorney general said, “the Census question—which has appeared in one form or another on the Census for over a hundred years—is either legal or illegal. The words on the page don’t have a motive; they are either permitted or they are not,” he added. “But the judge has decided to hold a trial over the inner-workings of a Cabinet secretary’s mind.

Ross had announced last March that Census was planning to add a citizenship question despite warnings from data scientists within the bureau and among outside critics that such a question frightens some respondents away from completing the census form.

Ross had originally said that he acted because the Justice Department needed such data to monitor voter fraud. But subsequently, emails emerged suggesting that the idea may have come from the White House and anti-voter-fraud activist attorney Kris Kobach, a Trump voting rights adviser now running for governor in Kansas.

Ross faces accusations that he misled Congress on what motivated the question when he answered queries by Rep. Grace Meng, D-N.Y., by saying he “wasn’t aware” of any discussion with the White House about adding the question.

A Commerce spokesman on Tuesday told Government Executive via email that Ross at that moment “was responding to a question about a [Republican National Committee] email, not a direct question about the citizenship question. He was in fact looking at the RNC email that the congresswoman provided him during the hearing as he was responding to Rep. Meng’s question and truthfully answered that he had not discussed the RNC email with the White House.” 

Separately on Oct. 12, the NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund and the nonprofit ethics group American Oversight filed suit against the Justice Department to enforce an earlier Freedom of Information Act request for release of records related to the department’s role in reinstating the citizenship census question.

"The Justice Department's efforts to add a citizenship status question to the 2020 census are deeply problematic given this administration's hostility to communities of color–which include immigrant people–in both its rhetoric and policies," said Leah Aden, deputy director of litigation at LDF. "The American people deserve to know the precise reasons that the Justice Department has been so intent on including a citizenship status question on the next census. We do not believe it’s in order to protect minority voting rights, as the department claims. If the department has nothing to hide, it should disclose the requested materials."

Austin Evers, executive director of American Oversight, added, "The Trump administration has never told the American people the truth about the citizenship question, and it is increasingly clear that DoJ engaged in a pretextual exercise to justify a political decision that could have serious consequences for the accuracy of the census."

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