Logo
Top Stories
Media Ratings
Latest
World
Sports
All Golf Football Boxing Basketball NFL MMA Tennis Formula 1 MLB
North America
USA Canada Mexico
Europe
United Kingdom Austria Belgium France Italy Germany Portugal Russia Greece Sweden Spain Switzerland Turkey Ireland
Asia Pacific
China South Korea Australia Singapore India Malaysia Japan Vietnam
Latin America
Brazil Colombia Costa Rica Cuba Chile Ecuador Uruguay Venezuela
Africa
Egypt Ethiopia Ghana Kenya Morocco South Africa
Middle East
Israel Lebanon Syria Iraq Iran United Arab Emirates Qatar
Crypto
Entertainment
Politics
Tech

About us, Contact us, Contribute, Privacy Policy, Review Guidelines, Legal Notice

No Result
View All Result
  • Login
  • Register
  • Top Stories
  • Latest
  • USA
  • United Kingdom
  • Europe
  • Africa
  • Asia Pacific
  • Latin America
  • Middle East
  • Sports

Home » States fight to keep certain immigrants out of census counts

States fight to keep certain immigrants out of census counts

Raw Story by Raw Story
1 year ago
0 0

Ohio Attorney General Dave Yost has joined Ohio with three other states in a federal lawsuit seeking to keep certain immigrants from being counted in the U.S. Census including those in the country illegally and those with temporary visas.

The case was filed in U.S. District Court on Jan. 17 and also includes the attorneys general from Louisiana, West Virginia and Kansas.

Yost and the other state legal chiefs – filing the action against the U.S. Department of Commerce and the U.S. Census Bureau (an agency within the Commerce department) – say a
residence rule that allows foreign nationals living in the U.S. to be counted in the decennial census resulted in 2020 Census figures that “included illegal aliens and aliens holding temporary visas” to determine apportionment for U.S. House districts and Electoral College representatives.

Since the first U.S. Census in 1790, counts that include both citizens and noncitizens have been used in the census and no count has left out residents due to immigration status. For decades, the hard-line Federation for American Immigration Reform
has been fighting to stop that, and President Donald Trump attempted to exclude unauthorized immigrants from the census count during his first administration.

Reapportionment is the process of dividing up congressional seats among the states based on the census numbers, which then leads to the congressional redistricting that lays out the district lines for those representatives.

The rules on counting residents of a state say that citizens of other countries who are living in the U.S. are counted at the “U.S. residence where they live and sleep most of the time.”

“Due to this unlawful decision, Plaintiff State Ohio lost one congressional seat and one electoral vote in the reapportionment conducted pursuant to the 2020 Census,” the lawsuit states. “That congressional seat and electoral vote were reallocated to a state with a larger illegal alien and nonimmigrant alien population.”

The states in the lawsuit say in allowing the count as the “residence rule” does, the Census Bureau is in violation of the 14th Amendment, thus “robbing the people of the Plaintiff States of their rightful share of political representation, while systematically redistributing political power to states with high numbers of illegal aliens and nonimmigrant aliens.”

“Including illegal aliens in the apportionment base is inconsistent with the text of the Fourteenth Amendment because illegal aliens and nonimmigrant aliens are not inhabitants of the states,” the attorneys general stated.

Yost told the Capital Journal in a Wednesday statement that the situation at the U.S. border was also part of the problem that resulted in Ohio’s loss of representation.

“After failing to secure the border, the federal government reallocated Ohioan’s democratic representation to sanctuary states like California with a larger illegal alien and nonimmigrant alien population.” Yost said. “I am fighting for Ohioans’ voices and the rule of law.”

GET THE MORNING HEADLINES.

SUBSCRIBE

The Congressional redistricting process in Ohio following the 2020 Census was fraught.

The Ohio Redistricting Commission adopted two different congressional maps, both of which were
found to be unconstitutionally partisan by the Ohio Supreme Court. The most recently adopted map stayed active, however, and was the map used for the last two election cycles.

The map will be
up for redrawing this year because it was not adopted with bipartisan agreement. Ohio’s redistricting law states that a map passed without bipartisan agreement only lasts four years, whereas bipartisan agreement allows the map to last 10 years.

Legislators have until the end of September to agree on a redrawn map. If legislators as a whole can’t agree and pass a map, it’s again up to the
Ohio Redistricting Commission to adopt a map, since an effort to eliminate the commission and introduce a citizen-led process failed in the November general election.

West Virginia also lost a congressional seat and vote on the Electoral College, according to new lawsuit, and if residents living in the state illegally or through temporary means continue to be allowed “each of the other Plaintiff States is likely to lose a congressional seat and an electoral vote in the 2030 reapportionment.”

California, Illinois, Michigan, Pennsylvania and New York were listed as other states who lost a U.S. House seat and an Electoral College vote, though they are not parties in the lawsuit. Colorado, Florida, North Carolina, Montana and Oregon were mentioned as states who gained a House seat, along with Texas who gained two seats.

The states in the lawsuit also argue they are being deprived of federal funding that could be provided to them based on their population, if the census data was changed. The suit cites Pew Research Center data from 2021, which found that Ohio’s illegal immigrant population makes up 1% of the total population.

The attorneys general harken back to the country’s founding and the Reconstruction Era for their interpretation of the constitutional obligation to count the number of people in each state.

The lawsuit argues the Founding Fathers and those around in the years following the Civil War understood the phrase “persons in each State” to be “restricted to United States citizens and permanent resident aliens who had been lawfully admitted to the body politic constituted by the Constitution.”

“Representatives and electors represent only the self-governing people of the United States, their descendants, and aliens whom the people of the United States have chosen to admit to the political community created by the Constitution through lawful immigration by granting them lawful permanent resident status,” the attorneys stated.

Ohio, Louisiana, West Virginia and Kansas asked the court to vacate the residence rule as it pertains to counting illegal immigrants or temporary visa holders in the decennial census, and to order the Census Bureau and the Department of Commerce to include questions about citizenship in the 2030 census.

Read Full Article

Tags: Donald TrumpElectoral CollegeTrump
Login
guest
guest
0 Comments
Oldest
Newest Most Voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments

Related Posts

Padilla’s SOTU response attacks Trump for ‘out-of-control’ immigration enforcement

Padilla’s SOTU response attacks Trump for ‘out-of-control’ immigration enforcement
by The Hill
5 minutes ago

...

Read moreDetails

Trump’s plan for rising energy costs: Pump oil, make data centers pay

by Los Angeles Times
6 minutes ago

...

Read moreDetails

Trump takes jab at Pelosi by name over history of controversial stock trading

by Fox News
8 minutes ago

...

Read moreDetails

State of the Union: Trump to announce plans for new tax cuts through budget reconciliation

by CNBC
1 hour ago

...

Read moreDetails

Drones hammer Sudan’s gold and oil zone – the pivotal new front line

by BBC News
1 hour ago

...

Read moreDetails
Load More

Trending Topics

Africa Artificial Intelligence Asia Australia Biden Canada China Donald Trump England Europe Force France Gaza Germany Hamas IDF India Iran Israel Joe Biden Kamala Harris Lions London Manchester Moscow NATO Netanyahu New York Nvidia OpenAI Palestine Paris Premier League Presidential Campaign Protests Putin Republican Party Russia Sport Trump Ukraine Ukraine War US Election World Zelensky

Popular Stories

  • Therians, the baseless viral phenomenon used by extremists to fuel their anti-woke rhetoric

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Mexican Authorities Traced Drug Lord El Mencho Through Visit From Romantic Partner

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Four years on, Zelenskyy says Putin did not win this war

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Russian drone strikes wound 5 in Ukraine’s Zaporizhzhia: emergency service

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Donald Trump delivers crucial State of the Union address ahead of mid-terms, 30 Democrats skip speech

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Top Stories
  • About us
  • Africa
  • Latest
  • Asia Pacific
  • Business
  • Comment Policy
  • Contact us
  • Contribute
  • Entertainment
  • Europe
  • Media Ratings
  • Middle East
  • Politics
  • Privacy Policy
  • Review Guidelines
  • United Kingdom
  • User Agreement
  • Video
  • World

MACH MEDIA

Welcome Back!

Sign In with Google
Sign In with Linked In
OR

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password? Sign Up

Create New Account!

Sign Up with Google
Sign Up with Linked In
OR

Fill the forms below to register

All fields are required. Log In

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
Back
Home
Explore
Ratings
  • Login
  • Sign Up
  • Top Stories
  • Media Ratings
  • Latest
  • World
  • Sports
    • All
    • Golf
    • Football
    • Boxing
    • Basketball
    • NFL
    • MMA
    • Tennis
    • Formula 1
    • MLB
  • North America
    • USA
    • Canada
    • Mexico
  • Europe
    • United Kingdom
    • Austria
    • Belgium
    • France
    • Italy
    • Germany
    • Portugal
    • Russia
    • Greece
    • Sweden
    • Spain
    • Switzerland
    • Turkey
    • Ireland
  • Asia Pacific
    • China
    • South Korea
    • Australia
    • Singapore
    • India
    • Malaysia
    • Japan
    • Vietnam
  • Latin America
    • Brazil
    • Colombia
    • Costa Rica
    • Cuba
    • Chile
    • Ecuador
    • Uruguay
    • Venezuela
  • Africa
    • Egypt
    • Ethiopia
    • Ghana
    • Kenya
    • Morocco
    • South Africa
  • Middle East
    • Israel
    • Lebanon
    • Syria
    • Iraq
    • Iran
    • United Arab Emirates
    • Qatar
  • Crypto
  • Entertainment
  • Politics
  • Tech

MACH MEDIA