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2025-06-27 Home Front: Politix
Who Counts? Trump Poised To Try To Remove Noncitizens From Census
[Real Clear Investigations] Following a years-long surge in illegal immigration, the Trump administration is poised to challenge a longstanding but legally fraught practice: counting illegal aliens in the U.S. census.

President Trump tried to end the practice during his first term, but President Biden overturned his predecessor’s policy before it was implemented. Now, buoyed by red state attorneys general and Republican legislators, the second Trump administration is determined "to clean up the census and make sure that illegal aliens are not counted," White House Deputy Chief of Staff for Policy Stephen Miller said last month.

What Miller didn’t mention are the political implications of the administration’s move. It could have significant political implications because the census count is used to apportion House seats, determine the number of votes each state gets in the Electoral College for selecting the president, and drive the flow of trillions of dollars in government funds.

Some immigration researchers project that including noncitizens in the census count disproportionately benefits Democratic states with large illegal alien populations. A recent study counters that, based on 2020 census figures, there would have been a negligible shift to the political map had the U.S. government excluded noncitizens from that count. But looking backward, those researchers found, red states would have benefited under the administration’s desired census counting shift. Had authorities excluded such migrants from the 2010 census, Louisiana, Missouri, Montana, Ohio and North Carolina all would have gained one seat in the House, while California would have lost three seats, and Texas and Florida would have each lost one seat — with the total number of Electoral College votes allotted each state changing accordingly.

Since the first census in 1790, the nation has counted not only citizens but also residents to determine such representation. In addition to citing its long history, defenders of the practice say it is only fair that states should be given the power and resources to represent and serve everyone within their borders.
Posted by Besoeker 2025-06-27 00:00|| || Front Page|| ||Comments [77 views ]  Top
 File under: Migrants/Illegal Immigrants 

#1 Imagine what adding 10.5 millions located in metro (D) areas would to the redrawing US House Districts
Posted by NN2N1 2025-06-27 02:06||   2025-06-27 02:06|| Front Page || Comments   Top

#2 Since the first census in 1790, the nation has counted not only citizens but also residents to determine such representation.

Right up until somebody figured out how to scam the system for their benefit with an illegal flood.
Posted by Bobby 2025-06-27 07:22||   2025-06-27 07:22|| Front Page || Comments   Top

12:31 Abu Uluque
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