President Donald Trump will take executive action to place the citizenship question on the 2020 Census, reports indicated July 11.
Trump said early Thursday on Twitter that he would be holding a news conference “on the Census and Citizenship” but didn’t disclose further details.
Two senior administration officials told Fin Gomez of CBS, a former Fox News reporter, that Trump will announce executive action to add the citizenship question to the census.
Trump has repeatedly railed at people against adding the question, saying it’s a simple one. The citizenship question was on the decennial census before being removed in the 1950s.
Top officials and some legal experts have said Trump has the authority to place the question on the census even with the Supreme Court’s ruling.
Attorney General William Barr said on July 8 that the administration was going to take action soon.
Trump explained why he wanted the question on the census earlier this month.
“You need it for many reasons. Number one, you need it for Congress, you need it for Congress, for districting, you need it for appropriations, where are the funds going. How many people are there? Are they citizens, are they not citizens? You need it for many reasons,” Trump told reporters in Washington.
“We have a number of different avenues. We could use all of them or one. We’re doing very well on that. We’re spending 15 to 20 billion dollars on a census. We’re doing everything. We’re finding out everything about everybody. Think of it: 15 to 20 billion dollars, and you’re not allowed to ask them, are you a citizen?” he added.
“And by the way, if you look at the history of our country, it’s almost always been asked. So we’re fighting very hard against the system, that’s a very difficult system but we’ll make a decision. The attorney general is working on that right now.”