U.S. Census Bureau Director Robert Santos confirmed he is resigning, clearing the way for President Donald Trump to change the agency’s leadership.
Santos, who was appointed by President Joe Biden, said in a letter Thursday evening that he made the decision “after deep reflection.” Santos, who was sworn in as the bureau’s 26th director in 2022, said in his letter that he planned to spend time with his family in retirement. His term, which lasts five years, was slated to end in 2027.
The Epoch Times contacted the Census Bureau’s public information office for comment on Friday.
Before joining the Census Bureau, Santos was a vice president and chief methodologist at the liberal-leaning Urban Institute and had spent four decades in survey research, statistical design, and analysis, and executive-level management.
Civil rights groups on Friday urged Trump to appoint an impartial leader to head the nation’s largest statistical agency.
Besides planning for the 2030 census, Santos and other bureau leaders were overseeing changes to the questionnaires for the next once-a-decade head count and the annual American Community Survey when it comes to sexual orientation and gender identity, as well as race and ethnicity.
Queries about sexual orientation and gender identity were planned for the 2027 annual survey of American life for the first time. The bureau also was implementing a directive from the Biden administration to combine questions about race and ethnicity and add a new Middle Eastern and North African category.
Since his November 2024 election win, Trump has not made any comments on the U.S. Census Bureau or who he would like to lead the agency. Months before the 2020 census was carried out, the first Trump administration had sought to place a question about citizenship.