Trump Administration Tests Citizenship Question in 2030 Census Field Survey
The Trump administration is moving ahead with a field test of a citizenship question as part of early planning for the 2030 U.S. census, using American Community Survey-style forms in Alabama and South Carolina that ask, “Is this person a citizen of the United States?” Axios reports that the test, disclosed in a recent regulatory filing, is part of a broader White House push to reshape how the U.S. counts its population and reduce the role of undocumented immigrants in apportioning House seats, Electoral College votes and roughly $2.8 trillion in federal funds. The move revives a fight the Supreme Court appeared to settle in 2019, when it blocked a citizenship question on the 2020 census as a pretext, and comes after Trump rescinded a Biden executive order requiring all residents be counted regardless of status. Voting‑rights groups like the Brennan Center warn such a question historically depresses response rates in immigrant communities and risks a major undercount, while House Oversight Democrats say the census is supposed to count all residents, not just citizens, and are calling for strong opposition. Social‑media reaction is already polarized: conservatives frame the test as common‑sense 'election integrity,' while advocates and demographers warn it is a backdoor attempt to shift power and resources away from diverse, immigrant‑heavy states and cities.
📌 Key Facts
- The Commerce Department and Census Bureau are planning a 2030 census field test in Alabama and South Carolina that includes a citizenship question drawn from the American Community Survey.
- The test follows President Trump’s August directive to develop a 'new' census and his push for red states to draw more GOP‑friendly congressional maps ahead of the 2026 midterms.
- The Brennan Center and other experts warn citizenship questions have historically reduced participation in immigrant communities, increasing the risk of undercount and skewed apportionment, while House Oversight Democrats say the move violates the constitutional mandate to count all residents.
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