AP FACT CHECK: Trump officials strain truth on census change
WASHINGTON — The Trump administration isn’t telling the full story on its politically charged decision to ask people about their citizenship in the 2020 census.
White House spokeswoman Sarah Huckabee Sanders was flat-out wrong in claiming the citizenship question had been regularly included in the Census Bureau’s decennial survey to all U.S. households in recent decades. She also didn’t provide context in asserting that a greater level of citizenship data is needed to comply with the Voting Rights Act.
The decision to include the question in the 2020 census has stirred worry among opponents that it will intimidate immigrants, leading to an undercount and decreased political representation in Democratic-leaning communities where they tend to live.
Meantime, Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross, who announced his department’s move to change the 2020 census, appeared to skew the science behind his decision when he asserted that the impact of asking about citizenship had been “well-tested.”