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Pregunta sobre ciudadanía del censo

Common Cause detuvo los esfuerzos del entonces presidente Trump de agregar una pregunta peligrosa sobre el estado de ciudadanía al Censo de 2020.

¿Qué pasó?

The U.S. Census is hugely important. Getting the decennial count right means ensuring that communities across the country get the representation and resources that they deserve.

But in 2019, then-President Donald Trump and his administration sought to rig the 2020 Census for political gain by adding an untested, last-minute question about citizenship status.

Experts warned that including this question would discourage countless individuals who felt intimidated by Trump’s anti-immigrant rhetoric—whether they were citizens or not—from filling out the survey. This would have led to a significant undercount, particularly of communities of color.

That means the Census data that we would have used to draw legislative districts, make spending decisions, and more wouldn’t have accurately reflected our population.

That is no how the Census should work. This process is required by law to count todos who lives within the borders of our country, regardless of their citizenship status.

Why did Trump push this question?

The citizenship question was part of a long-term strategy by some Republican leaders to permanently rig American democracy in their favor.

Back in 2015, a Republican operative named Thomas Hofeller—once called “the Michelangelo of the modern gerrymander”—was hired by a Republican mega-donor to answer the question: what if the rules of redistricting were changed to draw legislative districts based on the number of voting citizens living in them, not the total number of people living in a state?

Los archivos de Hofeller

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Los archivos de Hofeller

La evidencia obtenida por Common Cause confirma cómo los operadores políticos pasaron años conspirando para manipular nuestra democracia con una pregunta sobre ciudadanía en el Censo. El principal cerebro de la manipulación de distritos electorales del Partido Republicano, Thomas Hofeller, presentó un plan para agregar la pregunta sobre ciudadanía al Censo. ¿El propósito? Manipular nuestro proceso de censo y redistribución de distritos para que sea, en palabras de Hofeller, "ventajoso para los republicanos y los blancos no hispanos".

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Hofeller understood that this change would be a “radical departure from the federal ‘one person, one vote’ rule presently used in the United State[s].” He even recognized that it would be hard to convince the Supreme Court to mandate this change, unless… he could figure out how to add a citizenship question to the upcoming 2020 Census.

Then, in the next round of redistricting, the plan was for Republicans to use that citizenship data to supercharge their partisan gerrymandering strategy. They would excise a large number of people out of redistricting altogether and pack the remaining Democrats and voters of color into as few districts as possible.

Who blocked the question?

After hundreds of thousands of calls, emails, and petition signatures from Common Cause members, the Department of Justice confirmed that the 2020 Census questionnaire would be printed without a question on citizenship status. This decision came just a week after the Supreme Court rejected the administration’s reason for including it as “contrived.”

What happens next?

Common Cause and our 1.5 million members and supporters will fight any attempt to draw legislative districts that do not include all people—because everyone in the U.S. deserves representation in our government.

One way to make sure this doesn’t happen again is to pass the Census IDEA Act. This legislation would mandate that all new Census questions undergo a three-year review process.

Su apoyo financiero nos ayuda a generar un impacto al: Hacer que el poder rinda cuentas y fortalecer la democracia.

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Representación blanqueada

Los agentes partidistas están intentando cambiar la forma en que se delimitan los distritos electorales, en un esfuerzo radical por socavar nuestra democracia representativa.

Informe

Los archivos de Hofeller

La evidencia obtenida por Common Cause confirma cómo los operadores políticos pasaron años conspirando para manipular nuestra democracia con una pregunta sobre ciudadanía en el Censo. El principal cerebro de la manipulación de distritos electorales del Partido Republicano, Thomas Hofeller, presentó un plan para agregar la pregunta sobre ciudadanía al Censo. ¿El propósito? Manipular nuestro proceso de censo y redistribución de distritos para que sea, en palabras de Hofeller, "ventajoso para los republicanos y los blancos no hispanos".

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