Trump urged to ignore Supreme Court, print census question: 'Because we should,' GOP lawmaker says
A Republican congressman has encouraged President Trump to ignore the Supreme Court and print the 2020 U.S. Census with the question about citizenship, as the president mulls an executive order.
Rep.
Chip Roy, who represents the Lone Star State's 21st Congressional
District -- covering much of the area north of San Antonio, plus much of
Austin -- made the call on social media amid the controversy over the
census citizenship question that caused some confusion within the Trump
administration on whether the question will appear on the survey.
“It’s
the lawyers advising him,” Roy wrote in a tweet. “[Trump] should ignore
them. Completely. Print the Census with the questions — and issue a
statement explaining why — ‘because we should.’ Done.”
The
Supreme Court last week blocked the citizenship question for the time
being until more reasoning from the administration can be provided.
This
prompted Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross to initially announce that his
department would print the census without the citizenship question amid
the Supreme Court objections.
Rep. Chip Roy, R-Texas, made the call on social media amid the
controversy over the census citizenship question that caused some
confusion within the Trump administration of whether the question will
appear on the survey. (Associated Press)
“The Census Bureau has started the process of
printing the decennial questionnaires without the question,” Ross said
in a statement. “My focus and that of the bureau and the entire
department is to conduct a complete and accurate census.”
The
Texas congressman, a freshman Republican, fired back on social media
after being accused of openly calling on Trump to ignore the high court.
“Lawless
is the state of our border. Lawless is being ruled by Judges on matters
of policy choices,” he tweeted. “Lawless is NOT rightly advising the
President to follow the Constitution and include a citizenship question
on the census — particularly in light of the opinion.”
Trump has
been critical of the Supreme Court block, attacking it as “totally
ridiculous” that the U.S. government “cannot ask a basic question of
Citizenship.”
On Wednesday, Trump said that reports that that Commerce had dropped the “quest” to put the question on the census were “fake!”
“We are absolutely moving forward, as we must, because of the importance of the answer to this question,” he tweeted.
On
Thursday Trump said his administration is still working to add the
question on the census, with reports saying he’s mulling an executive
order to do so, a move that would lead to a showdown between his
administration and the Supreme Court.
“So important for our
Country that the very simple and basic ‘Are you a Citizen of the United
States?’ question be allowed to be asked in the 2020 Census,” he
tweeted.
Multiple outlets reported that Trump is considering using
an executive order to move forward with the push. The Washington Post
reported that Trump had told lawyers to fix the situation with an
executive order and add it to the census later.
"The
administration is considering the appropriateness of an executive order
that would address the constitutional need for the citizenship question
to be included in the 2020 census," a source told Axios. Fox News’ Adam Shaw contributed to this report.
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