Donald J. Trump
✔@realDonaldTrump
.....United States Supreme Court is given additional information from which it can make a final and decisive decision on this very critical matter. Can anyone really believe that as a great Country, we are not able the ask whether or not someone is a Citizen. Only in America!
12:37 PM - Jun 27, 2019
he totally missed the part where it can be asked,
Trash doesn't do "close reading or listening" or nuance.
As Vox noted:
The Commerce Department has acknowledged that in an emergency, with “extraordinary effort,”
it could finalize the census forms as late as October 30 and still run the census in time in 2020.
So in theory, it could spend some time gathering new evidence, issue a new decision adding the question to the census, and then get the courts to review that decision and uphold it as correct.
But it would have to do all that within four months, tops.
The existing case took a year to adjudicate at trial, and another five months from the initial ruling to Thursday’s SCOTUS decision.
In other words, the strategy on timing totally backfired.
2. His Administration got called out for lying.
Secretary of Commerce Ross (who decided to include the citizenship question in the census)
argued the need for the question by saying he was trying to better enforce the Voting Rights Act (VRA).
Ross’ real motivation appears to be derailing the counting of Hispanics and immigrants, thus providing those communities less-than-fair amounts of government representation.
Reviewing the District Court’s decision, SCOTUS lined up Ross’ story with the evidence adduced in court. And that didn’t go so well for the Trump Administration.
The citizenship question had been planned for quite a while:
That evidence showed that the Secretary was determined to reinstate a citizenship question from the time he entered office;
Then later, Ross explained his decision by citing enforcement of the VRA. SCOTUS wasn’t buying it.
We share the District Court’s conviction that the decision to reinstate a citizenship question cannot be adequately explained in terms of DOJ’s request for improved citizenship data to better enforce the VRA.
And down came the hammer:
Altogether, the evidence tells a story that does not match the explanation the Secretary gave for his decision