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UPDATE: Trump Administration Asks Supreme Court To Allow Census Count To End

SAN FRANCISCO (CBS SF/AP) — The Trump administration has filed an emergency request asking the Supreme Court to allow the Census Bureau to end its field operations for the 2020 Census.

The request by Acting Solicitor General Jeffrey Wall Wednesday comes just hours after a federal appeals court rejected the administration's attempt to block a lower court order extending the counting timeline for the census in order to give the bureau more time to get an accurate count.

The administration maintains that the process needs to be wrapped up since it has passed the bureau's internal target date of Oct. 5 to have a chance of meeting the legal deadline for delivering census results to President Trump by the end of the year.

"With October 5 having come and gone while the court of appeals was considering the stay application, every passing day exacerbates the serious risk that the district court's order to continue field operations and delay post processing will make it impossible for the Bureau to comply with the December 31 statutory reporting deadline." Wall wrote in a statement.

Earlier Wednesday, a panel of three appellate judges upheld a lower court allowing the 2020 head count of every U.S. resident to continue through October. But the panel struck down a provision that had suspended a year-end deadline for turning in figures used to decide how many congressional seats each state gets.

The ruling by the three judges on the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals in San Francisco was a split decision for the Trump administration and a coalition of civil rights groups and local governments that had challenged the administration's 2020 census schedule.

"The process of disbanding thousands of census workers will resume if an administrative stay is put in place, eliminating the Bureau's ability to conduct field work," the ruling stated.

The ruling upheld part of U.S. District Judge Lucy Koh's preliminary injunction last month, and rejected part of it.

Koh's preliminary injunction suspended a Sept. 30 deadline for finishing the 2020 census and also a Dec. 31 deadline for turning in numbers used to determine how many congressional seats each state gets in a process known as apportionment. Because of those actions, the deadlines reverted back to a previous Census Bureau plan that had field operations ending Oct. 31 and the reporting of apportionment figures at the end of April.

Attorneys had indicated they would likely appeal the case to the U.S. Supreme Court.

The coalition of civil rights groups and local governments had argued that minorities and others in hard-to-count communities would be missed if the counting ended in September instead of October. But Trump administration attorneys had argued that the Census Bureau was obligated to meet the congressionally mandated requirement to turn in apportionment numbers by Dec. 31.

In response to the pandemic, the Census Bureau in April proposed extending the deadline for finishing the count from the end of July to the end of October and pushing the apportionment deadline from Dec. 31 to next April. The proposal to extend the apportionment deadline passed the Democratic-controlled House, but the Republican-controlled Senate didn't take up the request. Then, in late July or early August, bureau officials changed the deadline once again to the end of September.

The Republicans' inaction coincided with a memorandum President Donald Trump issued, which was later ruled unlawful by a panel of three district judges in New York, directing the Census Bureau to exclude from the apportionment count people in the country illegally. The Trump administration is appealing that case to the U.S. Supreme Court.

By keeping to the Dec. 31 deadline, the apportionment count would be under the control of the Trump administration no matter who wins the presidential election next month.

While allowing the head count to continue through October does leave less time to crunch the numbers before the Dec. 31 deadline, Trump administration officials and outside advisory groups had said that the Census Bureau would be unable to meet that deadline "under any conditions," the appellate judges said.

"Moreover, the December 31, 2020, deadline is nearly three months away. As we have already stated, predictions as to whether it can still be attained are speculative and unstable," the judges said.

The census determines how many congressional seats and Electoral College votes each state gets and how $1.5 trillion in federal funding is distributed each year.

As of Tuesday, 99.7% of households nationwide had been counted, a figure that surpassed the completion rate in 2010, although South Carolina, Alabama, Mississippi and Louisiana hadn't yet crossed the 99% threshold, according to the Census Bureau.

 

© Copyright 2020 CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved. The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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