Hansi Lo Wang (he/him) Profile picture
Sep 28, 2020 5 tweets 2 min read Read on X
BREAKING: Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross, who oversees Census Bureau, has announced Oct. 5 as "target date" for ending all #2020Census counting efforts, bureau's spokesperson Michael Cook confirms to me, days after a judge ordered counting through Oct. 31.
2. The Census Bureau has now issued a press release with the same language as the earlier tweet:
census.gov/newsroom/press… The Secretary of Commerce has announced a target date of Oct
3. During a court conference, U.S. District Judge Lucy Koh said she's ordering the Trump admin to release all internal documents related to its decision to set Oct. 5 as a "target date" by 10 a.m. PT tomorrow (9/29), as well as to finish filing other docs for the case by 10/4.
4. DOJ attorney August Flentje pushed back on Judge Koh's order for an administrative record on 10/5 "target date," calling it "outrageous" that every time Census Bureau adjusts ops it needs to show record. Judge said that's what's required in Administrative Procedures Act case.
4. "I would expect that if you had done reasoned decision-making," Judge Koh told DOJ attorney August Flentje, you would be "proud of your work" and want to show the court.

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More from @hansilowang

Dec 19, 2023
A controversial Census Bureau proposal could shrink the rate of disability in the U.S. by about 40%. Public comments on this potential change are due Tuesday, Dec. 19, but NPR has confirmed there will be another opportunity to give feedback in the spring…
npr.org/2023/12/18/121…
2. Public comments on these proposed changes to the disability questions on the American Community Survey can be emailed to acso.pra@census.gov. The bureau tells NPR they are set to be published here before the next public comment period in the spring: regulations.gov/document/USBC-…
3. The bureau says the proposed changes are part of a years-long effort to improve the quality of its disability data and standardize the statistics so they're comparable to other countries' numbers
npr.org/2023/12/18/121…
Read 7 tweets
Jan 23, 2023
The Supreme Court could upend how federal elections are run across the U.S. if it adopts even a limited version of a once-fringe idea called the "independent state legislature theory."

I wrote about what could happen after SCOTUS rules on Moore v. Harper:
npr.org/2023/01/22/114…
A Supreme Court ruling that adopts some version of the “independent state legislature theory” could lead to more lawsuits and bring uncertainty to upcoming elections
npr.org/2023/01/22/114…
A Supreme Court ruling that adopts some version of the “independent state legislature theory” could make it easier for state lawmakers to ignore voting rights protected under state law
npr.org/2023/01/22/114…
Read 4 tweets
Oct 18, 2022
I wrote about a push for the U.S. Supreme Court to change who counts as Black in redistricting.

Republican officials in Louisiana want a narrower definition of Blackness that excludes some Black people & could minimize Black voting power around the U.S.
npr.org/2022/10/18/112…
2. A 2003 ruling by SCOTUS after the 2000 census — the first U.S. head count that allowed people to identify with more than one race — set a standard definition of "Black" for voting rights cases focused exclusively on the voting power of Black people.
npr.org/2022/10/18/112…
3. That definition of "Black" has included everyone who identifies as Black for the census — including people who mark the boxes for Black and any other racial/ethnic category such as white, Asian & Hispanic/Latino, which federal gov't says is an ethnicity
npr.org/2022/10/18/112…
Read 11 tweets
Nov 6, 2021
SCOOP: Former President Donald Trump's payroll tax delay last year left a $7 million accounting mess for the Census Bureau, which has been trying to get ~28K former census workers to pay off their debt after giving up trying to collect from ~148K others
npr.org/2021/11/05/104…
2. I deleted this earlier tweet that misstated the number of former 2020 census workers from whom the Census Bureau has decided to stop trying to collect unpaid payroll taxes. That number is 147,619 former workers (not ~178K):
3. The Census Bureau was one of many fed agencies the Trump admin directed last year to stop collecting some employees' share of a payroll tax that helps fund Social Security. Trump said it would get "bigger paychecks for working families.” But it’s also an accounting challenge.
Read 5 tweets
Nov 4, 2021
I asked the office of Sen. Rick Scott, R-Fla. — who blocked an attempt to confirm Census Bureau director nominee Robert Santos by unanimous consent in October — why Scott said he's concerned Santos will “politicize" the bureau & not serve "in a fair and unbiased fashion"...
2. So far, Scott's office has not provided any evidence that would suggest Santos would “politicize” the Census Bureau and “not perform his duties in a fair and unbiased fashion."

Instead, Scott's communications director, McKinley Lewis, gave this statement by email: The Census Bureau performs critically important functions to
3. I am waiting for any direct response to this follow-up question:

Does Sen. Rick Scott consider Robert Santos not qualified or competent to serve as Census Bureau director? If so, why?
Read 4 tweets
Nov 2, 2021
NEW: The 2020 census likely undercounted people of color at rates higher than those of the last count, an @urbaninstitute study finds. That could translate into inequities in political representation & federal funding across the U.S. for the next 10 years
npr.org/2021/11/02/104…
@urbaninstitute 2. Important to note: This @urbaninstitute study is *not* an analysis of 2020 census results & doesn't show actual over/undercounts. The estimates are based on a *simulated* census & a method for measuring accuracy that's different from the Census Bureau's
urban.org/research/publi…
@urbaninstitute 3. Let's also keep in mind: When people of color are undercounted in the census, it's not just "some" groups who miss out on federal funding and political representation — it's *everyone* living in the local communities and states where there are people of color.
Read 5 tweets

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