The Biden government “strongly opposes” the efforts of congressional Republicans to include a citizenship question on the census in order to prevent non-citizens from being counted for congressional apportionment. It claims that doing so would be costly and “make it more difficult to obtain accurate data.”
The Congressional Equal Representation Act is designed to exclude non-citizens from diluting the voting power of U.S. citizens and prevent states with high numbers of illegal residents from gaining undue, disproportional influence over the country. A significant number of the illegal aliens who have flooded across the U.S.-Mexico border since Joe Biden took office have ended up in Democratic cities and states.
The Biden Office of Management and Budget (OMB) said in a statement that it “strongly opposes” the bill as it would “preclude the Department of Commerce’s Census Bureau from performing its constitutionally mandated responsibility to count the number of persons in the United States in the decennial census.” The OMB also claims it would “increase the cost of conducting the census and make it more difficult to obtain accurate data” and “violate the Fourteenth Amendment of the Constitution.”
Republicans, however, contend that the Biden government is simply trying to secure political advantages for the Democratic Party that would come from counting illegal aliens in the census. “It is unconscionable that illegal immigrants and non-citizens are counted toward congressional district apportionment and our electoral map,” said Sen. Bill Hagerty (R-Tenn.) in January.
“While people continue to flee Democrat-run cities, desperate Democrats are back-filling the mass exodus with illegal immigrants so that they do not lose their seats in Congress or their electoral votes for the presidency, hence artificially boosting their political power and in turn diluting the power of other Americans’ votes.”