Trump 'determined' to add citizenship question to the census, immigration official says

A top U.S. immigration official said Sunday he’s confident that the Trump administration will add the citizenship question to the 2020 census after their effort to do so was shot down by the Supreme Court.

“I do think so,” Ken Cuccinelli, acting director of the Citizenship and Immigration Services office, told “Fox News Sunday.” “I think the president has expressed determination. He’s noted that the Supreme Court didn’t say this can’t be asked. They said they didn’t appreciate the process by which it came forward the first time.”

“The president is determined to fix that and to have it roll forward in the 2020 census,” he continued.

On NBC’s “Meet the Press,” Rep. Will Hurd, R-Texas, said it was of paramount importance to move forward with the census without another effort at including the controversial citizenship question.

“I think we can’t wait, we need to make sure we accurately count everybody,” Hurd said. “An accurate count is important for cities, for counties. It’s important for resources. … We don’t want there to be a miscount, for sure. Everybody needs to be counted.”

“The Supreme Court has ruled,” Hurd added. “Let’s move forward, we shouldn’t stall the census.”

President Donald Trump made clear last week that he isn’t abandoning efforts at having the question included in the 2020 census even after the Supreme Court, in a 5-4 ruling, went against the administration’s effort. On Friday, he said he was looking at issuing an executive order to add the question.

“We’re thinking about doing that, we have four or five ways we can do it, it’s one of the ways we’re thinking about doing it very seriously,” Trump said when asked about using an executive order to add the question.

source: nbcnews.com