Trump officials push citizenship question in test survey for 2030 census

· Axios

The Trump administration is moving forward with a field test of a citizenship question as part of early 2030 U.S. Census planning, raising fresh alarm that the question could make a comeback after being blocked in 2019.

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Why it matters: The change is part of a broader push to reshape how the U.S. counts its people, and reduce the practice of counting undocumented immigrants to determine congressional apportionment, Electoral College votes, and the distribution of $2.8 trillion in federal funds.

  • Any change that alters who gets counted can shift political power and resources across states.

Driving the news: The plan that's part of a regulatory filing follows President Trump's August announcement that he had instructed the Commerce Department to work on a new census amid a White House push for red states to draw new congressional maps more favorable to Republicans ahead of the 2026 midterms.

State of play: The U.S. Constitution requires the headcount of every U.S. resident every 10 years to apportion congressional districts.

  • The current field test, now limited to Alabama and South Carolina, uses the American Community Survey (ACS) form — which already includes a citizenship question — sparking concerns that this is a step toward normalizing its inclusion on the actual census form, per AP.
  • ABC News reports that one proposed question states: "Is this person a citizen of the United States?"

Zoom in: The Brennan Center noted during the first Trump administration's push to require people to reveal their citizenship status in the census that the Constitution requires the count to include "every individual" in the U.S. — regardless of their age, race, gender, ethnicity or citizenship.

  • Adding a citizenship question historically depressed response rates in immigrant communities and could lead to an undercount of populations critical to fair representation and funding formulas.
  • "Census professionals agree that a citizenship question will significantly reduce census participation, both by citizens and non-citizens," according to the Brennan Center.

What they're saying: "The census is meant to count all people living in the United States, not just citizens," Democrats on the House Oversight Committee said on Bluesky Thursday.

  • "President Trump's threat to add a citizenship question to the census would deny communities of representation and critical resources. We must strongly oppose these efforts."
  • Representatives for the Commerce Department and Census Bureau did not immediately respond to Axios' Thursday night request for comment.

Flashback: Trump's first administration tried and failed to include a citizenship question on the 2020 census; the Supreme Court blocked that effort, finding the administration's rationale pretextual.

  • Since returning to the White House, Trump has signaled interest in reshaping census rules — including rescinding former President Biden's 2021 executive order requiring all residents be counted regardless of status.

Go deeper: Trump orders "new" census: What the Constitution allows

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