Texas could lose political clout in census that would exclude undocumented immigrants
WASHINGTON — As Texas moves to redraw its congressional map at the behest of President Donald Trump, the White House is pushing ahead on another proposal to safeguard GOP power in Washington that could have major implications for Texas.
Last week, Trump said he had ordered the Commerce Department to start working on a new census that does not count undocumented immigrants.
Excluding 'people who are in our Country illegally,' as Trump declared on social media, would fulfill a longtime conservative priority and mark a reversal from the longstanding practice of counting all people residing in the United States, legally or not, in the once-a-decade headcount.
With an estimated 1.7 million undocumented immigrants living in Texas, the move could have major ramifications for the state's political sway.
One of the main motivations for White House officials in pushing forward a new census is the potential to reallocate political power, including Electoral College votes, from Democrat-dominated states to ones controlled by Republicans, according to two people with knowledge of the effort who were granted anonymity to discuss internal deliberations they were not authorized to publicly speak about.
The White House also sees a new census as an opportunity to correct an overcount of people in predominantly blue states from the 2020 census, which they argue gave too much political power to Democratic strongholds.
The push comes as Texas' GOP-controlled Legislature is attempting to overhaul the state's congressional lines to net Republicans up to five more seats — a process left in limbo by Democratic lawmakers' departure from the state. Blue states — including California, New York and Illinois — have threatened to retaliate by crafting new districts of their own that would kick Republican lawmakers out of power.
Trump's census proposal is all but certain to face constitutional challenges and logistical hurdles, and it would require cooperation from the U.S. Census Bureau and its staff of largely apolitical career civil servants.
But in his seven months in office, Trump has shown an unparalleled ability to bend the levers of power to his will and push the norms that have restrained previous presidencies.
How does the census determine political power?
Planning a national census is a yearslong process that typically happens once per decade, generating population and demographic data that is used to determine how billions of federal dollars are allocated and how many seats each state gets in Congress. States receive the number of districts that correspond to their total population, so that the more people living in a state, the more representatives they get to send to the U.S. House.
The census headcount also dictates each state's footprint in the Electoral College, which is used to decide presidential elections and is based on how many House members a state elects, plus their two senators. Texas, for example, has two senators and 38 House members, giving it a whopping 40 Electoral College votes.
This distribution has long been based on the total number of people living in a given state, irrespective of citizenship. Under the Trump-backed proposal, only those residing in the country legally would be counted.
Such a change would have ripple effects across the nation. States with higher undocumented populations could see some of their congressional districts redistributed to states with fewer undocumented residents.
It's not immediately clear how this would change the country's political balance. California, Texas, New York and Florida — a mix of red and blue states — are among those with the highest number of unauthorized immigrants, according to the Migration Policy Institute, a nonpartisan Washington-based think tank. Texas comes in at No. 2 behind California, with 1.7 million undocumented immigrants as of 2019, according to the think tank's estimates.
Red states that are home to a disproportionate number of undocumented immigrants, like Texas and Florida, could see a decrease in their counted population, thwarting their political power and throwing a wrench in Republicans' plans, some experts believe.
'I don't understand how illuminating them is going to be advantageous to Republicans,' said Jennifer Van Hook, a sociology and demography professor at Pennsylvania State University.
But blue states, most notably California and New York, have seen a population exodus in recent years, primarily to Republican-controlled states. The Democrats' top redistricting organization, the National Democratic Redistricting Committee, has said it expects to see California, New York, Illinois, Rhode Island and other blue states lose seats under the traditional apportionment that will follow the 2030 census.
Meanwhile, Texas, Florida, Arizona and Georgia could add districts thanks to their massive population growth, the NDRC predicts, noting that Texas could see a three-seat pickup.
Republicans are betting population increases in red states with large undocumented populations would outweigh the losses they can expect by not counting those undocumented residents.
Referring to an overcount of some Democratic states in the 2020 census, Vice President JD Vance asserted that if the Trump administration conducted a new census, 'you'd have 10 additional Republican seats and 9 fewer Democrat seats,' forecasting states like Ohio and Florida could gain political clout.
But not everyone is convinced a new census that omits undocumented residents would benefit one party over the other.
Robert Warren, a demographer at the Center for Migration Studies, created hypothetical electoral maps for each census dating back to 1980 that did not count undocumented immigrants. His research found that excluding the undocumented population had little to no effect on how congressional districts are doled out.
'It wouldn't shift enough seats to make any difference, and that's been true for five straight censuses,' he said in an interview with The Tribune.
Constitutional and procedural concerns
Paul Mitchell, a redistricting expert working in California Democratic politics, believes that not counting all people who live in a particular state runs afoul of the 14th Amendment, which requires House seats to be allocated based on the 'whole number of persons in each state.'
'The Constitution very clearly says that apportionment is determined by the number of people, not citizens,' he said.
If Trump's plan is carried out, it is all but certain to face legal challenges.
Trump's firing of the head of Bureau of Labor Statistics over poor job numbers he claimed were inaccurate has disturbed some demography experts, who worry about what it portends for the accuracy of any census data obtained through atypical means.
The president's announcement said the new data would be calculated from 'modern day facts and figures,' including 'information gained from the Presidential Election of 2024.'
While it remains unclear exactly how this would work, Van Hook said there's been a fast-growing push to carry out an 'administrative record census.' This new type of count would use data from other federal agencies — such as tax records, Medicare records and other government databases — to create a model of the nation without a full-fledged census survey.
But these databases are complex and incomplete, potentially proving inaccurate. An administrative records census could 'leave out a lot of people who are not in official record systems,' Van Hook said, including undocumented immigrants and 'people who don't really want to be found.'
Even if the accuracy met census standards, carrying out such a complex new project could prove difficult before the 2028 election.
'The Census Bureau is a giant aircraft carrier, and they have to turn everything around, and it takes them months and months and months and months to do that,' Van Hook said. 'It doesn't seem plausible.'
Some legislation has been proposed to ameliorate the concerns, or at least lay the legal groundwork for an unconventional quick-turn census.
A bill by Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Georgia, would require a revamp of the census before the 2026 elections. It would also give the bureau latitude to obtain the data through any method approved by the commerce secretary, 'including the use of sampling procedures and special surveys.'
Another proposal, the 'Equal Representation Act,' would implement a citizenship question on the 2030 census and exclude non-citizens from being counted in the apportionment of House seats and Electoral College votes. A version of the bill passed the House last year with broad support from Texas Republicans but failed to advance in the Senate.
This article originally appeared on Corpus Christi Caller Times: Texas could lose clout in census that would exclude undocumented people
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Hill
a few seconds ago
- The Hill
Haberman warns Democrats against pushback on Trump's DC crime claims
New York Times reporter Maggie Haberman warned Democrats run a risk of alienating voters if they push back on President Trump's attempt to crack down in crime in Washington, D.C. and other large cities run by members of the party. 'I think you see that in terms of [DC] Mayor [Muriel] Bowser, how she has reacted,' Haberman, who is also a contributor to CNN, said during an appearance on the network on Tuesday. 'There is a crime problem everywhere, in multiple cities. Big cities have traditionally had crime problems.' 'There are a lot of people who feel unsafe in big cities,' she continued. 'And so if the mayor pushes back on the president, she sounds like she's not addressing concerns of constituents.' The journalist's comments were first highlighted by Mediaite. Trump on Monday declared a state of emergency over crime in the district, taking control of its police force and deploying National Guard troops to help law enforcement on city streets. Bowser, a democrat, on Monday called Trump's actions 'unprecedented' and 'unsettling' but has said she welcomes help to fight crime in the district, meeting this week with Attorney General Pam Bondi about the administration's moves. Other Democrats have vocally condemned Trump's actions, citing statistics showing crime declining in D.C. in recent years and arguing the president is overstepping his authority for political reasons. 'Violent crime in Washington, D.C. is at a thirty-year low,' House Minority Leader Hakeen Jeffries (D-N.Y.) posted on social platform X. 'Donald Trump has no basis to take over the local police department. And zero credibility on the issue of law and order. Get lost.' Trump has suggested federal agencies and the military could also deploy to other major U.S. cities, naming Chicago, New York City and Baltimore as possible targets.


The Hill
a few seconds ago
- The Hill
Schumer: ‘No f—ing way' Dems will back Trump DC takeover extension
Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) declared on Wednesday that Democrats will not go along with a potential request by President Trump to extend federal control of the Washington, D.C., police department and deployment of the National Guard in the District. Trump can unilaterally control the department for up to 30 days, but any extension beyond that period is up to Congress, meaning it would require the support of Senate Democrats. Schumer made clear in an interview on Wednesday that wouldn't happen. 'No f—ing way,' Schumer told host Aaron Parnas. 'We'll fight him tooth and nail. … He needs to get Congress to approve it, and not only are we not going to approve it, but there are some Republicans who don't like either.' 'This is, again, just a distraction. He's afraid of Epstein,' Schumer continued, referring to the push to release files related to Jeffrey Epstein, the disgraced financier who died awaiting federal trial on sex trafficking charges. 'He's afraid of all that, and we are not going to give up on Epstein.' Trump on Wednesday said that he is seeking a 'long-term extension' of the federalization of the Metropolitan Police Department. 'If it's a national emergency, we can do it without Congress,' Trump told reporters at the Kennedy Center. 'But we expect to be before Congress very quickly.' He added that he plans to push for congressional backing of a crime bill that would 'pertain initially to D.C.,' but ultimately become a 'very positive example' for other cities. Both Maryland senators on Wednesday also told Semafor that they will not support any further plan to federalize the MPD. 'What Donald Trump is doing is, in some ways, a dress rehearsal for going after others around the country. And I think we need to stop this — certainly by the end of the 30 days,' said Sen. Chris Van Hollen (D-Md.). 'This should never have started, so I definitely want to make sure it doesn't continue.'


The Hill
a few seconds ago
- The Hill
Trump presses Nobel Peace Prize case: ‘The pressure's on'
President Trump is raking up global support in his push for a Nobel Peace Prize — garnering nominations from Pakistan, Cambodia, Israel and GOP lawmakers as he touts his role in talks to end various global conflicts. Friday may be Trump's biggest diplomatic test yet when he sits down with Russian President Vladimir Putin to talk about ending the war in Ukraine, something the president has struggled to settle between the two adversaries. But Trump has succeeded in other long-standing conflicts. The leaders of Armenia and Azerbaijan, who have been at war over territory shared by their two countries for decades, floated a joint nomination for Trump when they visited the White House recently for a U.S.-brokered peace summit. The White House is publicly arguing it is 'well past time' Trump gets the prize. A source close to Trump World said the White House is 'very serious' about getting Trump the prize, adding that 'on the merits, it's pretty straightforward.' The list of those who agree has been growing. Pakistan nominated Trump for the prize for his mediation of a ceasefire between the country and India in May. After he ended another conflict between Cambodia and Thailand, the former said this month it would nominate Trump for the prize. Rep. Darrell Issa (R-Calif.) in March said he would nominate Trump for the award, and Rep. Buddy Carter (R-Ga.) nominated him in June, citing his role in brokering a ceasefire agreement between Iran and Israel. The award is given annually in December by the Norwegian Nobel Committee to someone who has worked to establish peace between nations. A former aide in Trump's first term said senior State Department officials have the Nobel Peace Prize in the back of their heads at all times, an idea that shapes how they think about the big picture. 'There's no question the pressure's on,' the former aide said. 'Trump sees this prize as the ultimate capstone to how history will remember him.' Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Manet lauded Trump's 'historic contributions to advancing world peace,' in an announcement this week on the Nobel nomination. Similarly, Pakistan praised Trump for 'pragmatic diplomacy and effective peace-building' when it nominated him. India has denied that Trump played a role in its military decisions. White House trade adviser Peter Navarro in July said Trump deserves a Nobel Prize specifically for restructuring the international trade environment with his aggressive tariff plan. And the president himself said he deserved the prize after a deal was announced in June to end the conflict between Rwanda and Congo. 'I'm not politicking for it. I have a lot of people that are,' Trump said Friday about the award. However, peace in two of the world's major wars — between Russia and Ukraine, and Israel and Hamas — has proven elusive for Trump, who set high expectations for his negotiating acumen. Trump has increasingly grown frustrated that he can't end the fighting in Ukraine after promising on the campaign trail to achieve peace 'on Day 1.' He has pulled various levers, like imposing new sanctions on Russia and sanctions on India for buying Russian oil. The White House has tempered expectations for the Trump-Putin meeting in Alaska on Friday, at times calling it a 'listening session.' Trump has said this week that he would know in a matter of minutes whether Putin was serious about a peace deal. The White House has also largely avoided predicting any deliverables. When it comes to Israel, Trump showed rare daylight with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu during recent remarks in which he acknowledged the starvation in Gaza, vowing to increase aid. Netanyahu in July, on a visit to the White House, presented Trump with a letter he sent to the Nobel Prize committee. 'It's nominating you for the peace prize, which is well-deserved. And you should get it,' Netanyahu said. The two leaders have not always seen eye-to-eye in public over the war in Gaza, which like in Ukraine, has no end in site with several ceasefire proposals falling apart this year. Bill O'Reilly recently told NewsNation that Trump feels the Ukraine-Russia war is the key to his prize. 'I know exactly what Trump is aiming for. He would like to be nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize,' O'Reilly said on NewsNation's ' On Balance.' 'That may or may not happen. That's not the most honest organization over in Norway, but he wants to get this thing settled.' Other conservatives also questioned if the effort is worth it. 'Trump is obsessed with the Nobel Prize. He shouldn't be. He talks about a new type of leadership so why does he need an affirmation by a bunch of Norwegian progressives? He needs to decide whether he wants to Make America Great Again, or if he wants to be Jimmy Carter v. 2.0,' Michael Rubin, senior fellow with the conservative Washington think tank the American Enterprise Institute, told The Hill. Former President Carter was awarded the prize post-presidency, in 2002, for his work to find peaceful solutions to international conflicts. Former President Obama received the award in the first year of his presidency, in 2009, for his work to strengthen international diplomacy. Only two other presidents have won it — former President Wilson in 1920 and former President Theodore Roosevelt in 1906. Former Vice President Al Gore won it in 2007 for his work on combating climate change. 'Trump seems much more ideologically flexible than I think a lot of Republicans in D.C. would like him to be. And it's drive in pursuit of ego and the idea that he clearly wants to go down in history as some kind of celebrated deal-maker,' one former national security aide to former President Biden said. The former aide added, 'He promised to end the Russia-Ukraine war famously in 24 hours, failure. He inherited a ceasefire in Gaza, failure. That's fallen apart … he said he would try to get a nuclear deal with Iran, failure.' Marc Siegel, a professor of medicine at NYU Langone Health, argued in an op-ed this week that Trump deserves the prize for Operation Warp Speed, which got the COVID-19 vaccine off the ground at the end of his first term. On the foreign policy front, Trump has sought to bring an end to both erupting conflicts and long-simmering disputes. The White House on Friday touted the Armenia and Azerbaijan peace deal to end a decades-long conflict in the south Caucuses. At that event, the leaders of Armenia and Azerbaijan argued Trump would be worthy of the Nobel Prize for his efforts. 'I think President Trump deserves to have the Nobel Peace Prize. … We will promote for that,' Armenia Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan said. 'President Trump deserves the Nobel Peace Prize many times over – his direct involvement in major conflicts, leveraging tools from America's military might to our superior consumer market, has brought peace to decades-long wars around the world,' spokesperson Anna Kelly said, adding the 'success is exemplified' by the Azerbaijan-Armenia peace summit. 'The President's legacy is already cemented as Peacemaker-in-Chief, and he has received multiple nominations because America is respected again with him in office,' she said. The former Biden national security aide argued that the previous administration had done the vast majority of the groundwork in many diplomatic deals, adding that Trump 'parachuted in' to close them. 'I think he's interested in any deal he can slap his name on and say look what I got done,' the former aide said.