HR-151-119
Placed on the Union Calendar, Calendar No. 536.
Sponsored by Chuck Edwards (R-NC)
What it does
This bill would require the President's post-census apportionment statement — the document that determines how many U.S. House seats each state receives — to count only citizens, excluding noncitizens. It would also require the decennial census questionnaire to include a citizenship/immigration status question with four response options: U.S. citizen, U.S. national (non-citizen), lawful noncitizen resident, or unlawful noncitizen resident. The Department of Commerce would be required to publish population totals for each state broken down by each of those four categories.
Who benefits
States with relatively smaller noncitizen populations (generally rural and interior states) would likely gain or retain House seats relative to states with large noncitizen populations. Citizens living in those states would gain proportionally more representation in the House. Advocates for citizenship-based political representation would see a long-sought policy goal enacted. Researchers and policymakers who want disaggregated citizenship data from the census would benefit from the new public data requirement.
Who is hurt
States with large noncitizen populations — including California, Texas, New York, Florida, and New Jersey — could lose one or more House seats and Electoral College votes, reducing their political representation. All residents of those states, including citizens, would have less representation per capita in Congress. Local governments in high-noncitizen areas, which use census data for federal funding formulas, could see reduced allocations if funding follows apportionment. Noncitizen residents — including lawful permanent residents, visa holders, and others — would be formally excluded from the political apportionment process. Civil rights organizations that have historically opposed citizenship questions on the census argue such questions depress response rates among immigrant communities, potentially undercounting citizens as well.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that the Constitution's original purpose of apportionment was to allocate political representation among the voting-eligible population, and that counting noncitizens — who cannot vote — dilutes the votes of citizens in states with fewer noncitizens. They contend that the 14th Amendment's apportionment clause, which counts "persons," was never intended to include unauthorized immigrants, and that the Supreme Court left this question explicitly open in Trump v. Hawaii (2020) and related litigation. They further argue that adding a citizenship question restores data the census collected for most of its history before 1960 and that disaggregated data serves legitimate policy and research purposes.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that the 14th Amendment's text — "counting the whole number of persons in each State" — has been consistently interpreted to include all residents regardless of citizenship status, and that changing this interpretation requires a constitutional amendment, not a statute. They contend that adding a citizenship question would suppress census participation among immigrant households, causing undercounts that harm citizens and lawful residents alike — a concern the Commerce Department's own research raised during the 2020 census debate. They further argue that states with large noncitizen populations would lose federal funding and representation for all their residents, including millions of U.S.-born citizens, penalizing those states for demographic factors largely outside their control.
Constitutional context
The 14th Amendment's Apportionment Clause directs that House seats be allocated by "counting the whole number of persons in each State." Whether "persons" can be statutorily redefined to exclude noncitizens is an unresolved constitutional question — the Supreme Court declined to rule on it in Trump v. New York (2020), finding the case not ripe. The Commerce Clause and the Census Clause (Art. I, §2) give Congress broad authority over census design, but the scope of that authority to redefine the apportionment base is actively contested.
Checks and balances
Congress would gain authority to redefine the apportionment base; the Executive Branch (Commerce/Census Bureau) would implement the citizenship question and publish disaggregated data; federal courts would serve as the primary check, with near-certain litigation over whether the statute conflicts with the 14th Amendment's apportionment language.
Historical precedent
The census included a citizenship or nativity question in various forms from 1820 through 1950, and on the long-form survey through 2000; the Trump administration's 2019 attempt to add a citizenship question to the 2020 census was blocked by the Supreme Court in Department of Commerce v. New York (2019) on administrative grounds, not constitutional ones.