https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/polit...fJy?li=BBnb7Kz
The Justice Department affirmed Friday that it still is pursuing a  path for adding a citizenship question to the 2020 Census, according to a  filing in federal court in Maryland. 
   
 The filing followed statements earlier in the day from President  Trump in which he said he is “thinking of” issuing an executive order to  add the controversial question. 
Government lawyers said in their  filing Friday that the Justice and Commerce Departments had been  “instructed to examine whether there is a path forward” for the question  and that if one was found they would file a motion in the Supreme Court  to try to get the question on the survey to be sent to every U.S.  household. 
Attorneys  for the government and challengers to the addition of the question  faced a 2 p.m. deadline set by U.S. District Judge George J. Hazel to  lay out their plans. 
Hazel said earlier this week that if the  government stuck with a plan to try to add the question, he would move  ahead on a case before him probing whether the government has  discriminatory intent in wanting to ask about citizenship. 
The  Justice Department lawyers argued in Friday’s filing that there was no  need to start producing information in that case since for now courts  have barred the government from adding the question. But the government  also agreed to follow a schedule to move ahead if that was laid out. 
The  government has begun printing the census forms without the question,  and that process will continue, administration officials said.
© Evan Vucci/AP  President Trump talks to reporters on the South Lawn of the White House  before departing for his Bedminster, N.J. golf club, on Friday. Trump had raised the possibility that some kind of  addendum could be printed separately after further litigation of the  issue, a move would almost certainly carry additional costs and may not  be feasible, according to census experts. 
“We’ll see what  happens,” Trump said. “We could start the printing now and maybe do an  addendum after we get a positive decision. So we’re working on a lot of  things, including an executive order.” 
Census experts say that,  among other concerns, such an addendum would likely violate the bureau’s  strict rules on testing a question, which include considering how the  placement of a question on the form affects respondents’ likelihood of  filling it out. 
Trump’s comments came as government lawyers  scramble to find a legal path to carry out the president’s wishes  despite their conclusions in recent days that no such avenue exists. 
Census  officials and lawyers at the Justice and Commerce departments scrapped  holiday plans and spent Independence Day seeking new legal rationales  for a citizenship question that critics say could lead to a steep  undercount of immigrants, which could limit federal funding to some  communities and skew congressional redistricting to favor Republicans. 
“It’s  kind of shocking that they still don’t know what they’re doing,” Thomas  A. Saenz, president and general counsel of the Mexican American Legal  Defense and Educational Fund said. MALDEF is representing some of the  plaintiffs in the case in Maryland." We’re in this posture because they  don’t know what the real plan is.” 
The question had seemed settled after 
the Supreme Court ruled last week against  the Trump administration. As late as Tuesday evening, Commerce  Secretary Wilbur Ross, who oversees the census, said the administration  was dropping its effort and was printing the census forms without the  citizenship question. 
But Trump, in tweets Wednesday and  Thursday, said he was not giving up. He tweeted Thursday morning: “So  important for our Country that the very simple and basic ‘Are you a  Citizen of the United States?’ question be allowed to be asked in the  2020 Census. Department of Commerce and the Department of Justice are  working very hard on this, even on the 4th of July!” 
The reversal  came after Trump talked by phone with conservative allies who urged him  not to give up the fight, according to a senior White House official  and a Trump adviser, who both spoke on the condition of anonymity. 
In  the Supreme Court’s splintered ruling last week, Chief Justice John G.  Roberts Jr. said the government had provided a “contrived” reason for  wanting the information, seemingly leaving open the door for the  government to offer a new justification and see whether it satisfies the  court. An executive order from Trump and a new rationale given by Ross  on the basis of that order could give the administration something to  take back to the justices. 
Trump told reporters Friday that the  White House was surprised by the Supreme Court decision and that he  found it “very shocking” that the citizenship question could not be  included. 
Trump said he believes the rationale provided by Ross “can be expanded very simply.” 
“He  made a statement,” Trump said of Ross. “He wrote something out. The  judge didn’t like it. I have a lot of respect for Justice Roberts. But  he didn’t like it, but he did say come back. Essentially, he said come  back.” 
Saenz derided the idea that an executive order could brush  aside the 15 months of litigation that culminated in the high court’s  ruling. 
“Despite what yesterday’s military show may have looked  like, the United States is not a Soviet bloc dictatorship,” Saenz said,  referring to the “Salute to America” event that Trump staged on  Thursday. “Executive orders do not override decisions of the Supreme  Court. Separation of powers remains, as it has been for over 200 years, a  critical part of our constitutional scheme.” 
Earlier Friday, Ken Cuccinelli,  Trump’s acting U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services director, said  during an appearance on Fox Business Network that there’s a “high  chance” that Trump would find a way, either through executive order or  “another administrative way, to ask the simple census question.” 
Cuccinelli said he met with Trump this week and the president “was very determined about this.” 
In  litigation earlier this year, the government stressed that forms needed  to go to the printer by July 1, prompting the Supreme Court to expedite  its consideration of the question. 
In a June filing to the  court, Solicitor General Noel Francisco noted that witnesses at trial  had said changes to the questionnaire after June 2019 “would impair the  Census Bureau’s ability to timely administer the 2020 census,” and that a  delay until October would be feasible only with “exceptional  resources.” 
tara.bahrampour@washpost.com 
john.wagner@washpost.com 
Colby Itkowitz contributed to this report. 
I was surprised at the rationale of the SC on the issue, to state the "Least".
The DPST resistance to counting citizens is flagrant pandering to achieve voting status for illegals and non-citizens.  Democrats - DPST's want that to boost their voting numbers. 
When it happens - it is the death of America as a nation under the Law of the  Constitution.
Thought ( YR will ridicule ) - Grass-roots  - a write-in on the census form -" I am a US citizen." 
Let every citizen who chooses ( under penalty of perjury if false) - write in their citizenship status. 
The DPST's gonna go through and round up all who do so for their concentration camps??
I think Not. 
They would be met with deadly force in many circumstances attempting that.  Their leadership- if the write-in happens - will still bluster and threaten.
Fuck Them.
I will write in my citizenship status. 
I invite all who agree to do so as well. 
DPST's - You know who you are - welcome to not participate.