- Thursday, August 7, 2025

As states rush to redraw their congressional maps, President Trump moved Thursday to get his team involved, saying he’s ordered the government to conduct a new count of the country’s residents — but this time without illegal immigrants. Here’s what you need to know about the Trump census order:

The Trump directive

President orders Commerce Department to conduct new count:



  • Trump announced on social media he “instructed” Commerce Department to start work
  • Department oversees Census Bureau
  • Ordered “immediately” start work on “new and highly accurate” count
  • “People who are in our Country illegally WILL NOT be COUNTED IN THE CENSUS”

The potential impact

New count could shift congressional seats between states:

  • Could shift several seats from states with high illegal immigrant populations
  • Would also spark “hefty constitutional questions”
  • Slimmed-down census without illegal immigrants long-term conservative goal
  • Based on both principle and politics arguments

The conservative rationale

Advertisement
Advertisement

Republicans argue illegal immigrants shouldn’t determine representation:

  • Say illegal immigrants aren’t part of broader body politic that should be counted
  • Fear Democrat-led states and localities get more congressional seats
  • Also affects state legislature representation when illegal immigrants counted
  • Argue counting creates unfair political advantage

The constitutional questions

Constitution calls for counting “whole number of free persons”:

  • Document excepted Indians “not taxed” and included three-fifths compromise for slavery
  • Also called for count “within every subsequent term of ten years”
  • Left it to Congress to legislate on how counting done
  • Whether Trump’s vision fits constitutional framework likely to be tested in courts
Advertisement
Advertisement

The seat shift projections

Study shows potential changes from excluding illegal immigrants:

  • Two demographers John Robert Warren and Robert Warren published study this year
  • If illegal immigrants hadn’t been included in 2020 count, would have shifted two seats
  • Seats would have gone from Texas and California to New York and Ohio
  • 2010 census would have seen larger shifts

The historical impact

Advertisement
Advertisement

Decade earlier would have seen more dramatic changes:

  • After 2010 census, California would have lost three seats
  • Texas and Florida would have lost one apiece
  • Gains would have gone to Montana, Louisiana, Missouri, Ohio and North Carolina
  • Electoral College affected but not enough to change election results

The legislative support

Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene announces supporting legislation:

Advertisement
Advertisement
  • Georgia Republican announced legislation to exclude illegal immigrants from census
  • Trump touring Florida’s Gator Gitmo detention facility backed idea with Gov. DeSantis
  • “Ron would love it. I would love it” said Trump
  • DeSantis skeptical that little would change politically

DeSantis’s political calculation

Florida governor sees potential for significant seat gains:

  • “We only got one seat in the last Census”
  • “Florida only had one seat in that? We should have had at least two”
  • “Texas should have had another one”
  • “That could be the difference in the House of Representatives, and the majority”
Advertisement
Advertisement

The first-term precedent

Trump previously tried to adjust census during initial presidency:

  • Sought to add citizenship question to 2020 count
  • Supreme Court stepped in and shut him down before final deadline
  • Chief Justice John Roberts said Trump likely had legal authority
  • But didn’t follow correct rulemaking process for adding new question

The 2020 legal battle

Previous attempt to exclude illegal immigrants from count:

  • Trump tried to order Commerce Department to provide states count without illegal immigrants
  • Drew immediate legal challenge from opponents
  • Three-judge panel ruled Trump’s order illegal
  • Supreme Court held matter was premature and vacated lower court ruling

The Biden reversal

Current president set stage for Trump’s new attempt:

  • President Biden rescinded Trump policy on taking office
  • Action set Trump up for his “do-over now”
  • New count will be “based on modern day facts and figures”
  • Will use “results and information gained from the presidential election of 2024”

The redistricting context

Census order comes amid broader map-drawing battles:

  • GOP-led Texas trying to redraw lines now to undo minority voter districts
  • Started “dominoes toppling” with Democrat-led states retaliating
  • Apportionment divides House’s 435 seats among states
  • States then redistrict by drawing congressional district lines

Read more:

Trump orders new census count to exclude those in U.S. illegally

This article was constructed with the assistance of artificial intelligence and published by a member of The Washington Times' AI News Desk team. The contents of this report are based solely on The Washington Times' original reporting, wire services, and/or other sources cited within the report. For more information, please read our AI policy or contact Steve Fink, Director of Artificial Intelligence, at sfink@washingtontimes.com

The Washington Times AI Ethics Newsroom Committee can be reached at aispotlight@washingtontimes.com.

Copyright © 2026 The Washington Times, LLC. Click here for reprint permission.

Please read our comment policy before commenting.