Sixty-seven percent of voters said that the government should include a citizenship question on the 2020 census, according to a poll released Tuesday.
According to a Harvard CAPS/Harris poll released Tuesday, sixty-seven percent of voters said that the government should be allowed to ask U.S. residents if they are citizens.
The poll arises as the Supreme Court decided last week to block a citizenship question on the 2020 census.
The survey found that Americans across the political spectrum support the citizenship question.
Eighty-eight percent of Republicans, 52 percent of Democrats, and sixty-three percent of independents said that they support a citizenship question on the United States census.
Rep. Jody Hice (R-GA) told Bretibart News that most Americans want the citizenship question and it should not be a partisan issue.
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It should be on the census!
ReplyDeleteWait till next time y'all will be one in five with the all the illegals coming into this country
ReplyDelete2/3 plus one more
ReplyDeleteWhen are the Democrats going to learn it is not about them but for the people. You hear the Democrat Presidential candidates say they are for the people. BS
ReplyDeleteNo,no ,no it's is illegal for an illegal to illegally vote or have illegal representation illegally.
ReplyDeleteI deliberately legally put illegal on here several times to make my legal comment. Lock and load my friends, I'm on the legal side
All citizens are on thr legal side. It is the tyrannical legislation that states otherwise.
DeleteStop the presses and add the question(s). The People have spoken.
ReplyDeleteIt is not the Public's decision to make
ReplyDeleteThe US Government Corporation can run its business any way it wants
It can also treat its employees (the citizens with a birth certificate) any way it wants
ReplyDeleteThe purpose of the Census, going all the way back to the Framers and its inclusion in Article 1 of the Constitution is to determine how many citizens live in the US, and where they reside, in order to apportion the Representatives in Congress.
It's exactly that simple and fundamental.