New York, NY – The Jewish Council for Public Affairs (JCPA) applauds the Supreme Court’s decision to block, at least for now, the addition of a citizenship question to the 2020 Census. JCPA has long opposed the U.S. Commerce Department’s plan to add a citizenship status question, which we believe would deter immigrants from participating and undermine the accuracy and fairness of the Census.

The Supreme Court remanded the case back to the New York District Court, ruling that the Commerce Department’s justification for the question is inadequate and seems “contrived.” The Court upheld the lower court’s decision to send the citizenship question back to the Census Bureau for further explanation, preventing the question’s addition to the survey.

“We applaud the Supreme Court justices for protecting the integrity of the Census. But even as we celebrate this victory, we are mindful of the fear already instilled in the immigrant community and will continue working to ensure that everyone is counted,” said David Bernstein, President and CEO of JCPA. “These once-in-a-decade surveys are the basis for determining funding and political representation. Undercounting populations prevents a fair provision of government services and undermines our representative democracy.”

With census forms set to go to printing over the summer, it is unlike that the Census Bureau can afford to wait until a final decision is rendered by the federal courts. JCPA urges the Commerce Department and the Census Bureau to respect the Supreme Court’s decision and immediately proceed with preparations for a 2020 Census that does not include the citizenship question.

Share

Next Up:

JCPA Applauds House Passage of the American Dream and Promise Act

Take Action Donate

June 16, 2026

JCPA Statement on Trump Administration Effort to Move Office for Civil Rights Out of Department of Education

June 12, 2026

Allyship Toolkit

June 10, 2026

JCPA on Capitol Hill: Supporting the New “Jewish American Safety Act”

June 4, 2026

JCPA 2026 National Summit Speakers

June 3, 2026

JCPA 2026 National Summit

May 19, 2026

JCPA Welcomes Bipartisan Rosen-Lankford Legislation to Fight Antisemitism

May 18, 2026

JCPA Horrified by Shooting at San Diego Mosque

May 11, 2026

JCPA, AFT, and Weitzman Museum Launch New Resource Hub to Support Educators Teaching Jewish History, Antisemitism, and Democracy

May 8, 2026

Director of Finance & Administration

May 7, 2026

Jewish American Heritage Month Toolkit for Partners