Hmmm…if citizenship count determines proportional representation, why are they against that census question?

Knowing the number of American citizens in any given geographical area provides law-makers with the knowledge necessary to determine accurate counts for key issues.

The U.S. Constitution, Art.1, Sec. 2, clause 3, calls for an enumeration (census) every 10 years, to ensure 1 House Representative for every 30,000 citizens. If the census can’t ask about a person’s citizenship, how else can gov’t determine proportionality?

Then, there’s the question of federally-funded social programs.

How can the U.S. government proportionally distribute those programs to its citizens, by state, if it doesn’t know the proportional citizenship demographics within those states?

Yet, Democrat politicians don’t want the question on the census, and fight it in court?

What would you bet it’s Democrat-controlled states fighting against the question?

After all, federally-funded dollars are sent to states to distribute amongst its qualifying citizenry and, if – on a state level – each state determines the amount of those who qualify, guess who pockets the excess when only REAL citizens get the funds?

We’re guessing…THE STATES.

So, basing their financial and representation needs on inflated numbers that include an illegal alien population is in their best financial & political interest…after the dust settles.

Hmmm…is it any wonder they don’t want the citizenship question asked?

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