Press Release: A Victory in the Senate with the Halt of the Vitter Amendment.
November 5, 2009
Contact: Lizette Jenness Olmos, LULAC (202) 833-6130 ext. 16
Washington, DC – The League of United Latin American Citizens, the oldest
and largest Hispanic civil rights organization in the country, National
President Rosa Rosales issued the following statement on the Senate cloture
vote today 60-39 rejecting the Vitter-Bennett amendment.
“The community won an important battle today in the fight for a fair and
accurate 2010 census that counts every person in the United States as
required by the U.S. Constitution. By voting today for cloture on the
Commerce-State-Justice Appropriations bill, the Senate effectively ended
debate on the divisive Vitter-Bennett amendment. The amendment, which would
have forced the Census Bureau to add questions on citizenship and
immigration status to the census form less than six months before the count,
is clearly unconstitutional. Under the 14th amendment to the Constitution,
the apportionment of members of the House of Representatives is based on a
full count of persons – not just citizens – in each state.
Any changes to the 2010 census form would cause "logistical issues" because
the bureau has already printed over 100 million copies of the form, which
does not contain any questions about U.S. citizenship. Any attempt to
exclude or deter illegal residents from participating in the decennial count
would violate "the tradition and the law" of the census, which is mandated
as a counting of all U.S. residents in the place where they usually live.
We commend the Senate for standing up for the Constitution and for sparing
the nation from the damage the amendment would have done to the census and
to the civil rights of millions of people – both native-born and immigrant –
who would have been discouraged from being counted had the amendment passed.
We also hope that today's vote sends a strong message that the Senate is
committed to a 2010 census in which every person counts and every person is
counted.”
The Census Bureau has enlisted the help of community leaders nationwide to
encourage Hispanics to participate in the decennial count and to convince
skeptical respondents that their personal information will be kept private.
The League of United Latin American Citizens, the oldest and largest
Hispanic membership organization in the country, advances the economic
conditions, educational attainment, political influence, health, housing and
civil rights of Hispanic Americans through community-based programs
operating at more than 700 LULAC councils nationwide.
###
|