Census Bureau plans 2030 count as 2020 lawsuit continues

Census Bureau plans 2030 count as 2020 lawsuit continues

Spread the love

The Census Bureau is planning for 2030, making decisions that will shape the distribution of federal funding that topped $2.8 trillion in fiscal year 2021, even as lawsuits over the 2020 Census remain unresolved.

The decisions being made now will determine how hundreds of millions of Americans are represented in Congress, how legislative districts are drawn in every state for the next decade, and how much federal funding flows to programs like Medicaid and the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, formerly known as food stamps.

The bureau’s 2030 planning and a federal lawsuit both center on the same question: how to protect the privacy of census respondents without distorting the population data that determines representation and funding.

America First Legal, a nonprofit law firm co-founded by Stephen Miller, now serving as President Donald Trump’s Deputy Chief of Staff for Policy, filed the suit in September 2025 in federal court in Tampa, Florida.

The group alleged that the Census Bureau’s use of two statistical methods, differential privacy and group quarters imputation, unconstitutionally manipulated population data and cost Florida two congressional seats.

Differential privacy is a statistical technique that adds small amounts of random noise to census data before publication, making it harder to identify individual respondents. The Census Bureau adopted it for the 2020 Census to protect the confidentiality of people who filled out census forms, replacing an older method called data swapping.

A three-judge federal panel dismissed the lawsuit in February as time-barred, ruling that the plaintiffs waited too long to sue. The court also rejected the standing theory of Rep. Byron Donalds, R-Fla., who had joined the case as a plaintiff.

The case drew intervenors opposing AFL, including the Alliance for Retired Americans and two University of Central Florida students. The alliance’s members include nursing home residents counted through group quarters imputation. The students lived in campus housing subject to the same method.

AFL had celebrated the case’s progress. In November 2025, the organization called its summary judgment filing “a critical step forward” that brought the case “one step closer to restoring integrity” to the census. A December news release said the case was “paving the way for the Court to decide the case in early 2026.” When the court ruled in early 2026, it dismissed the case entirely.

When plaintiffs refiled, they dropped the differential privacy challenge entirely, the method that had been the focus of AFL’s public statements about the case. The revised complaint focuses on statistical imputation, a technique the Census Bureau uses to fill in missing population data by adding people who could not otherwise be counted.

The government argues that because imputation adds people to the count, it cannot cause the undercount at the heart of plaintiffs’ claims.

The group alleged the methods cost Florida two congressional seats. But according to court filings, group quarters imputation added 16,500 people to Florida’s population count. Cory McCartan, a statistician at Penn State University who analyzed the data for the court on behalf of the intervenor-defendants opposing AFL, found that removing all of them would not have changed congressional apportionment in any state.

“The number of seats awarded to each state was not affected by differential privacy,” McCartan told The Center Square, “so there was no impact on state-level congressional representation.”

Researchers have confirmed that differential privacy did introduce real accuracy problems at the census block level, the smallest geographic unit used for redistricting. McCartan found that drawing districts at a granular level using racial data can magnify those errors, though he said other sources of census error remain larger at the district level.

Steven Ruggles, a demographer at the University of Minnesota who has studied census methodology for decades, said the Census Bureau injected so little noise into the 2020 data that they were “virtually unaffected” by differential privacy.

Ruggles told The Center Square the Census Bureau overstated the privacy threat that justified adopting differential privacy. The claim that the old data swapping method left respondents vulnerable to reidentification was “laughably exaggerated,” he said.

Ruggles rejected AFL’s imputation argument.

“If the Republicans succeeded in getting rid of it, that would disproportionately undercount places with high census nonresponse rates, particularly the South and rural areas, so it seems like this would backfire on them,” he told The Center Square.

AFL and its allies argued that differential privacy systematically favored urban, Democratic-leaning areas at the expense of rural communities.

An analysis published in November 2025 by the National Conference of State Legislatures, an organization that represents state legislatures, found that differential privacy noise tends to increase rural population counts and decrease urban ones.

Critics have blamed the Biden administration for adopting differential privacy. The Census Bureau formally announced its decision to use the method in December 2018, during the first Trump administration.

Benjamin Osborne, a legal fellow at the Center for Renewing America, a nonprofit policy organization founded by Russ Vought, now serving as director of the Office of Management and Budget, wrote in April that the census had “defrauded” the American people through differential privacy.

“The government took real communities and replaced them with statistical fiction,” he wrote. “And then it told states to draw political maps based on that fiction.”

The bureau is already planning for 2030. Its operational plan, approved in July 2025, calls for researching improvements and alternatives to the disclosure avoidance methods used in 2020. A final design will be tested in a 2028 dress rehearsal before peak production begins in 2029.

The plan also lists modernized enumeration of people living in group quarters, the same method at the center of the federal lawsuit, as a key improvement for 2030.

Ruggles said the methodology decisions being made now will have consequences beyond the privacy debate. In a March 2025 paper published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, he said the Census Bureau’s ongoing efforts to replace the American Community Survey, the bureau’s annual demographic survey, with fully synthetic data pose a bigger threat to data quality than anything differential privacy introduced.

AFL has continued to press the case, filing a motion in May seeking production of internal Census Bureau records by June 15.

The Census Bureau did not respond to requests for comment despite being contacted multiple times over three weeks. The bureau initially said it was working on a response, then asked for additional time on multiple occasions before missing a final deadline of 5 p.m. Eastern on June 11.

AFL and Rep. Donalds also did not respond to requests for comment.

AFL’s federal case remains active, with two motions to dismiss and a motion to modify the court’s scheduling order awaiting rulings from the three-judge panel.

Leave a Comment





Latest News Stories

WATCH: Republican leader: says Pritzker budget cut EO a ploy for IL tax increases

By Greg Bishop | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – Gov. J.B. Pritzker blames President Donald Trump for ordering Illinois state agencies to find 4% budget cuts....
Judge’s questions during IL gun ban arguments gives rights advocates ‘hope’

Judge’s questions during IL gun ban arguments gives rights advocates ‘hope’

By Greg Bishop | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – With Illinois’ gun ban now in the hands of a three judge panel of the federal appeals...
Illinois agencies to post monthly investment reports, lawmaker calls symbolic

Illinois agencies to post monthly investment reports, lawmaker calls symbolic

By Catrina Barker | The Center Square contributorThe Center Square (The Center Square) – Illinois agencies must now post monthly reports on how taxpayer dollars are invested, a move supporters...
Joliet-Junior-college.-Graphic-Logo.4

JJC Board Approves Contract with Adjunct Faculty Union

Joliet Junior College Board of Trustees Meeting | September 2025 Article SummaryThe Joliet Junior College (JJC) Board of Trustees approved a new collective bargaining agreement with the Joliet United Adjuncts...
Joliet-Junior-college.-Graphic-Logo.3

JJC Board Approves Student Trustee Quorum Policy Amid Heated Debate

Joliet Junior College Board of Trustees Meeting | September 2025 Article SummaryThe Joliet Junior College Board of Trustees passed a controversial policy change allowing the student trustee to be counted...
Meeting Briefs

Meeting Summary and Briefs: Summit Hill School District 161 for August 13, 2025

The Summit Hill District 161 Board of Education on Wednesday, August 13, 2025, approved a major technology contract and navigated a rare split vote on a new teacher hire. The...
Joliet-Junior-college.-Graphic-Logo.2

Joliet Junior College, City of Joliet to Explore Joint Public Safety Institute

Joliet Junior College Board of Trustees Meeting | September 2025 Article SummaryThe Joliet Junior College (JJC) Board of Trustees approved an intergovernmental agreement with the City of Joliet to begin...
frankfort-school-district-161.2-e1754272831494

Summit Hill 161 Accepts a Dozen Resignations, Approves New Hires

Article Summary: The Summit Hill School District 161 Board of Education processed a significant number of staff changes, accepting twelve resignations and approving a slate of new hires for the 2025-2026...
summit-hill-junior-high-school-frankfort-161

Summit Hill 161 Approves $48K Tech Upgrade, Board Divided on New Teacher Hire

Article Summary: The Summit Hill District 161 Board of Education approved a five-year, $48,305 agreement for a virtual server upgrade and separately hired a new junior high teacher in a contentious...
Meeting Briefs

Meeting Summary and Briefs: Frankfort Village Board for September 8, 2025

The Frankfort Village Board's meeting on Monday, September 8, 2025, was highlighted by a resident's pointed questions regarding the village's process for exploring a potential switch to Lake Michigan water....
Frankfort Village Board Meeting Graphic

Frankfort Resident Questions Village’s Lake Michigan Water Survey Process

Article Summary: A Frankfort resident publicly questioned the village's handling of a recent water source survey during the village board meeting, arguing it was released with limited research and a...
Meeting Briefs

Meeting Summary and Briefs: Frankfort Public Library District for July 24, 2025

The Frankfort Public Library District board on Thursday, July 24, 2025, addressed a major loan payment error by its bank, paused a planned reading room project due to high costs,...
Joliet-Junior-college.-Graphic-Logo.3

JJC Moves Forward with Major Technology Overhaul to Modernize College Operations

Article Summary: The Joliet Junior College Board of Trustees received a detailed update on a sweeping Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) project, a major initiative designed to modernize the college's core...
Joliet-Junior-college.-Graphic-Logo.2

Meeting Summary and Briefs: Joliet Junior College Board of Trustees for August 20, 2025

The Joliet Junior College Board of Trustees focused on a major technological overhaul, celebrated milestones in student support, and addressed internal governance issues at its regular meeting on August 20,...
Joliet-Junior-college.-Graphic-Logo.4

Tensions Flare as JJC Chairman Rebukes “Entitlement” After Trustee Lists Demands

Article Summary: Apparent tensions on the Joliet Junior College Board of Trustees surfaced during its meeting on Wednesday, August 20, 2025, when one trustee requested to be returned to "good...