Noah Feldman, Columnist

Roberts Won’t Let Trump Get Away With a Lie in Census Case

The Supreme Court blocks the citizenship question for now, but might allow it if the Commerce Department is honest about its motives.

The census doesn’t care if you’re a citizen. For now.

Photographer: Andrew Harrer/Bloomberg

Chief Justice John Roberts split the baby — again. In a dramatic and complicated opinion in a much watched census case, he first held that the Trump administration’s decision to add a citizenship question to the 2020 census was constitutionally and statutorily permissible and was supported by sufficient evidence. He was joined by the U.S. Supreme Court’s other conservatives.

Then Roberts switched course. In a separate part of his opinion, in which he was joined by only the court’s four liberals, Roberts held that Secretary of Commerce Wilbur Ross had not given his true reasons for wanting to ask about citizenship on the census, but had instead given a “pretext” — lawyer-speak for a lie. In this part of the decision, Roberts upheld U.S. District Judge Jesse Furman’s decision to send the census case back to the Commerce Department to give a new (and presumably honest) explanation for its actions.