ORLANDO, Fla. — The U.S. Census Bureau plans to use a survey form with a citizenship question as part of its practice test of the 2030 census, raising questions about whether the Trump administration might try to make a significant change to the once-a-decade headcount that failed during the president's first term.
The field test being conducted in Huntsville, Alabama, and Spartanburg, South Carolina, is using questions from the American Community Survey, the comprehensive survey of American life, rather than questions from recent census forms.
Among the questions on the ACS is one that asks, ''Is this person a citizen of the United States?'' Questions for the census aren't supposed to ask about citizenship, and they haven't for 75 years.
Last August, Trump instructed the Commerce Department to have the Census Bureau start work on a new census that would exclude immigrants who are in the U.S. illegally from the head count.
The Constitution's 14th Amendment says ''the whole number of persons in each state'' should be counted for the numbers used for apportionment, the process of divvying up congressional seats, and Electoral College votes among the states. The Census Bureau has interpreted that to mean anybody living in the U.S., regardless of legal status.
The bureau did not respond Thursday to inquiries seeking comment about why the ACS questions were being used for the 2026 test.
Terri Ann Lowenthal, a former congressional staffer who consults on census issues, said the ACS questions have never been used for a census field test before. She said the 2026 test — which was pared down from six locations to two — has become ''a shell of what the Census Bureau proposed and should do to ensure an accurate 2030 Census.''
''This full pivot from a real field test is alarming and deserves immediate congressional attention, in my view,'' Lowenthal said.