The Supreme Court is temporarily blocking a court order that would have compelled President Donald Trump's commerce secretary, Wilbur Ross, to give a deposition in a lawsuit regarding the constitutionality of a new census question that asks about American residents' citizenship.

The court did not offer any reasons for its decision, which is common in cases involving stay applications, according to The New York Times. The order itself simply required that the deposition be stayed until a petition from Trump's administration had been resolved, which may happen when a trial involving the census question controversy begins next month.

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In the emergency application to bar Ross' deposition, Solicitor General Noel J. Francisco argued that the commerce secretary's private reasons for adding the question to the census are irrelevant if the stated official reason is legally sound.

"The immediate dispute here is about whether respondents are entitled to probe Secretary Ross’s mental processes — his subjective motivations — when he decided to reinstate the citizenship question," Francisco wrote. "Secretary Ross consulted with many parties, including Census Bureau, Commerce Department, and Justice Department officials, before announcing his decision, and he set forth his reasons in a detailed memorandum backed by a voluminous administrative record. See App., infra, 117a-124a. Those reasons include the Justice Department’s view that citizenship data from the decennial census would be helpful to its enforcement duties under the Voting Rights Act of 1965 (VRA), 52 U.S.C. 10301 et seq. App., infra, 125a-127a. Not content to evaluate the legality of the Secretary’s order based on the administrative record, respondents assert that Secretary Ross’s stated reasons are pretextual, and that his decision was driven by secret motives, including animus against racial minorities. They seek — and the district court agreed to compel — wide-ranging discovery to probe the Secretary’s mental processes, including by deposing him and other high-ranking government officials."

The argument of those challenging the addition of a citizenship question on the census is that Ross' shifting explanations reveal potential racial animus. Although Ross initially claimed that he had added the question in response to a Justice Department request from December 2017, he later admitted that he had planned on adding the question long in advance and had consulted Trump's then-chief strategist, Steve Bannon, in spring 2017.

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"Innocuous at first blush, its effect would be truly insidious. It would discourage noncitizens and their citizen family members from responding to the census, resulting in a less accurate population count," California Attorney General Xavier Becerra and Secretary of State Alex Padilla wrote in the San Francisco Chronicle in March. Becerra and Padilla also described the question as "illegal" and as "an extraordinary attempt by the Trump administration to hijack the 2020 census for political purposes."

By contrast, Ross argued at the time that "the Department's review demonstrated that the collection of citizenship data by the Census has been a long-standing historical practice. Prior decennial census surveys of the entire United States population consistently asked citizenship questions up until 1950, and Census Bureau surveys of sample populations continue to ask citizenship questions to this day."

As Slate's Mark Joseph Stern explains, the Trump administration has Justice Neil Gorsuch to thank for the temporary victory:

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