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Rhode Island Gov. Will Oversee End of 2020 Census

President-elect Joe Biden has selected Gina Raimondo to serve as Commerce secretary, which will put her in charge of the 2020 Census closure and economic recovery from the pandemic-driven recession.

Rhode Island Governor Gina Raimondo.
Rhode Island Governor Gina Raimondo. (David Kidd/Governing)
David Kidd
(TNS) — President-elect Joe Biden will nominate Rhode Island Gov. Gina Raimondo to serve as his Commerce secretary, according to several news reports last Thursday.

Raimondo, if confirmed, would oversee the end of a historically challenged decennial census as well as economic recovery from the coronavirus pandemic. 

The Washington Post, New York Times and CNN reported the decision Thursday without naming sources. Members of Biden’s transition team and the governor’s office could not be immediately reached for comment.

One of Raimondo’s first decisions on the job would regard how to handle the results of last year’s decennial census. The coronavirus pandemic as well as decisions by the Trump administration hampered efforts to count everyone in the country, resulting in a shortened census schedule and a blown end-of-year statutory deadline for delivering apportionment results. As the Census Bureau, which the Commerce Department oversees, trudges through errors in hundreds of thousands of records, it anticipates being ready to deliver apportionment results shortly after Biden takes office on Jan. 20.

Census officials previously asked for a 120-day extension to deliver apportionment results. However, the Trump administration abandoned that push amid an effort to exclude undocumented immigrants from the apportionment process, an effort Biden has criticized.

Raimondo would also be responsible for making decisions about how to handle undocumented immigrants included in census results as well as President Donald Trump’s effort to have the Census Bureau produce detailed information about the population of voting-age citizens in the United States.

Raimondo would take over from current Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross, who has served throughout the entirety of Trump’s term. Ross frequently clashed with Congress over the administration of the decennial census, including in his failed effort to add a citizenship question to the questionnaire.

A former venture capitalist, Raimondo became the first female governor of Rhode Island with her election in 2014, and she won reelection in 2018. State law limits the governor to two consecutive terms.

Prior to her gubernatorial run, Raimondo was the second woman to serve as the state’s general treasurer, a position she held from 2011 to 2015. She also served as chair of the Democratic Governors Association in 2019.

Raimondo’s departure from Rhode Island would leave an opening for a potential gubernatorial run by one of the state’s two representatives in the U.S. House, Democrats David Cicilline and Jim Langevin. Census Bureau projections indicate the state could lose one of its congressional seats.

With a 50-50 split in the Senate, Biden cannot afford to lose many votes from his caucus in confirming his Cabinet picks.

The progressive organization Demand Progress called Raimondo the wrong pick for the job, saying in a press release Thursday that “Raimondo has a long history of prioritizing the needs of Wall Street above those of working Rhode Islanders.” Demand Progress and other groups criticized cuts she proposed to the state’s aid for low-income residents, as well as hikes in the health insurance rate.

(c)2021 CQ Roll Call. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC

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