Gays to Be Included in 2020 Census Politics Daily
October 26, 2009
The U.S. Census, which said in June that it would
try to include same-sex couples in next year's
national head count, announced today that it won't
happen until 2020.
The decision to delay the count was made because
of concerns about accuracy. The "evolving legal
state" of gay marriage across the country led Census
officials to determine that it's too soon to include
same-sex couples in the overall snapshot of marital
status in America, Gary Gates, a UCLA demographer
and Bureau adviser, told the Associated Press.
Just as they were in 2000, gay married couples
will be included in the category for unmarried
partners. But for the first time, the Census will
provide a separate set of data on same-sex couples
"who described themselves as married." That
information will be available on a state-by-state
basis, a decision Gates said was "less about
politics and more about accurate data."
Gay advocates are urging same-sex couples to
participate in the census, noting that the numbers
are used in the fight for marriage rights and to
show representatives in Washington how many gay
constituents they have.
The decision to count married same-sex couples
reverses an earlier decision made under President
Bush.