Object
Statistical Sampling (census methodology — policy concept)
A proposed statistical sampling method for conducting the decennial census, invoked as a procedural alternative to traditional door‑to‑door enumeration. The method lacks a single physical artifact in the Roosevelt Room; it manifests through briefing memos, amendment language, and urgent oral argument. Characters defend or attack sampling with legal citations, gestures toward unseen charts, and appeals to fairness. Its presence sharpens constitutional rhetoric and visibly shifts the room’s emotional temperature as lawmakers weigh abstract technique against concrete human consequences.
0 appearances
Purpose
To estimate total population counts for apportionment and legislative purposes by drawing representative samples rather than enumerating every household.
Significance
Functions as the episode’s central policy flashpoint: a procedural and moral lever that fractures partisan alignment, provokes constitutional reading (Article I, Section 2), and precipitates Joe Willis’s pivotal choice to abandon the anti‑sampling amendment — preserving the bill and reframing fairness in the debate.
Appearances in the Narrative
When this object appears and how it's used
No events recorded for this object