Reuters/Ipsos Poll Finds 64% Oppose Ending Birthright Citizenship
The Reuters/Ipsos survey of 4,557 U.S. adults found 64% oppose ending birthright citizenship as the Supreme Court weighs Trump’s order.
- A recent Reuters/Ipsos poll found 64% of Americans oppose ending birthright citizenship, while 32% support the change in a nationwide survey conducted April 15–20.
- President Donald Trump ordered an end to birthright citizenship in January 2025, sparking a legal challenge now before the Supreme Court that tests his hardline immigration agenda.
- Public perception is split along party lines, with 62% of Republicans supporting an end to birthright citizenship and 36% favoring keeping it, while only 9% of Democrats support scrapping the policy.
- The high court, which has a 6-3 conservative majority, appeared unlikely to side with Trump during an April 1 oral argument, with justices expected to issue a ruling by the end of June.
- Justices are poised to rule in coming weeks on polarizing issues from immigration policy to mail-in ballot rules, decisions that could define the administration's legacy and shape the November 3 midterm elections.
10 Articles
10 Articles
As US high court prepares ruling, Americans oppose ending birthright citizenship, Reuters/Ipsos poll finds
A majority of Americans believe all babies born in the country should automatically be granted citizenship, as the U.S. Supreme Court prepares to rule on President Donald Trump's effort to end the practice.
Majority of US citizens oppose abolishing birthright citizenship - pollA poll found that 64% of Americans oppose abolishing birthright citizenship. Also, 67% support banning transgender people from women's sports.
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Bias Distribution
- 50% of the sources are Center, 50% of the sources lean Right
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