U.S. Supreme Court to examine birthright citizenship Wednesday
The justices will weigh a challenge to Trump’s order after lower courts blocked it, with as many as 250,000 babies a year potentially affected, Reuters reported.
- On Wednesday, the Supreme Court hears oral arguments in Trump v. Barbara, challenging President Donald Trump's January 20, 2025 executive order that seeks to end birthright citizenship for children born to parents present illegally or temporarily.
- President Trump signed Executive Order 14160 on his first day back in office, asserting the 14th Amendment's 'subject to the jurisdiction thereof' clause does not automatically grant citizenship to children of parents without legal status.
- Citing the 1898 Supreme Court precedent in United States v. Wong Kim Ark, lower courts have uniformly blocked the policy, ruling birthright citizenship applies to children of non-citizens domiciled in the United States.
- Implementation could create a 'tidal wave of legal confusion and chaos,' according to Jill Habig, CEO of Public Rights Project, potentially affecting more than one-quarter of a million babies born annually.
- A final decision from the Supreme Court is expected by late June or early July, determining whether birthright citizenship will be upheld or restricted under the 14th Amendment's citizenship clause.
288 Articles
288 Articles
If you are born in the USA, you automatically get your citizenship. Actually, the Supreme Court made this clear more than a hundred years ago. President Trump doesn't care.One of the most explosive cases of the past years is being negotiated before the Supreme Court: Are children automatically US citizens when they are born in the United States of America – even if their parents are not legal in the country? US President Donald Trump says: No. B…
In their words: What judges have said about birthright citizenship
WASHINGTON — Federal courts have uniformly blocked President Donald Trump’s order seeking to end birthright citizenship for children born in the United States to someone in the country illegally or temporarily. The Supreme Court is hearing arguments Wednesday in the Trump administration’s appeal of a ruling by a federal judge in New Hampshire who concluded that the executive order the Republican president signed on the first day of his second te…
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