Supreme Court Upholds Birthright Citizenship Against Trump Order
The United States Supreme Court decisively upheld the principle of birthright citizenship, thwarting former President Donald Trump's executive order aimed at denying citizenship to children born to non-citizen parents in the United States. The 6-3 decision reinforced a fundamental element intrinsic to the US identity, embedded within the 14th Amendment, that confers citizenship to those born on American soil.
This judicial rebuke represents a significant setback for Trump's immigration policies. The President's directive sought to narrow the interpretation of the Citizenship Clause, thereby excluding newborns of non-citizen parents from automatic citizenship—a move positioned as essential in his broader immigration crackdown.
The court's ruling was driven by arguments highlighting the constitutional language, which stipulates the jurisdiction and, by extension, the rights of those born in the US. Legal experts had highlighted that a successful implementation of Trump's order could have compromised the citizenship status of up to 250,000 newborns annually, with substantial implications for families across the nation. The case marks a meaningful reinforcement of judicial oversight over executive actions perceived to overstep constitutional bounds.