Supreme Court appears skeptical of Trump’s attempt to limit birthright citizenship
WASHINGTON (NBC News) — Tackling one of President Donald Trump's most provocative policies, members of the Supreme Court on Wednesday expressed skepticism about the lawfulness of his proposal to limit the constitutional guarantee of birthright citizenship for anyone born on U.S. soil.
Announced on the first day of Trump’s second term in office as part of his hard-line immigration policy, the executive order at issue would limit birthright citizenship to people who have at least one parent who is a U.S. citizen or a permanent resident.
As a result, babies born to temporary visitors who entered the country legally or to people who entered illegally would not be citizens at birth.
Trump attended the oral argument in person, a first for a sitting president, but left before it ended. "We are the only Country in the World STUPID enough to allow 'Birthright' Citizenship!" he wrote in a Truth Social post soon after.
Trump's executive order upends the traditional understanding of a provision of the Constitution’s 14th Amendment known as the citizenship clause.
“All persons born or naturalized in the United States, and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the United States,” it states.
Amid discussion of how the issue of mass illegal immigration was not anticipated at the time the amendment became law, conservative Chief Justice John Roberts and others pushed back on the government's new interpretation.
"It's a new world. It's the same Constitution," Roberts told Sauer.
The clause, ratified with the 14th Amendment after the Civil War to provide equal rights to formerly enslaved Black people, has long been assumed by officials at all levels of the government to apply to almost anyone born in the United States, regardless of the legal status of their parents.
The few exceptions understood at the time included children born to diplomats and foreign invaders.
Trump’s executive order was immediately blocked by courts around the country and has never been in effect.
Conservative Justice Neil Gorsuch, addressing Sauer's reliance on citizenship being conditioned on someone being a long-term resident of the United States, pointed out that at the time of the 14th Amendment's ratification, that would not have turned on whether someone had entered the country legally.
"If somebody showed up here in 1868 and established domicile, that was perfectly fine," he said. "And so why wouldn't we, even if we were to apply your own test, come to the conclusion that the fact that someone might be illegal is immaterial."
Justice Amy Coney Barrett, another conservative, also poked holes in Sauer's approach, questioning how his assertion that the children of slaves brought to the United States unlawfully would be citizens under the 14th Amendment was consistent with the rest of his argument.
“How would that apply to the children of illegally trafficked people today?” she added.
Sauer, referring to the parents, said that it would depend on whether "their presence is lawful," not how they entered the country.
Liberal Justice Elena Kagan suggested Sauer was relying on "pretty obscure sources" to make his arguments.
"The text of the clause, I think, does not support you. I think you're sort of looking for some more technical, esoteric meaning," she added.
Even conservative Justice Clarence Thomas, often a reliable vote for Trump, asked Sauer to "be more specific" when raising the question of how the 14th Amendment was intended to repudiate the notorious 1857 Dred Scott ruling that said Black slaves were not citizens.
he administration’s legal argument focuses on the “subject to the jurisdiction thereof” language in the citizenship clause, saying it has a much broader meaning than hitherto believed.
Sauer argued in court papers that the citizenship clause was intended to apply primarily to the children of free slaves. People must be under the direct “political jurisdiction” of the U.S. and not have any allegiance to another country, he wrote.
The American Civil Liberties Union, which is leading the legal challenge to Trump’s executive order, responded in its brief that the text of the 14th Amendment is largely self-explanatory, as are the history and tradition of how it has been interpreted.
The group’s lawyers also point to an 1898 Supreme Court ruling called United States v. Wong Kim Ark, which concluded that a man born in San Francisco to parents who were both from China was a U.S. citizen.
In addition to probing the language of the 14th Amendment, the justices also probed whether the executive order falls afoul of a federal immigration law that uses similar language, including "subject to the jurisdiction thereof." The court could rule that the executive order is unlawful under that law without having to decide the 14th Amendment question and put the onus on Congress to act.
The Supreme Court has a 6-3 conservative majority, which repeatedly ruled in Trump’s favor last year. But the court handed him a major defeat in February when it ruled that his broad use of tariffs was unlawful.
Trump responded to that ruling with harsh criticism of the justices who voted against him in the 6-3 decision, calling them “disloyal to the Constitution.”