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Tuesday, January 21, 2025

Surprise! Democrat-Led States Sue to Stop Trump’s ‘Birthright Citizenship’ Order

'Radical Leftists can either choose to swim against the tide and reject the overwhelming will of the people, or they can get on board and work with President Trump...'

(Headline USAAttorneys general from 22 states sued Tuesday to block President Donald Trump’s move to end a century-old immigration practice known as “birthright citizenship” guaranteeing that U.S.-born children are citizens regardless of their parents’ status.

Trump’s roughly 700-word executive order, issued late Monday, amounts to a fulfillment of something he’s talked about during the presidential campaign. But whether it succeeds is far from certain amid what is likely to be a lengthy legal battle over the president’s immigration policies and a constitutional right to citizenship.

At issue is the right to citizenship granted to anyone born in the U.S., regardless of their parents’ immigration status.

Currently, the U.S. is among about 30 countries that applied the principle of jus soli or “right of the soil” for anyone born in the country.

That means those in the United States on a tourist or other visa or in the country illegally can become the parents of a citizen if their child is born here.

Most other countries confer citizenship based on whether at least one parent—jus sanguinis, or “right of blood”—is a citizen, or have a modified form of birthright citizenship that may restrict automatic citizenship to children of parents who are on their territory legally.

With Democrats now having decided that they will no longer enforce border security, the automatic citizenship is one of the ways to entice illegals in order to permanently shift the demographic and, in theory, import more Democrat voters within a generation—if not sooner.

Although they have nominally denied pursuing the so-called Great Replacement to secure permanent majorities and push the populus farther left, their actions during the Biden administration belie their true intentions.

Revoking the promise of automatic citizenship could help Trump achieve his professed mass deportation objectives through attrition, avoiding the costly expenses of having to involve Immigration and Customs Enforcement.

But open-border activists maintain that the birthright citizenship is enshrined in the 14th Amendment to the Constitution, which was intended to clarify the citizenship status of former slaves after the Civil War.

Trump’s order questions whether the plain language of the 14th Amendment extends citizenship automatically to anyone born in the United States, despite the fact that it has traditionally been interpreted as such.

Ratified in 1868, in the aftermath of the Civil War, the 14th Amendment says: “All persons born or naturalized in the United States and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the United States and of the State wherein they reside.”

Trump’s order asserts that the children of noncitizens are not subject to the jurisdiction of the United States.

It excludes the following people from automatic citizenship: those whose mothers were not legally in the United States and whose fathers were not U.S. citizens or lawful permanent residents, and people whose mothers were in the country legally but on a temporary basis and whose fathers were not citizens or legal permanent residents.

It goes on to bar federal agencies from recognizing the citizenship of people in those categories. It takes effect 30 days from Tuesday, on Feb. 19.

It’s not clear whether the order would retroactively affect birthright citizens. It says that federal agencies “shall” not issue citizenship documents to the people it excludes or accept other documents from states or local governments.

The Democratic attorneys general and immigrant rights advocates say the question of birthright citizenship is settled law.

“The president cannot, with a stroke of a pen, write the 14th Amendment out of existence, period,” New Jersey Attorney General Matt Platkin said.

The White House said it’s ready to face the states in court and called the lawsuits “nothing more than an extension of the Left’s resistance.”

“Radical Leftists can either choose to swim against the tide and reject the overwhelming will of the people, or they can get on board and work with President Trump,” White House deputy press secretary Harrison Fields said.

Connecticut Attorney General William Tong, a U.S. citizen by birthright and the nation’s first Chinese American elected attorney general, said the lawsuit was personal for him.

“The 14th Amendment says what it means, and it means what it says—if you are born on American soil, you are an American. Period. Full stop,” he said.

“There is no legitimate legal debate on this question,” he continued. “But the fact that Trump is dead wrong will not prevent him from inflicting serious harm right now on American families like my own.”

The 14th Amendment did not always guarantee birthright citizenship to all U.S.-born people. Congress did not authorize citizenship for all Native Americans born in the United States until 1924.

In 1898, an important birthright citizenship case unfolded in the U.S. Supreme Court. The court held that Wong Kim Ark, who was born in San Francisco to Chinese immigrants, was a U.S. citizen because he was born in the country. After a trip abroad, he had faced denied reentry by the federal government on the grounds that he wasn’t a citizen under the Chinese Exclusion Act.

But some advocates of immigration restrictions have argued that while the case clearly applied to children born to parents who are both legal immigrants, it’s less clear whether it applies to children born to parents without legal status.

In addition to the states, the District of Columbia and San Francisco, open-border activist groups are also suing to stop Trump’s order.

Chapters of the American Civil Liberties Union in New Hampshire, Maine and Massachusetts along with other immigrant rights advocates filed a suit in New Hampshire federal court.

The suit asks the court to find the order to be unconstitutional. It highlights the case of a woman identified as “Carmen,” who is pregnant but is not a citizen. The lawsuit says she has lived in the United States for more than 15 years and has a pending visa application that could lead to permanent status. She has no other immigration status, and the father of her expected child has no immigration status either, the suit says.

“Stripping children of the ‘priceless treasure’ of citizenship is a grave injury,” the suit says. “It denies them the full membership in U.S. society to which they are entitled.”

In addition to New Jersey and the two cities, California, Massachusetts, Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, Hawaii, Maine, Maryland, Michigan, Minnesota, Nevada, New Mexico, New York, North Carolina, Rhode Island, Vermont, and Wisconsin joined the lawsuit to stop the order.

Arizona, Illinois, Oregon and Washington filed a separate suit in federal court challenging Trump’s order as well.

Adapted from reporting by the Associated Press

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