Wednesday, July 1


The US Supreme Court’s judgment on Tuesday settles the question of birthright citizenship in the country. As one of the first presidential actions in his second term, Donald Trump had circumscribed its ambit. Citizenship to children born after February 15, 2025 to undocumented immigrants and foreign nationals, who were in the US legally but “temporarily,” was denied. The US top court has now preserved the extent of birthright citizenship as understood before the Trump executive order. The court deemed the order “unlawful” in a 6:3 majority and violative of the US constitution in a slim 5:4 majority.

The US top court has now preserved the extent of birthright citizenship as understood before the Trump executive order. The court deemed the order “unlawful” in a 6:3 majority and violative of the US constitution in a slim 5:4 majority. (Bloomberg)
The US top court has now preserved the extent of birthright citizenship as understood before the Trump executive order. The court deemed the order “unlawful” in a 6:3 majority and violative of the US constitution in a slim 5:4 majority. (Bloomberg)

This is significant for two reasons. One, the Trump administration had relied on a narrow interpretation of the 14th Amendment to curtail birthright citizenship and the judgement ends the debate as far as the letter of the law is concerned. Two, the slim majority deeming the order unconstitutional underlines the politicisation of what had largely been a bipartisan consensus — anyone born in the US was a citizen. The conservative judge who deemed the order unlawful as it violated the will of Congress when the 14th Amendment was passed simultaneously didn’t see it as violative of the country’s constitutional principles. Theoretically, thus, Congress could curtail birthright citizenship by legislating this.

Indeed, Trump has called for Congress to start work on amending the law immediately. Though the Republicans have a very slim majority in Congress at present, the true test for birthright citizenship in the US would be the mid-term elections in November and the influence powerful moderates yield in the Republican Party. India-born mothers, including non-US citizens, account for the third-largest foreign-origin group giving birth in the US. Those born in the US after the Trump cut-off will have to wait before they celebrate.



Source link

Share.
Leave A Reply

Exit mobile version