The Supreme Court will hear oral arguments in May regarding President Donald Trump’s executive order limiting birthright citizenship.
Signed on his first day in office, the order reinterprets the 14th Amendment to deny automatic U.S. citizenship to children born to non-legal residents.
Lower courts blocked the order, and appeals courts upheld those decisions. The Justice Department filed emergency appeals, prompting the Supreme Court to take the unusual step of scheduling a late-term hearing.
Trump argues the 14th Amendment was intended for formerly enslaved individuals, not for children of undocumented immigrants or tourists. He claims many legal scholars support his view.
The administration contends that people not lawfully in the U.S. are still under their home country’s jurisdiction, thus not qualifying for birthright citizenship under the Constitution.
BREAKING: Supreme Court says it will hold oral arguments on Trump's birthright citizenship restrictions on May 15. #SCOTUS
pic.twitter.com/t5ZKdo48kjAdvertisement— Jimmy Hoover (@JimmyHooverDC) April 17, 2025
Trump was told that the SCOTUS would start hearing oral arguments on his Birthright Citizenship case.
"They use it for people who come into our country… and all of a sudden they become citizens."
Trump is correct. The left has distorted it to help facilitate their mass… pic.twitter.com/Ny3QRhkxI8
— Gunther Eagleman™ (@GuntherEagleman) April 17, 2025