Story Highlights
- Trump’s executive order, signed January 20, 2025, sought to deny birthright citizenship to children of undocumented immigrants and those on temporary visas, but has been blocked by courts since January 23, 2025
- The Supreme Court heard oral arguments in Trump v. Barbara on April 1, 2026; a ruling is expected by late June or early July
- Legal analysts say the government’s novel “domicile” theory received a skeptical reception from the justices, suggesting Trump is unlikely to prevail on the merits
What Happened
On his first day back in office, President Donald Trump signed an executive order declaring that birthright citizenship — the principle enshrined in the 14th Amendment that all persons born on U.S. soil are citizens — does not apply to children born to parents who are in the country without authorization or on temporary visas. The order was immediately challenged in multiple federal courts, and within three days a judge issued a block preventing its enforcement. Every court to consider the order on its merits has ruled it unconstitutional.
After the Supreme Court’s June 2025 ruling in Trump v. CASA — which limited the scope of nationwide injunctions — new lawsuits were filed as class actions that could more effectively protect affected individuals. In December 2025, the Supreme Court agreed to take up Barbara v. Trump, a class-action case filed in New Hampshire, and fast-tracked the case for a spring argument. Oral arguments were held April 1, 2026, with the court expecting to issue a decision before its summer recess.
The government’s central legal argument is that the 14th Amendment’s phrase “subject to the jurisdiction thereof” limits birthright citizenship to those with permanent legal residency or domicile in the United States. Under this theory, children born to parents who are temporarily present — whether on tourist visas, student visas, or without authorization — are not fully “subject to the jurisdiction” of the United States. Solicitor General D. John Sauer argued this position before the court on April 1.
Legal scholars and the court’s questioning appeared deeply skeptical of the government’s theory. The Supreme Court’s 1898 decision in Wong Kim Ark established a broad interpretation of the citizenship clause, holding that children born on U.S. soil to alien parents are citizens regardless of parental status. Immigration law scholar César GarcÃa Hernández, analyzing the oral arguments, concluded that the government’s argument depends on a novel interpretation of “domicile” that finds no clear support in the 14th Amendment’s text or its post-Civil War ratification history.
Why It Matters
The 14th Amendment’s citizenship guarantee was forged in the aftermath of the Civil War specifically to repudiate the Supreme Court’s infamous Dred Scott decision, which had held that Black Americans — whether enslaved or free — could never be citizens. Its drafters deliberately chose language broad enough to make citizenship a birthright of soil rather than ancestry or parental legal status. A ruling that narrows that guarantee by importing a domicile or legal status requirement would be the most significant revision to the amendment’s meaning since its ratification.
For the approximately 200,000 children born each year in the United States to undocumented or temporary-status parents, the stakes are existential. Without birthright citizenship, these children would be born stateless in many cases — their parents’ home countries may not recognize them as citizens, and the United States would deny them citizenship as well. That outcome creates a practical and humanitarian crisis without precedent in modern American history.
The decision also carries immediate practical consequences for healthcare, education, and social services. As researchers at Georgetown University have documented, birthright citizenship is integral to a seamless healthcare coverage framework for newborns. Hospitals, Medicaid systems, and pediatric providers operate on the assumption that babies born in the United States are automatically eligible for coverage. Eroding that assumption would leave newborns without insurance coverage at the most medically critical hours of their lives.
Economic and Global Context
Birthright citizenship has economic dimensions that extend well beyond immigration policy. The United States has historically benefited from a robust culture of immigrant entrepreneurship. Children of immigrants — including those born to temporary workers and undocumented parents — have contributed disproportionately to American innovation and economic productivity. Restricting the pathway to citizenship for children born on U.S. soil would alter the incentives that draw skilled workers and their families to the country.
Internationally, the United States is among a minority of developed nations that practices unconditional jus soli — birthright citizenship based purely on place of birth. Canada and Mexico also practice it; most European nations do not. A ruling that narrows American birthright citizenship would move the United States toward a jus sanguinis system — citizenship by blood and ancestry — more common in Europe and Asia. That shift could affect how international businesses and governments perceive the United States as a destination for workers, families, and long-term settlement.
From a fiscal standpoint, the administrative costs of implementing a two-tier system of birth documentation — tracking parental immigration status at the moment of delivery for every birth in the country — would be substantial. States, counties, and hospital systems would need new verification infrastructure. The cascading effects on state and local government systems, which rely on clear citizenship determination at birth for benefits eligibility and school enrollment, have not been fully modeled.
Implications
Legal analysts across the political spectrum widely expect the court to rule against Trump on the merits. The oral argument signaled that even justices who have sided with the administration on other immigration matters are skeptical of the government’s domicile theory. If the court rules in Cook’s favor — striking down the executive order as unconstitutional — the decision will reaffirm the broad 14th Amendment citizenship guarantee and make clear that it cannot be narrowed by executive order.
A ruling against Trump on birthright citizenship would arrive in the pre-midterm political environment, adding to the administration’s legal setbacks. Democrats would immediately frame the ruling as a vindication of constitutional rights against executive overreach, and it would energize Latino and immigrant-community voters heading into November. The administration would almost certainly push Congress to attempt a statutory or even constitutional amendment process — both of which face long odds.
If, against expectations, the court upholds the executive order — even in a narrow form — it would trigger an immediate cascade of litigation over which children born after the ruling are affected, how states must respond, and how birth registration systems across the country must change. Hospital systems, pediatric advocates, and state attorneys general are already preparing for that contingency. The ruling, whatever its direction, will be one of the most debated constitutional decisions since United States v. Wong Kim Ark over 125 years ago.
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