citizenship · USA · Trump (гражданство · сша · трамп)
On Tuesday, the Supreme Court ruled that President Trump's executive order restricting automatic citizenship by birth is unconstitutional. The U.S. Supreme Court has struck down Trump's order limiting birthright citizenship.
Consensus
- The Supreme Court of the United States ruled that President Donald Trump's executive order limiting birthright citizenship was unconstitutional.
- The decision was made by a majority vote of six justices to three.
- The ruling invalidated an interpretation of the 14th Amendment that would have denied automatic citizenship to children born in the U.S. if their parents were not lawful residents or citizens.
Points of divergence
- The Supreme Court's decision was published on its official website and included a written opinion by Chief Justice John Roberts stating that citizenship is a right to participate in the political community, as intended by the framers of the 14th Amendment. — vedomosti
- The Trump administration filed a case with the Supreme Court in September 2025 seeking review of the constitutionality of the executive order. — vedomosti
- A federal district judge had previously issued a preliminary injunction blocking the implementation of the order until further notice, and the administration later strengthened immigration rules for green card applications in May 2026. — vedomosti
- President Trump anticipated that the Supreme Court would not support his position and warned it could lead to an economic catastrophe with 25% of people entering the country through birthright citizenship. — interfax
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