Supreme Court Rules on Birthright Citizenship
The Supreme Court has ruled in favor of birthright citizenship, affirming constitutional protections for those born on US soil. This decision impacts immigration policy and citizenship rights. (sources: bbc, dw, aljazeera, npr, theguardian)

The Supreme Court ruled 6-3 to uphold birthright citizenship, rejecting an executive order aimed at changing citizenship guarantees. The ruling confirms that nearly all individuals born in the US are automatically citizens.
- The Supreme Court's decision is a significant setback for immigration policy efforts associated with a previous administration.
- The ruling affirms that individuals born on US soil are entitled to citizenship under the Constitution.
- Civil rights groups have expressed support for the ruling.
Why it matters
This ruling reinforces constitutional protections for citizenship and shapes future immigration policy.
↓ Congress can act on this
8 bills on this issue are moving right now — and the most active one is H.R.1526: NORRA of 2025 No Rogue Rulings Act of 2025.
H.R.1526 · 119th Congress
NORRA of 2025 No Rogue Rulings Act of 2025
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About this bill
What H.R.1526 actually does
This story is about US top court backs birthright citizenship in rebuke to Trump. this bill would legislatively narrow district co.
If passed, it would:
- Restrict when district courts can issue broad injunctions against federal policy • Shift more disputes over nationwide relief into a tighter statutory framework.
7 other bills moving on this issue
Take action on any of them individually.
This story is about US top court backs birthright citizenship in rebuke to Trump. This bill would block federal agencies from spending money to implement EO 14160.
If passed, it would
- Block federal agencies from spending money to implement EO 14160 • Force the issue back into normal legislation and litigation rather than executive implementation.
This story is about US top court backs birthright citizenship in rebuke to Trump. This bill would bar federal funds from implementing EO 14160.
If passed, it would
- Bar federal funds from implementing EO 14160 • Create a Senate vehicle for opposition to the order itself, not just to court procedure.
This story is about US top court backs birthright citizenship in rebuke to Trump. This bill would limit automatic citizenship at birth to children with a U.S.-citizen/national parent, an LPR parent.
If passed, it would
- Limit automatic citizenship at birth to children with a U.S.-citizen/national parent, an LPR parent • Leave people born before enactment unaffected.
This story is about US top court backs birthright citizenship in rebuke to Trump. This bill would prohibit federal courts from issuing national injunctions in many situations.
If passed, it would
- Prohibit federal courts from issuing national injunctions in many situations • Narrow available court remedies against future executive actions.
This story is about US top court backs birthright citizenship in rebuke to Trump. This bill would limit automatic citizenship at birth to children meeting the bill’s parental-status tests.
If passed, it would
- Limit automatic citizenship at birth to children meeting the bill’s parental-status tests • Preserve the status of people born before enactment.
This story is about US top court backs birthright citizenship in rebuke to Trump. This bill would limit birthright citizenship to people born to a U.S.-citizen parent or lawful permanent resident parent.
If passed, it would
- Limit birthright citizenship to people born to a U.S.-citizen parent or lawful permanent resident parent • Apply only to people born after enactment.
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