US Supreme Court ruling on birthright citizenship
The Supreme Court has ruled against an executive order aimed at ending birthright citizenship. This decision has implications for the interpretation of the 14th Amendment. (sources: theguardian, foxnews, cbsnews)

The Supreme Court issued a 6-3 ruling that struck down an executive order related to birthright citizenship. The ruling saw three conservative justices align with the liberal justices on the matter.
- The Supreme Court ruled against an executive order that sought to end birthright citizenship.
- The decision was made with a 6-3 vote, with three conservative justices joining the liberal justices.
- The ruling pertains to the interpretation of the 14th Amendment.
Why it matters
The ruling affects the legal framework surrounding citizenship rights in the United States.
↓ Congress can act on this
5 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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What H.R.1526 actually does
This story is about about the US supreme court ruling on birthright citizenship. This bill would change how lower courts would block federal policies nationwide in futur
4 other bills moving on this issue
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This story is about about the US supreme court ruling on birthright citizenship. This bill would block federal agencies from spending any money to carry out Executive Order 14160
Take action on HR3368 →This story is about about the US supreme court ruling on birthright citizenship. This bill would direct Senate respo
Take action on S304 →This story is about about the US supreme court ruling on birthright citizenship. This bill would block federal agencies from using any money to carry out Executive Order 14160.
Take action on S646 →This story is about about the US supreme court ruling on birthright citizenship. This bill would narrow birthright citizenship under federal law.
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