Supreme Court upholds birthright citizenship ruling
The Supreme Court confirmed the constitutional guarantee of birthright citizenship, rejecting an executive order aimed at limiting this right. Reactions from various stakeholders highlight differing views on the ruling's implications. (sources: aljazeera, cbsnews, axios, abcnews)

The Supreme Court voted 6-3 to uphold birthright citizenship, striking down an executive order from Trump that sought to limit this right. Reactions include praise from civil rights advocates and disappointment from some lawmakers.
- The Supreme Court upheld the Constitution's guarantee of birthright citizenship.
- The court's decision struck down an executive order from Trump that aimed to end birthright citizenship.
- Norman Wong, a descendant of Wong Kim Ark, described the ruling as a victory for America.
- NAACP general counsel Kristen Clarke expressed support for the ruling, emphasizing its significance.
Why it matters
The ruling reinforces the legal framework surrounding birthright citizenship in the United States.
↓ Congress can act on this
5 bills on this issue are moving right now — and the most active one is HR3368: Born in the USA Act of 2025.
HR3368 · 119th Congress
Born in the USA Act of 2025
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About this bill
What HR3368 actually does
This story is about US Supreme Court upholds birthright citizenship: Who wins, who loses?. This bill would make Congress, not the executive branch alone, decide whether agencies would spend money on this policy.
If passed, it would:
- It would make Congress, not the executive branch alone, decide whether agencies can spend money on this policy.
4 other bills moving on this issue
Take action on any of them individually.
This story is about US Supreme Court upholds birthright citizenship: Who wins, who loses?. This bill would they would limit automatic citizenship mainly to children with a citizen/national parent, an LPR parent.
If passed, it would
- They would limit automatic citizenship mainly to children with a citizen/national parent, an LPR parent.
This story is about US Supreme Court upholds birthright citizenship: Who wins, who loses?. This bill would narrow birthright citizenship under federal law.
If passed, it would
- They would give lawmakers another statutory vehicle to revisit the issue after the Court’s decision.
This story is about US Supreme Court upholds birthright citizenship: Who wins, who loses?. This bill would apply prospectively to people born after enactment.
If passed, it would
- It would apply prospectively to people born after enactment.
This story is about US Supreme Court upholds birthright citizenship: Who wins, who loses?. This bill would restrict automatic citizenship at birth to children with a U.S. national parent, a permanent resident parent.
If passed, it would
- It would restrict automatic citizenship at birth to children with a U.S. national parent, a permanent resident parent.
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