Trump plans to attend oral arguments in Supreme Court birthright citizenship case - NBC News
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The Bottom Line
Trump will attend Supreme Court arguments on whether birthright citizenship should be curtailed, signaling this immigration case is a priority.
How This Affects You
If the Court rules against birthright citizenship, millions of children born in the U.S. to non-citizen parents could lose automatic citizenship rights, affecting future immigration status and eligibility for benefits.
AI Summary
President Trump plans to attend oral arguments in a Supreme Court case challenging birthright citizenship, according to NBC News. The case tests whether the 14th Amendment's citizenship clause automatically grants citizenship to children born in the U.S. to non-citizen parents — a longstanding practice that Trump has signaled he wants to curtail. Presidential attendance at oral arguments is rare and typically signals the administration views the case as a priority. The Trump administration has backed legal challenges to birthright citizenship as part of its immigration enforcement agenda. A decision against birthright citizenship would represent a significant shift in citizenship law with major implications for immigration policy.
What's Being Done
The Trump administration has backed legal challenges to birthright citizenship as part of its immigration enforcement agenda.
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Trump suggests he will attend birthright citizenship arguments at Supreme Court - Politico
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Who is an American? The Supreme Court will decide
President Trump claims that there is no automatic guarantee to birthright citizenship in the Constitution. But, will that claim hold up in court?
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