Welcome to Nationwide Report®
Thursday, December 4, 2025
Nationwide Report
  • States
    • Midwest
      • Illinois
      • Indiana
      • Iowa
      • Kansas
      • Michigan
      • Minnesota
      • Missouri
      • Nebraska
      • North Dakota
      • Ohio
      • South Dakota
      • Wisconsin
    • Northeast
      • Connecticut
      • Maine
      • Massachusetts
      • New Hampshire
      • New Jersey
      • New York
      • Pennsylvania
      • Rhode Island
      • Vermont
    • Southeast
      • Alabama
      • Arkansas
      • Delaware
      • Florida
      • Georgia
      • Kentucky
      • Louisiana
      • Maryland
      • Mississippi
      • North Carolina
      • South Carolina
      • Tennessee
      • Virginia
      • West Virginia
    • Southwest
      • Arizona
      • New Mexico
      • Oklahoma
      • Texas
    • West
      • California
      • Colorado
      • Hawaii
      • Idaho
      • Montana
      • Nevada
      • Oregon
      • Utah
      • Washington
      • Wyoming
  • Breaking News
  • Entertainment
    • All
    • Gaming
    • Music
    • Sports
    Multi-Million Dollar Legal Battle Between K-Pop Agency Attrakt and Warner Music Korea Kicks Off Next Month

    Multi-Million Dollar Legal Battle Between K-Pop Agency Attrakt and Warner Music Korea Kicks Off Next Month

    Metallica Turns It Up to Eleven with New Year-Round SiriusXM Channel

    Metallica Turns It Up to Eleven with New Year-Round SiriusXM Channel

    Vivid Seats Ticket Pre-sales Drop 900,000 in Brutal Q2—Is This A Sign of Things To Come?

    Vivid Seats Ticket Pre-sales Drop 900,000 in Brutal Q2—Is This A Sign of Things To Come?

    BET Indefinitely Suspending Hip-Hop and Soul Train Awards

    BET Indefinitely Suspending Hip-Hop and Soul Train Awards

    Grok AI Tool Accused of Generating Deepfake Taylor Swift Nudes

    Grok AI Tool Accused of Generating Deepfake Taylor Swift Nudes

    Hybe Posts 10% Q2 2025 Revenue Growth as Concerts, Merch, and Weverse Gains Offset a Recorded Music Slip

    Hybe Posts 10% Q2 2025 Revenue Growth as Concerts, Merch, and Weverse Gains Offset a Recorded Music Slip

  • Lifestyle
    • All
    • Food
    • Health
    • Travel
    Hobbs signs order for statewide prescription drug discount program

    Hobbs signs order for statewide prescription drug discount program

    NM Health Department: Drink plenty of water amid early-August heat wave

    NM Health Department: Drink plenty of water amid early-August heat wave

    Trump illegally froze 1,800 NIH medical research grants, Congress’ watchdog says

    Trump illegally froze 1,800 NIH medical research grants, Congress’ watchdog says

    Trump pledges overhaul of school fitness tests

    NM mental health reform committee approves project timeline 

    NM mental health reform committee approves project timeline 

    ‘More paperwork for everyone’: NM Medicaid program braces for more churn

    ‘More paperwork for everyone’: NM Medicaid program braces for more churn

  • Resources
    • Find an Accident Report + Claim Consultation
    • Find a Repair Center
    • Law Enforcement Agencies
    • Online Traffic School
  • Tech
    The UK is falling behind in the global race for digital sovereignty

    The UK is falling behind in the global race for digital sovereignty

    Cybersecurity must be a top priority for businesses from beginning to end

    Cybersecurity must be a top priority for businesses from beginning to end

    Gemini AI can turn prompts into picture books, but I still prefer Paddington

    Gemini AI can turn prompts into picture books, but I still prefer Paddington

    Grok rolls out AI video creator for X with bonus “spicy” mode

    Grok rolls out AI video creator for X with bonus “spicy” mode

    Can you run OpenAI’s new gpt-oss AI models on your laptop or phone? Here’s what you’ll need and how to do it

    Can you run OpenAI’s new gpt-oss AI models on your laptop or phone? Here’s what you’ll need and how to do it

    This 10,000mAh power brick is incredibly small and impressively sweet-colored – and yes, we want one

    This 10,000mAh power brick is incredibly small and impressively sweet-colored – and yes, we want one

Nationwide Report
  • States
    • Midwest
      • Illinois
      • Indiana
      • Iowa
      • Kansas
      • Michigan
      • Minnesota
      • Missouri
      • Nebraska
      • North Dakota
      • Ohio
      • South Dakota
      • Wisconsin
    • Northeast
      • Connecticut
      • Maine
      • Massachusetts
      • New Hampshire
      • New Jersey
      • New York
      • Pennsylvania
      • Rhode Island
      • Vermont
    • Southeast
      • Alabama
      • Arkansas
      • Delaware
      • Florida
      • Georgia
      • Kentucky
      • Louisiana
      • Maryland
      • Mississippi
      • North Carolina
      • South Carolina
      • Tennessee
      • Virginia
      • West Virginia
    • Southwest
      • Arizona
      • New Mexico
      • Oklahoma
      • Texas
    • West
      • California
      • Colorado
      • Hawaii
      • Idaho
      • Montana
      • Nevada
      • Oregon
      • Utah
      • Washington
      • Wyoming
  • Breaking News
  • Entertainment
    • All
    • Gaming
    • Music
    • Sports
    Multi-Million Dollar Legal Battle Between K-Pop Agency Attrakt and Warner Music Korea Kicks Off Next Month

    Multi-Million Dollar Legal Battle Between K-Pop Agency Attrakt and Warner Music Korea Kicks Off Next Month

    Metallica Turns It Up to Eleven with New Year-Round SiriusXM Channel

    Metallica Turns It Up to Eleven with New Year-Round SiriusXM Channel

    Vivid Seats Ticket Pre-sales Drop 900,000 in Brutal Q2—Is This A Sign of Things To Come?

    Vivid Seats Ticket Pre-sales Drop 900,000 in Brutal Q2—Is This A Sign of Things To Come?

    BET Indefinitely Suspending Hip-Hop and Soul Train Awards

    BET Indefinitely Suspending Hip-Hop and Soul Train Awards

    Grok AI Tool Accused of Generating Deepfake Taylor Swift Nudes

    Grok AI Tool Accused of Generating Deepfake Taylor Swift Nudes

    Hybe Posts 10% Q2 2025 Revenue Growth as Concerts, Merch, and Weverse Gains Offset a Recorded Music Slip

    Hybe Posts 10% Q2 2025 Revenue Growth as Concerts, Merch, and Weverse Gains Offset a Recorded Music Slip

  • Lifestyle
    • All
    • Food
    • Health
    • Travel
    Hobbs signs order for statewide prescription drug discount program

    Hobbs signs order for statewide prescription drug discount program

    NM Health Department: Drink plenty of water amid early-August heat wave

    NM Health Department: Drink plenty of water amid early-August heat wave

    Trump illegally froze 1,800 NIH medical research grants, Congress’ watchdog says

    Trump illegally froze 1,800 NIH medical research grants, Congress’ watchdog says

    Trump pledges overhaul of school fitness tests

    NM mental health reform committee approves project timeline 

    NM mental health reform committee approves project timeline 

    ‘More paperwork for everyone’: NM Medicaid program braces for more churn

    ‘More paperwork for everyone’: NM Medicaid program braces for more churn

  • Resources
    • Find an Accident Report + Claim Consultation
    • Find a Repair Center
    • Law Enforcement Agencies
    • Online Traffic School
  • Tech
    The UK is falling behind in the global race for digital sovereignty

    The UK is falling behind in the global race for digital sovereignty

    Cybersecurity must be a top priority for businesses from beginning to end

    Cybersecurity must be a top priority for businesses from beginning to end

    Gemini AI can turn prompts into picture books, but I still prefer Paddington

    Gemini AI can turn prompts into picture books, but I still prefer Paddington

    Grok rolls out AI video creator for X with bonus “spicy” mode

    Grok rolls out AI video creator for X with bonus “spicy” mode

    Can you run OpenAI’s new gpt-oss AI models on your laptop or phone? Here’s what you’ll need and how to do it

    Can you run OpenAI’s new gpt-oss AI models on your laptop or phone? Here’s what you’ll need and how to do it

    This 10,000mAh power brick is incredibly small and impressively sweet-colored – and yes, we want one

    This 10,000mAh power brick is incredibly small and impressively sweet-colored – and yes, we want one

Nationwide Report
Home birthright citizenship

Trump’s attack on birthright citizenship to be heard by U.S. Supreme Court

by RSS News
May 14, 2025
in birthright citizenship, D.C. Bureau, immigration, Nick Brown, U.S. Supreme Court, Washington
Reading Time: 6 mins read
Trump’s attack on birthright citizenship to be heard by U.S. Supreme Court
Share on FacebookShare on X

Read MoreThe U.S. Supreme Court on Thursday, May 15, 2025, will hear cases related to President Donald Trump's executive order on birthright citizenship. (Photo by Jane Norman/States Newsroom)

The U.S. Supreme Court on Thursday, May 15, 2025, will hear cases related to President Donald Trump’s executive order on birthright citizenship. (Photo by Jane Norman/States Newsroom)

WASHINGTON — U.S. Supreme Court justices on Thursday are set to hear oral arguments in three cases stemming from the Trump administration’s attempt to end the constitutional right of birthright citizenship — though the focus may be on the power of district court judges to issue orders with national effects.

It’s one of the first major legal fights of the Trump administration’s second term to reach the high court, and one of several immigration-related emergency requests to be considered.

The justices have before them three challenges to President Donald Trump’s executive order to end birthright citizenship, from courts in Maryland, Massachusetts and Washington state. Under birthright citizenship, all children born in the United States are considered citizens, regardless of their parents’ legal status.

But the Trump administration has asked the Supreme Court to focus instead on whether lower court judges can issue nationwide injunctions, rather than the constitutionality of the executive order. Such injunctions affect everyone in the country and not just those involved in the case or living in the court’s district.

It is up to the court alone to decide, though, what it wants to consider, and justices could also wade into the birthright citizenship question.

If birthright citizenship were to be eliminated, more than a quarter of a million children born each year would not be granted U.S. citizenship, according to a new study by the think tank Migration Policy Institute.

It would effectively create a class of 2.7 million stateless people by 2045, according to the study.

The lawyers who will be making oral arguments in court are New Jersey Solicitor General Jeremy Feigenbaum and Kelsi Corkran, Supreme Court director at Georgetown’s Institute for Constitutional Advocacy and Protection.

In briefs, they argue that the Trump administration has not shown it will be harmed by the multiple district courts placing the executive order on hold.

On the core issue of birthright citizenship, in their briefs, they argue that the 14th Amendment “guarantees citizenship to all born in the United States and subject to the jurisdiction thereof” and cite Supreme Court cases that have upheld birthright citizenship to those born in the U.S.

Nine justices, three cases

The nine justices will hear arguments on whether lower courts erred in granting a nationwide pause on the policy that extended beyond the plaintiffs who initially filed the challenge.

Immigrant rights’ groups and several pregnant women in Maryland who are not U.S. citizens filed the case in Maryland; four states — Washington, Arizona, Illinois, and Oregon — filed the case in Washington state; and 18 Democratic state attorneys general filed the challenge in Massachusetts.

Those 18 states are California, Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, Hawaii, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, Nevada, New Mexico, New Jersey, New York, North Carolina, Rhode Island, Vermont and Wisconsin.

Solicitor General D. John Sauer, who will argue on behalf of the Trump administration, has criticized the nationwide injunctions as impeding the executive branch’s authority. 

The Trump administration has contended that it’s unconstitutional for federal judges to issue nationwide injunctions. Instead, the Trump administration said, the injunctions should be limited to those who brought the challenges.

Wong Kim Ark case

On Trump’s Inauguration Day, he signed an executive order, which was originally planned to go into effect Feb. 19, that children born in the United States would not be automatically guaranteed citizenship if their parents were in the country without legal authorization or if they were on a temporary legal basis such as a work or student visa.

Birthright citizenship was adopted in the 14th Amendment of the Constitution in 1868, following the Civil War, to establish citizenship for newly freed Black people. In 1857, in Dred Scott v. Sandford, the Supreme Court initially denied citizenship to Black people, whether they were free or enslaved.

In 1898, the Supreme Court upheld birthright citizenship, when the justices ruled in United States v. Wong Kim Ark that children born in the U.S. are citizens.

In that case, Ark was born in San Francisco, California, to parents who were citizens of the Republic of China, but had a temporary legal authority to be in the country, such as a visa.

When Ark left the U.S. for a trip to China, on his return his citizenship was not recognized and he was denied reentry due to the Chinese Exclusion Act— a racist law designed to restrict and limit nearly all immigration of Chinese nationals.

The high court eventually ruled that children born in the United States to parents who were not citizens automatically become citizens at birth.

In arguments in the lower courts on the current case, attorneys on behalf of the Trump administration argue that the Wong Kim Ark case was misinterpreted and pointed to a phrase in the 14th Amendment: “subject to the jurisdiction.”

The Trump administration contends that phrase means that birthright citizenship only applies to children born to parents who are “subject to the jurisdiction” of the United States. In their view, people in the U.S. without legal status or temporary legal status are “subject to the jurisdiction” of their country of origin.

Tribal sovereignty

Tribal law scholars have noted that the language pertaining to “jurisdiction of” stems from the idea of political alliance when it comes to tribal sovereignty.

It’s from another Supreme Court case involving the U.S. citizenship of American Indian citizens, which the Trump administration focuses on in its argument, citing Elk v. Wilkins in 1884.

In that case, the Supreme Court denied citizenship to John Elk, a Winnebago man living in Omaha, Nebraska, on the grounds that “Indian tribes, being within the territorial limits of the United States, were not, strictly speaking, foreign states; but they were alien nations, distinct political communities.”

Torey Dolan, an assistant professor of law at the University of Wisconsin Law School, said the Trump administration’s reliance on Elk in its birthright citizenship executive order and the idea the political alliance of a parent would then transfer to a child is a misinterpretation.

“A lot of this reliance on Elk is really a distortion,” Dolan said. “I think the administration’s reliance is a stretch, at best, and a bastardization of the case, at worst.”

Dolan, an enrolled citizen of the Choctaw Nation of Oklahoma, said some Native Americans were excluded from citizenship in the 14th Amendment because during that time, Congress would specifically sign treaties with tribes and grant citizenship.

“That is consistent with a long history of Congress creating pathways to Indian citizenship,” she said.

After the justices hear arguments on Thursday, any decision is likely to come before the Supreme Court’s recess in early July. 

This post was originally authored and published by Ariana Figueroa from Washington State Standard via RSS Feed. Join today to get your news feed on Nationwide Report®.

Related Breaking News

Devastating Single-Vehicle Crash on 4633 Sycamore School Road Kills 1 [Fort Worth, TX]

Disastrous Head-On Crash on Missouri Highway 8 near Payne Lane Injures 2 [St Francois County, MO]

Injuries Reported in AC Transit Bus Crash on 68th Avenue and Foothill Boulevard [Oakland, CA]

Alarming Pedestrian Crash on Lincoln Avenue at Georgia Street Injures 1 [Napa, CA]

Robert Hann Arrested in Alarming Hit-and-Run Crash on Main Street and Interstate 70B [Grand Junction, CO]

Nationwide Report®

Nationwide Resources

Nationwide Report® has built a nationwide sponsorship network with those that specialize in accidents, injuries and safe driving.

Accident Reports
Repair Centers
Traffic Schools
Currently Playing

Can You Unscramble These Words? (Quiz)

Can You Unscramble These Words? (Quiz)

00:08:09

Test Your Geography: Guess The Flag!

00:08:20

WWE Quiz: Name That Superstar!

00:08:13

Guess The Logo: From Easy to Hard!

00:08:32

Name That Animal! Missing Letters Game

00:11:12
Sponsored

Nationwide Report® locates and sources news for local areas across the United States. In addition, we offer and connect you to resources in your area.

About

  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Disclaimers
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Use
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Disclaimers
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Use

Daily Newsletter

Join over 4,500 Daily Subscribers!

  • ¹ Accident Report & Legal Consultation Disclaimer
  • ² Affiliate Disclaimer 
  • ³ Sponsored News Content Disclaimer
  • Cookie Settings

NOTICE ABOUT ATTORNEY & SPONSOR ADVERTISING:  This website contains sponsor advertisements such as our accident report retrieval. Nationwide Report is not a law firm and does not provide legal advice. We help consumers locate their official accident reports and connect them with attorneys or other service providers when applicable. Vehicle Accident Attorneys and/or sponsors have paid an advertising fee. Using our website is not intended to and does not create an attorney-client relationship between a lawyer or sponsor. The information contained on Nationwidereport.com is not legal advice and the lawyer or sponsor does not in any way constitute a referral or endorsement by this site. If you live in AL, FL, MO, NY or WY, click here to see additional information about the attorney or sponsor advertising in these states.

COOKIE & PRIVACY NOTICE: We use cookies to customize your experience and analyze our website traffic. We share information about your activity on our site with our analytics partners, who may combine it with other data you’ve provided or that they’ve gathered from your usage of their services. By continuing to use our website, you agree to our use of cookies. Learn more about our Privacy Policy and for those in California, you can learn about the notice of collection here.

Copyright © 2025 Nationwide Report®. All rights reserved.

  • States
    • Midwest
      • Illinois
      • Indiana
      • Iowa
      • Kansas
      • Michigan
      • Minnesota
      • Missouri
      • Nebraska
      • North Dakota
      • Ohio
      • South Dakota
      • Wisconsin
    • Northeast
      • Connecticut
      • Maine
      • Massachusetts
      • New Hampshire
      • New Jersey
      • New York
      • Pennsylvania
      • Rhode Island
      • Vermont
    • Southeast
      • Alabama
      • Arkansas
      • Delaware
      • Florida
      • Georgia
      • Kentucky
      • Louisiana
      • Maryland
      • Mississippi
      • North Carolina
      • South Carolina
      • Tennessee
      • Virginia
      • West Virginia
    • Southwest
      • Arizona
      • New Mexico
      • Oklahoma
      • Texas
    • West
      • California
      • Colorado
      • Hawaii
      • Idaho
      • Montana
      • Nevada
      • Oregon
      • Utah
      • Washington
      • Wyoming
  • Breaking News
  • Entertainment
  • Lifestyle
  • Resources
    • Find an Accident Report + Claim Consultation
    • Find a Repair Center
    • Law Enforcement Agencies
    • Online Traffic School
  • Tech

© 2024 Nationwide Report® - Regional news updates from different parts of the nation.