Trump’s executive order targeting birthright citizenship strikes at the core of how America has defined belonging since 1868. By tying a newborn’s status to their parents’ paperwork, it redraws the boundary between “us” and “them” in the delivery room itself. Undocumented parents would see their children denied automatic citizenship, but so would families on student, work, or tourist visas who followed every rule they were given.
The legal backlash has been fierce. Twenty-two state attorneys general argue that the 14th Amendment’s promise is unambiguous, warning that the order would create a permanent class of people born here yet never fully accepted. As the Supreme Court weighs the case, the stakes extend far beyond immigration law: at issue is whether America will honor a post–Civil War commitment to equality, or allow fear and political theater to redefine who gets to call this country home.
