Tennessee AG Backs Trump’s Birthright Citizenship Executive Order In SCOTUS Brief

In a series of emergency appeals, President Donald Trump’s administration requested that the Supreme Court permit him to advance with his plans to terminate birthright citizenship, elevating a legal theory that has thus far been rejected by numerous lower courts.

In a series of emergency appeals, the Trump administration asked the justices to limit the impact of the controversial policy, arguing that lower courts had gone too far in issuing nationwide injunctions to block it. In January, a federal judge blocked the implementation of his executive order, calling it “blatantly unconstitutional.” Trump’s plan “runs counter to our nation’s 250-year history of citizenship by birth,” a Maryland judge declared a few days later.

The Trump administration’s request to halt lower court decisions that placed nationwide injunctions on an executive order he signed on the first day of his second term has been dismissed by appeals courts.

Courts have interpreted the 14th Amendment’s language for more than 150 years to ensure citizenship for anyone who is “born or naturalized in the United States,” irrespective of their parents’ immigration status. That interpretation of the law was upheld by a significant Supreme Court decision in 1898, and the current court has shown no intention of changing that decision.

However, because the 14th Amendment states that the benefit is only available to those who are “subject to the jurisdiction” of the United States, some conservatives have argued that those long-held beliefs are incorrect. According to the theory, people who enter the country illegally are under the jurisdiction of their home country.
In response to requests from over 20 states, two immigrant rights organizations, and seven individual plaintiffs, courts in Maryland, Massachusetts, and Washington have all issued injunctions preventing implementation.

In his appeals to the Supreme Court, Trump is not directly questioning whether the policy is legal or not. Instead, the administration is making what they called a “modest” request to limit the scope of the injunctions.

Still, that is a big ask because if the Supreme Court says yes, the administration will be able to enforce its order against people who aren’t affected by the current lawsuit.

“Universal injunctions have reached epidemic proportions since the start of the current administration,” the Justice Department told the Supreme Court in its emergency appeals. “Those universal injunctions prohibit a Day 1 Executive Order from being enforced anywhere in the country, as to ‘hundreds of thousands’ of unspecified individuals who are ‘not before the court nor identified by the court.’”

“During the 20th century,” the administration told the court, “the executive branch adopted the incorrect position that the citizenship clause extended birthright citizenship to almost everyone born in the United States – even children of illegal aliens or temporarily present aliens,” the administration wrote. “That policy of near-universal birthright citizenship has created strong incentives for illegal immigration.”

On Friday, Tennessee Attorney General Jonathan Skrmetti sent an amicus brief to the US Supreme Court in support of President Donald Trump’s order to end birthright citizenship for children of illegal immigrants and people who are not citizens.

The brief backs Trump’s request to overturn several nationwide preliminary injunctions issued by federal district courts.

Related Posts

“I SLEPT UNDER A BRIDGE—BUT MY DOG KEPT ME WARM AND SANE”

Rock bottom isn’t always losing your home or family. For me, it was going two weeks without hearing my name—except from Bixby, my dog. Not in words,…

When Karma Came Calling: How Losing Our Dog Unraveled Family Secrets and Reclaimed My Dignity

Grief is a powerful force. It can draw families together—or tear them apart. For me, the loss of my mother set off a chain of events that…

HOMELESS MAN WANTED FOOD—NOW MY MOST RELIABLE WORKER

He came in after I restocked the coffee station—clothes torn, shoes falling apart, face worn with more than just fatigue. He asked quietly, “Do you have any…

My Husband Yelled at Me Because the Sounds of Me Cleaning Distracted Him from Work – And Then I Saw What This ‘Work’ Really Was

When I married my husband, I thought we both wanted the same things. I carried the whole household, thinking I was supporting him in whatever work he…

THEY TOLD US HE DIED IN THE LINE OF DUTY—BUT HIS DOG KNEW BETTER

Nobody could get Rex to move. He stood like a statue at the casket, paw resting on the edge, nose pressed to the wood like he was…

My Neighbor Totally Ruined My Windows with Paint after I Refused to Pay $2,000 for Her Dog’s Treatment

Let me tell you about the time I almost lost my mind living in what was supposed to be a peaceful suburban neighborhood. My name is Julia,…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *