Sunday, May 17, 2026

Supreme court justices appear skeptical of Trump administration’s argument to restrict birthright citizenship – live

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Here’s a recap of the oral arguments at the supreme court

  • Justices appeared skeptical of the Trump administration’s argument to restrict birthright citizenship for hundreds of thousands of children born to undocumented immigrants of temporary foreign nationals. The solicitor general, D John Sauer, argued that since noncitizens who are in the country temporarily aren’t “domiciled” they aren’t pledging “allegiance” to the US, and that subsequently invalidates their children’s claims to citizenship.

  • However, both liberal and conservative blocs on the bench probed Sauer about his position since the language of “domicile” isn’t part of the citizenship clause of the fourteenth amendment. Chief justice John Roberts at one point referred to part of the government’s argument as “very quirky”, while justice Elena Kagan said the administration’s “revisionist theory” requires the court to change what “people have thought the rule was for more than a century”.

  • Sauer also argued that unrestricted birthright citizenship has “spawned a sprawling industry of birth tourism” and created “a whole generation of American citizens abroad with no meaningful ties” to the US. When Roberts asked the solicitor general how significant a problem this is, Sauer conceded that “no one knows for sure”, but cited a number of media reports about estimates.

  • Justices also grilled the lawyer for the challengers in today’s case, Cecillia Wang, the national legal director of the ACLU, who said that Donald Trump’s executive order violates the fourteenth amendment, and would render swaths of American laws “senseless”. Wang noted that in US v Wong Kim Ark, a landmark decision on birthright citizenship, the court ruled that the fourteenth amendment “embodies the English common law rule” and that virtually everyone born on US soil is “subject to its jurisdiction and is a citizen”.

  • Throughout their questions, Wang maintained that a foreign national’s so-called “allegiance” to another country should not affect their child’s citizenship. “The government’s rule, which really is looking at whether someone has a divided allegiance because they’re a citizen of another country, would exclude the children of all foreign nationals,” Wang said.

  • Trump attended the hearing on Wednesday, widely considered to be the first time a sitting president has attended arguments at the supreme court. He sat through Sauer’s arguments before returning to the White House.

Key events

Away from the supreme court, another big story today is the expected launch of the Artemis II moon mission.

Four astronauts are preparing to lift off on a 685,000-mile journey as hundreds of thousands of spectators will watch on the ground – and millions will follow it live around the globe.

You can watch and follow all the latest updates in our Artemis II blog here:

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