When the Trump administration asks the Supreme Court on Thursday to allow it to deny birthright citizenship to the children of undocumented immigrants and visa holders, its legal theory will rest on a reinterpretation of a critical phrase of the Constitution. But when you plug their preferred meaning back into the historical context in which the Constitution’s Citizenship Clause was enacted, the results are nonsensical. In other words, the crux of the government’s argument simply makes no sense.

The first sentence of the 14th Amendment, passed by Congress a year after the Civil War, is the Citizenship Clause: “All persons born or naturalized in the United States, and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the United States.” When President Donald Trump signed an executive order on the first day of his administration that would deny birthright citizenship to the children of undocumented immigrants and visa holders, he premised it on the idea that undocumented immigrants and visa holders are not “subject to the jurisdiction” of the United States. This is the phrase the government is asking the courts to reinterpret into a fictional absurdity.

  • hansolo@lemm.ee
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    1 day ago

    Its such a stretch for an administration that has repeatedly failed hard to support its arguments with even coherent sentences. Not even kidding, the initial suits about mass firings, some US attorney said out loud that he had no evidence all government employees were criminals, but they just are because they are.

    The Constition also has a pesky part that says all people within the county are subject to it’s laws, meaning that no one in the US is exempt from them by virtue of being a non-citizen. Seriously, do tourists not have to follow laws?