Indianz.Com > News > Cronkite News: President Trump claims victory in birthright citizenship case
Supreme Court lets Trump birthright citizenship rewrite proceed as it curbs nationwide injunctions
Monday, June 30, 2025
Cronkite News
WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court dramatically scaled back lower courts’ authority to freeze presidential orders facing legal challenge – even those a judge views as unconstitutional – in a ruling Friday that centered on an effort to end automatic birthright citizenship.
President Donald Trump’s order reinterpreting the concept declared that children with at least one parent in the country illegally or temporarily are not entitled to U.S. citizenship – a stance at odds with previous Supreme Court rulings on the meaning of the 14th Amendment.
Federal district court judges in three states issued nationwide injunctions, prompting the administration to seek emergency review by the high court.
The justices voted 6 to 3 to lift the injunctions against Trump’s order, except as it relates to the specific plaintiffs in those three cases – a major, if potentially temporary, victory for the president.
The court also clamped down on the use of so-called “universal” injunctions by lower courts – temporary halts on executive action pending the outcome of a case.
“When a court concludes that the Executive Branch has acted unlawfully, the answer is not for the court to exceed its power, too,” Justice Amy Coney Barrett wrote in the ruling, joined by the other conservatives. [Decision: Trump v. CASA, Inc.]
Trump’s order will take effect in 30 days. After that, a newborn without at least one parent lawfully present in the U.S. will not receive automatic citizenship.
In a dissent by the three liberals, Justice Sonia Sotomayor wrote that under this ruling, “no right is safe” because a president could violate the Constitution knowing the judiciary would be unable to effectively or quickly step in.
“Today, the threat is to birthright citizenship,” she wrote. “Tomorrow, a different administration may try to seize firearms from law-abiding citizens or prevent people of certain faiths from gathering to worship.”
Fellow liberal Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson, writing separately, underscored the point. “The Court’s decision to permit the Executive to violate the Constitution with respect to anyone who has not yet sued is an existential threat to the rule of law,” she wrote.
The majority held that injunctions should apply only to the specific plaintiffs.
“Prohibiting enforcement of the Executive Order against the child of an individual pregnant plaintiff will give that plaintiff complete relief,” the majority stated, adding, “Extending the injunction to cover all other similarly situated individuals would not render her relief any more complete.”
Note: This story originally appeared on Cronkite News. It is published via a Creative Commons license. Cronkite News is produced by the Walter Cronkite School of Journalism and Mass Communication at Arizona State University.
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