The Daily - The Supreme Court Takes On Birthright Citizenship
Episode Date: April 2, 2026The Supreme Court heard arguments on Wednesday morning over President Trump’s efforts to limit birthright citizenship. In a historic first, the president himself showed up to the hearing. Ann E. Mar...imow, who covers the Supreme Court, took us inside the room. Guest: Ann E. Marimow covers the Supreme Court for The New York Times from Washington. Background reading: Here are five takeaways from the birthright citizenship argument. Mr. Trump attended the Supreme Court oral arguments, then left an hour in. Photo: Anna Rose Layden for The New York Times For more information on today’s episode, visit nytimes.com/thedaily. Transcripts of each episode will be made available by the next workday. Subscribe today at nytimes.com/podcasts or on Apple Podcasts and Spotify. You can also subscribe via your favorite podcast app here https://www.nytimes.com/activate-access/audio?source=podcatcher. For more podcasts and narrated articles, download The New York Times app at nytimes.com/app. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Can I ask you a couple questions?
Did you sleep here last night?
Yes, we did.
We did.
We got here at about 11.30 p.m.
and got some sleep until maybe 6 a.m.
Yeah.
How early did you get here?
6.30.
I got here a little bit after 4.
So we are waiting in the line from last Sunday.
Sorry, you've been waiting in line since last Sunday?
Yeah, yeah, last Sunday.
From New York Times.
I'm Michael Barrow.
This is the Daily.
On Wednesday morning in Washington,
the scene outside of the Supreme Court
captured the enormous stakes of the case
that was about to be argued
before its nine justices.
This is pivotal.
This will define the immigration experience for decades.
Birthright citizenship has just been a big part of
what it means to be American for a very long time,
like almost as long as the country.
The crux of this is illegal or those here temporarily
shouldn't receive the benefit of American citizenship,
which is to be cherished.
A case about President Trump's efforts to end birthright citizenship
that literally asks who gets to be an American.
So this case was very important for me because I'm an immigrant too.
We all came for the reason because U.S. is a shining city on the hill.
And now to change the whole thing, I'm like, did I make a right decision of wanting to come here?
And a case so historic that President Trump himself showed up in the courtroom to hear the arguments.
Today, my colleague, Anne Maramo, takes us inside the room.
It's Thursday, April 2nd.
And you had a pretty coveted seat inside the Supreme Court on one.
Wednesday morning, and I suspect your eyes quickly fix themselves on the presence of President Trump.
Yes, it was a historic day, the first sitting president to be in the Supreme Court courtroom for an oral
argument and to be sitting there as the justices were debating birthright citizenship.
And what did it look like for him to enter that august room?
So a hush came over the courtroom as the president was escorted to his seat.
The courtroom is always quiet, but this was even more quiet than usual as he walked in at that moment wearing a red tie and a dark suit and took his seat.
And it's really interesting where he was seated. Instead of being close to the justices in the special seats reserved for their families and visiting dignitaries, he was seated in the front row for the public.
Why?
I think it's because he is one of the parties in the cases and he's not a lawyer or member of the Supreme Court bar.
So there he was in the front row of the public gallery.
Just far enough away, perhaps, for some of the justices liking.
It feels difficult to overstate the symbolic potency of the head of the executive branch being in this room, in the heart of the judicial branch.
And as you know, well, this is the president known for very keenly understanding power and how you flex it.
And it felt to me anyway, like the president, by showing up for these oral arguments on this.
case was basically saying, you all want to sit in judgment of my executive order on birthright
citizenship, and therefore I'm going to sit in judgment of you as you do that.
There's absolutely a lot of symbolism having him there. He had mused about showing up previously
when the court took up his tariffs plan. That was also very important to the president.
He ended up not coming and saying he didn't want to be a distraction. But you're right,
there's been this effort, as you've seen, when the court has ruled a.
against him. The president has tried to intimidate the justices and criticize them in really harsh
personal terms. So to have him actually there in person face to face with the justices sent a real
signal. And above all, that signal was this case is really important to the president and to his
second term agenda, especially immigration. Just briefly remind us how this case found its way
into this room. So you'll remember the president on his first day back in office issued this executive
order to really limit the guarantee of birthright citizenship and say it does not include the children
of illegal immigrants or the children of many temporary foreign visitors. That was seen as an open
challenge to the long-held understanding of the 14th Amendment, and there were lawsuits filed immediately
by Democratic State Attorney Generals and expected parents. Right. Basically saying the 14th Amendment
guarantees that anyone born, with very few exceptions on American soil, is an American citizen.
Yes, and not just in the 14th Amendment, but in subsequent court rulings, in actions by past presidents, this has been the common subtle law understanding.
Right. And so we always understood that the administration's legal arguments in defense of this executive order were going to be potentially tough sledding before the entire judiciary. So take us into these oral arguments and how they unfold.
And let's start with the administration's lawyer.
We will hear argument this morning in case 25, 365, Trump v. Barbara.
General Sauer, Mr. Chief Justice, and may it please the court.
President Trump's Solicitor General, John Sauer, who represents the administration at the Supreme Court,
is asking the justices to reinterpret or restore what he says is the original meaning of the 14th Amendment.
The citizenship clause was adopted just after the Civil War to grant citizenship to the
newly freed slaves and their children.
So a key point to the administration's argument centered on the language of the 14th Amendment
and the meaning of a phrase, subject to the jurisdiction of.
The language of the 14th Amendment says that all persons born or naturalized in the United States
and subject to the jurisdiction thereof are citizens of the United States.
In 1984, this court recognized that subject to the jurisdiction means owing direct and immediate allegiance.
The clause thus does not extend citizenship to the children of temporary visa holders or illegal aliens.
John Sauer is trying to get the justices to focus on, again, the meaning of subject to the jurisdiction of.
In his view, the babies of illegal immigrants are not subject to the jurisdiction of the United States and are therefore not citizens.
Unrestricted birthright citizenship contradicts the practice of the overwhelming majority of modern nations.
It demeans the priceless and profound gift of American citizenship.
And why, according to Sauer, the president's solicitor general, is that the case, that children born to illegal immigrants are not subject to the jurisdiction thereof of the United States government and therefore not eligible to be American citizens when they're born on American soil?
So the administration's argument really rests on one of the court's rulings in 1898, and this is the case of the case.
of Wang Kim Ark. There, the court ruled that a man born in San Francisco, but to Chinese immigrants,
was a citizen. And John Sauer says, we've been thinking about that case all wrong. It's been read
too broadly to apply to a larger group of people. And really, he says the key in that decision is the
word domicile and the fact that Mr. Wong's parents were legally present in the United States,
even though they were not citizens.
They had a commitment to living in the U.S.
And for that reason, when their son was born in San Francisco, he was a citizen.
The court says at the very beginning of its opinion, here are the accepted facts.
These are lawfully domiciled here.
When it states the question presented, it talks about domicile.
When it recites the legal principle at page 693, it says domicile three times.
And at page 705 at the end of the opinion, it says here's the single question we've decided.
We've decided that Chinese immigrants with a permanent,
domicile and residence here are fall within the rule of birthright citizenship.
And so throughout the argument, John Sauer asked the justices to focus on that word
and saying that that's key to someone being able to become a birthright citizen.
And just to find that word domicile, because having watched these oral arguments myself,
not in the room, but at home, it comes up a lot.
It did come up a lot. And the Solicitor General told the justices, domicile to him
and in the law means somebody's residence,
but also their intention to stay and make a home
and having the ability legally to be able to be domiciled somewhere.
And in his telling, undocumented immigrants, by definition,
cannot be legally domiciled in the United States
because they are here illegally.
Because they've come into the country illegally,
but also he brings in another term,
and that is allegiance,
because they sort of have a political,
political allegiance to a foreign nation.
It did not grant citizenship to the children of temporary visitors or illegal aliens who have no such allegiance.
This conclusion reflects the original public meaning of the clause.
So basically, Sauer is arguing that if you look really closely, especially at that arc case issued by the Supreme Court many, many, many decades ago,
people have been misunderstanding this birthright citizenship precedent for a very long time,
and they've allowed it to be applied too broadly to people who should not be birthright citizens,
illegal immigrants especially.
That's right.
Okay.
So how do the justices respond to this argument?
So John Sauer got a lot of pushback pretty quickly, including from some of the key conservative justices who are often in the majority,
most notably from Chief Justice Roberts.
You obviously put a lot of weight on subject to the jurisdiction thereof.
But the examples you give to support that strike me as very quirky.
To refer to the government's theory as quirky.
Never a great sign.
Exactly.
So the Chief Justice pointed out that the 14th Amendment includes very specific exceptions
to groups of people who are not subject to the jurisdiction of the United States
and therefore not citizens.
You know, children of ambassadors,
children of enemies during a hostile invasion,
children on warships.
These are children of foreign diplomats,
children of invading armies,
and the children of Native American tribes
until Congress changed the law.
And then you expand it to the whole class
of illegal aliens are here in the country.
I'm not quite sure how you can get to that big group
from such tiny and sort of,
idiosyncratic examples.
And he's asking John Sauer,
you're asking us to create this huge
new exception and to expand
that understanding. Right. Robert
seems to be saying, you want us to
get from the concept
that invading pillagers
of the U.S., their kids
should not be American citizens, to suddenly
saying that all the children
of undocumented immigrants shouldn't
be given birthright citizenship.
And he just doesn't quite see the line between the two.
Yes, and Sowers are
is to go back to the debates around the drafting of the 14th Amendment and even to a statute
that existed before the amendment and to pull out various statements from senators at the time.
And one of the strongest statements of this is Senator Trumbull's statements that I quoted
at the beginning where he says, he's asked, what does that mean?
Some to the jurisdiction there is.
And he says, it means not owing allegiance to anybody else.
That is what it means.
And to try to reinforce this idea that in order to be a birthright citizen, your parents had
to have complete allegiance to what he called the political jurisdiction of the United States.
And it felt like the Solicitor General knew his audience that this conservative majority on this
court likes originalism, likes to go back to original sources, and that he was appealing to that
background. Sure, that's going to be key to this decision, what was the original meaning,
what were the drafters thinking of the time, and there was a lot of discussion about how do you
apply that history and the text to this modern-day issue of illegal immigration that the drafters
were not necessarily thinking about in these terms at that time.
And what we're dealing with here is something that was basically unknown at the time when
the 14th Amendment was adopted, which is illegal immigration. So how did we deal with that
situation when we have a general rule? Right. Justice Alito pipes up at this point,
and he's curious how the government's argument confronts that. Right. And he asks,
about the idea of applying a broad principle to a new problem. And the Solicitor General says,
that's right. This broad principle does apply here. And that's what we often do when we're interpreting
the Constitution. And he has all of these historical examples that he cites to sort of back up
this claim in the way that he thinks the principle has been applied over time.
Now, the problem of temporary visitors did exist. And it's very interesting that as you look at pages 26
and 28 of our brief, commentators going for...
from 1881 until 1922 are uniformly saying that children of temporary visitors are not included.
And then Justice Kagan intervenes and says, wait a minute.
Where does this principle come from? Allegiance, domicile.
Allegiance, I think, you point to a Lincoln funeral speech as your primary example of where this principle comes from.
These are really obscure esoteric references you're making to history and kind of pulling them out of thin.
But as far as I can tell, you know, at the time of the 14, you're using some pretty obscure sources to get to this concept.
And she really cast doubt on those as strong evidence.
Right. She's saying, I'm listening to all your historical references, and they feel like you're really stretching and reaching because you don't have texts within the 14th Amendment on your side.
In fact, the texts of 14th Amendment and her telling undermines your case.
So what's interesting is that the skepticism about the administration's use of history extends from the liberal justices to some of the key conservative votes like Justice Barrett and Justice Gorsuch.
And just to circle back to Justice Kagan's point, it's striking that in none of the debates do we have parents discussed.
We have the child's citizenship and the focus of clauses on the child, not on the parents.
And you don't see domicile mentioned in the debates.
the absence is striking.
And Gorsuch asked questions about this word domicile and says, if that's so critical to your argument,
where is that in the debates surrounding the drafting of the 14th Amendment?
Where is that in the history?
What was the understanding of that word at the time?
And what is Sauer's response?
Well, he says that there are 19th century sources that talk about domicile,
but really returns to Juan Kim Arc and the language in that opinion.
I would first cite Wang Kim Arc on that point,
because Juan Camarck says you're...
Well, I'm not sure how much you want to rely on Wong Kim Arr.
But that state, there is a statement in there and says,
so long as they are permitted to be here.
And Gorsuch goes so far as to suggest
the Solicitor General not rely on the decision in Wang Kim Ark
Ark that was taken as a broad affirmation of birthright citizenship.
This exchange really does seem to capture the tricky spot
that the Trump administration is in here
because one of the biggest arguments it's presenting to the...
justices, is this idea that a decades-old Supreme Court ruling that, as you said, broadly affirms
birthright citizenship as a universal principle, that somehow underpins the administration's case
that birthright citizenship shouldn't apply to illegal immigrants. And Gorsuch, a Trump appointee
to the Supreme Court, is saying, be careful here because you're kind of turning yourself
into a legal pretzel. Right. By the time John Sauer was finished with his art,
argument. You had Chief Justice Roberts asking him about his quirky idiosyncratic theory. You had
Justice Amy Coney Barrett asking, how is this going to work on a practical level with the parents of
newborn babies and asking them about their immigration status. And you had Justice Gorsuch saying
this precedent you're relying on is probably not your best case. So it was not looking good
for the administration. We'll be right back.
So, Anne, walk us through the argument put forth by the other side of this case,
the lawyer challenging President Trump's executive order on birthright citizenship.
Who's Wong?
Mr. Chief Justice, and may it please the court.
So this is Cecilia Wong, who is a legal director of the American Civil Liberties Union,
and she's representing the group of expectant parents who've sued the Trump administration on behalf of their future babies.
Ask any American what our...
citizenship rule is, and they'll tell you, everyone born here is a citizen alike. That rule was
enshrined in the 14th Amendment to put it out of the reach of any government official to destroy.
And Wong makes the case that it's a simple reading of the 14th Amendment. When the government
tried to strip Mr. Wong Kim-Arck's citizenship on largely the same grounds they raised today,
this court said no. That it's been interpreted broadly for generations and understood in
court rulings throughout the years and executive actions by past presidents.
And she says very strongly that the interpretation of the 14th Amendment should not be changed now.
My friend has now clearly said that the government is not asking you to overrule Wang Kim Ark.
That is a fatal concession because Wong Kim Ark's controlling rule of decision precludes their parental domicile requirement.
And Wong says that the government's case is particularly,
week because it's asking the court not to overrule Wong Kim Ark, which again, she says
stands for this broad principle of birthright citizenship. And the majority tells us six times
in the opinion that domicile is irrelevant under common law. She says the government's emphasis
on the word domicile was not the point of that opinion. So if they continue to say that it should
not be overruled, then the ACLU should win. Right. She basically seems to be saying where the Trump
administration finds some legal solace in this case, which is that old ARC case means that actually
they have no case at all because that domicile argument and her telling is just kind of bunk.
Right. But then she faces some major pushback from the justices.
We've heard a lot of talk about Long Kim Arc and you dismiss the use of the word domicile in it.
It appears in the opinion 20 different times. So first she hears from Chief Justice.
Roberts, who makes the point that the administration has made over time to point out that the
opinion in Juan K. Mark does include the word domicile 20 times.
Isn't it at least something to be concerned about to say that discussed 20 different times
and has that significant role in the opinion that you can just dismiss it as irrelevant?
And he asks sort of how this can be dismissed as irrelevant if the court from that era chose to
include that in the opinion.
On that, what do we do
with the fact that after Wong
Kempark, at least
some authorities,
took the view that the non-domiciliary
question wasn't decided,
remained open, and even continued to
press the view that
domicile is required?
You hear similar questions from Justice
Gorsuch about the history,
and then perhaps more surprising,
Justice Elena Kagan, a liberal, also
starts asking questions about the appearance of the word domicile throughout the opinion.
Well, Ms. Wong, I mean, everything you say strikes me as, yeah, that's the way I read it, too.
But then what are those 20 domicile words doing there?
Well, I think, again, those were the stipulated facts in the case.
And it's clear we have textual evidence in the majority opinion.
And in response, similar to the Solicitor General, she started pulling on different aspects of history.
We have an 1896 state department regulation.
All to make this case about the longstanding broad principle of birthright citizenship.
Again, after setting out the English common law rule and the exception.
She went back to English common law and other areas of history, citing even the example of Japanese nationals who were interned during World War II.
When the United States was detaining Japanese nationals whose children, babies who were born were U.S. citizens.
Everyone agreed.
that those babies were U.S. citizens.
And Professor Mueller goes on to explain
that, you know, there are many cases of those U.S. citizens
going on to a lifetime of government service
to the United States.
Everyone agrees those babies...
Right. And seemingly to make the point that
even in what seemed like rather extreme moments
where we might question the allegiance of a foreign national
and whether they were domiciled,
our system determined that their children were American citizens.
Yes, exactly. Even in wartime, she's saying this principle was affirmed over and over again throughout history. And many of the justices seem satisfied with her answers to questions about the word domicile. But one of the most skeptical justices seemed to be Justice Samuel Lido.
So let me give you these examples. Who posed a hypothetical about a boy born to an Iranian father.
That boy is automatically an Iranian national at birth, and he has a duty to provide military service to the Iranian government.
Is he not subject to any foreign power?
And he asked when the child be subject to military service, and doesn't that child still have allegiance to that country?
There's no surprise that he brought up this example since we are at war with Iran.
Right.
But again, Justice Alito, that would have meant that the children,
of Irish, Italian, and other immigrants, which Wong-Kmark refers to, and the debate the framers
refer to, would not have been citizens either.
And in response, Wong tried to broaden the scope to say, you know, if that's the case,
what about children of Irish immigrants? What about children of Italian immigrants?
Likely referring to Justice Alito's own immigration history.
Right, because Alito is of Italian descent.
And what she seems to be saying is, if you take...
take the hypothetical argument that Alito was making about an Iranian father and son and what do you have to serve in the army, perhaps because he has dual citizenship, that that was true of every person from every country who came to the U.S. and had a kid.
They owed some theoretical allegiance back to their home country.
Right. And she's saying that this issue of birthright citizenship has never been about the parents.
It's always about the children born here and their citizenship.
opportunities. Thank you, counsel, general. The case is submitted. And as these arguments
wrapped up on Wednesday afternoon, and just to say, they were long and they were very
substantive, was it right to think of this as a case that is quite likely to cut against
the president and his executive order seeking to end birthright citizenship? Was that the way
the wind was blowing? Yeah, I heard skepticism from at least a majority of justices, including
some key conservative justices. But I was also struck by how seriously they took the arguments
from the Trump administration. Those were once seen as sort of fringe, obscure theories.
It was clear that they were trying to process those and make sense of those. But at the end of the
day, I do think that the citizenship order will be struck down. And I want you to return to President
Trump, who, as best I can tell, is in that courtroom during a lot of the argument we're talking about.
What do you glean from his body language, from anything, about what he made of these arguments?
Well, he ended up leaving about halfway through.
He stayed to hear from his solicitor general arguing in favor of the administration's position.
He listened to the introduction from the ACLU lawyer.
And then he popped up and just slowly walked out of the courtroom and quickly went back to the White House.
And there he got onto social media and started criticizing.
the whole idea of guaranteed birthright citizenship,
saying that the United States is the only country in the world,
stupid enough, as he said, to allow birthright citizenship,
which we know is not true,
but just showing how much this is on his mind
and how important it is to him.
Right.
And something about that phrase, stupid enough,
makes me think that Trump might have left the Supreme Court
not certain of victory,
in fact, maybe nervous of defeat,
and perhaps if he had hoped that being there might change the dynamics of this difficult case,
perhaps recognizing that maybe it didn't?
I think that he's been counseled all along,
that this was a difficult case asking the court to reinterpret a long-held understanding of the 14th Amendment.
But certainly the atmosphere, the dynamics that pushed back to the administration
could not have felt great, leaving the courtroom.
Oh, Anne, thank you very much. Appreciate it.
Thank you.
We'll be right back.
Here's what else you need to another day.
As we speak this evening, it's been just one month since the United States military began operation.
Epic Fury, targeting the world's number one state sponsor of Tara, Iran.
In a televised speech to the nation on Wednesday night, President Trump declared that the United States and Israeli war against Iran has been a major military success.
In these past four weeks, our armed forces have delivered swift, decisive, overwhelming victories on the battlefield.
But Trump offered no clear timeline for when or how the war might end, downplayed its economic costs and claimed without evidence that the straight of hormonies.
moves would spontaneously open back up at the conclusion of the conflict.
When this conflict is over, the strait will open up naturally.
It'll just open up naturally.
And 10, 9, 8, 7, R.S. 25 engines.
8.4.3. 2.1. Booster ignition.
And lift off.
Artemis II, a 10-day mission around the moon, began on Wednesday evening when a spacecraft carrying four astronauts blasted off from the Kennedy Space Center in Florida.
The crew of Artemis II now bound for the moon. Humanity's next great voyage begins.
The mission is one of several that are expected to culminate in the next few years with the return of humans to the moon for the first time.
in decades.
Today's episode was produced by
Eric Kruppke, Shannon Lynn,
Lexi Diao,
and Jack DeSodoro,
with help from Claire Tennisketter.
It was edited by Rob Zipko
and M.J. Davis-Linn,
with help from Lindsay Erison.
Contains music by
Marian Lazzano,
Chelsea Daniel, and Pat McCusker.
Our theme music is by Wonderly.
This episode was
engineered by Alyssa Moxley.
That's it for the daily.
I'm Michael Bobar.
See you tomorrow.
