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Birthright Citizenship in the United States Survives 6-3: Roberts Says “Born Here, American Here” Forever

Birthright Citizenship in the United States Survives 6-3: Roberts Says "Born Here, American Here" Forever

Birthright Citizenship in the United States Survives 6-3: Roberts Says "Born Here, American Here" Forever

Published by TrenBuzz.com | July 9, 2026 | SUPREME COURT ANALYSIS


Key Points at a Glance


Birthright Citizenship Supreme Court Victory: The Broader Story Most Coverage Missed

The most important number in this case is not 6-3. It is 5-4.

Roberts’ constitutional majority, the one that says the 14th Amendment itself guarantees birthright citizenship, was only five justices deep. Kavanaugh agreed Trump’s executive order was illegal but declined to reach the constitutional question. Thomas and Gorsuch dissented on both the constitutional and statutory grounds. Alito separately dissented.

That means only five justices are currently on record saying that Congress could not abolish birthright citizenship even if it wanted to. Four justices either would not say that, or explicitly suggested Congress could act.

House Speaker Mike Johnson said immediately after the ruling that “Congress will deal with the idea of birthright citizenship.” John Eastman, the architect of the original legal theory and now disbarred, said he doubts Congress can fix this but acknowledged Kavanaugh left the door open. That ambiguity is not accidental. It is an invitation.


What Roberts Traced Through 14th Amendment History

Roberts traced the history of birthright citizenship from English common law, where anyone born on the sovereign’s territory owed allegiance and received protection, through the founding era, through the Civil War, and directly into the 14th Amendment’s ratification debates in 1868. At no point, Roberts found, did the framers of the amendment intend to impose a domicile requirement.

The 1898 case Wong Kim Ark, in which the Supreme Court ruled that a man born in San Francisco to Chinese immigrant parents was an American citizen despite his parents never becoming permanent residents, was the central precedent. Roberts called it unambiguous.


The Kavanaugh Path Congress May Now Try to Walk

Kavanaugh wrote that Trump’s executive order violated federal statute, specifically the Immigration and Nationality Act of 1952, rather than the Constitution itself. His reasoning explicitly suggested Congress could amend that statute to create exceptions to birthright citizenship for children of undocumented immigrants.

Legal commentator Mark Joseph Stern called the dissents “an unsettling reminder that we were one vote away from a ruling bringing back Dred Scott.” Brennan Center attorneys called Kavanaugh’s statutory path “a road map for a right-wing Congress to complete Trump’s failed job.”

The 14th Amendment survived June 30, 2026. Whether a Republican-controlled Congress tests Kavanaugh’s hypothesis before January 2027 is the story to watch next.


🔗 [Also Read: “The Lawsuit JD Vance Filed as a Senate Candidate Just Abolished 50 Years of Campaign Finance Law: Supreme Court’s 6-3 GOP Senate Campaign Finance Ruling Unlocks $125 Million in Republican War Chests Days Before Midterms” | TrenBuzz.com]

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