Trump, the frontrunner for the Republican presidential
nomination in an increasingly crowded field of candidates, said
in a campaign video posted to Twitter that he would issue an
executive order instructing federal agencies to stop what is
known as birthright citizenship. Any such action by Trump would
be certain to draw a legal challenge.
Birthright citizenship arises from the Constitution's 14th
Amendment, which was ratified in 1868, three years after the
conclusion of the American Civil War that ended the practice of
enslaving Black people in Southern states and overturned a
Supreme Court ruling that had held that slaves and free African
Americans were not entitled to U.S. citizenship.
The amendment granted citizenship to all persons "born or
naturalized in the United States," including formerly enslaved
people, and has been interpreted to apply whether or not parents
were in the country legally.
The proposed executive order, planned for the first day of a
second Trump term in office, would require that at least one
parent be an American citizen or lawful permanent resident for
their children to become automatic U.S. citizens, his campaign
said in a press release.
While president in 2018, Trump said he planned to issue an
executive order to limit birthright citizenship, but never
followed through. Many legal scholars at the time were skeptical
that Trump could use executive authority to roll back the right.
Trump on Tuesday also criticized President Joe Biden, the
Democrat who defeated him in 2020 and is seeking re-election in
2024, for record numbers of migrants caught crossing the border
illegally in recent years, calling the citizenship right for
children born on U.S. soil a "magnet." Trump noted that many
countries restrict birthright citizenship for non-citizens.
Trump has sought to appeal to Republican voters on his party's
right flank who support a crackdown on immigration. As
president, Trump pursued hardline policies toward immigration
and took steps toward building a wall along the U.S.-Mexico
border that he had promised as a candidate in 2016.
(Reporting by Ted Hesson in Washington; Editing by Will Dunham
and Mica Rosenberg)
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