Overview
- On December 5, the Supreme Court granted review in Barbara v. Trump, setting arguments for spring 2026 in a case over Executive Order No. 14160.
- Trump’s January 2025 order would deny automatic citizenship to U.S.-born children when the mother is unlawfully present or lawfully but temporarily present and the father is not a U.S. citizen or lawful permanent resident.
- Multiple lower courts issued preliminary injunctions halting enforcement, and a divided Ninth Circuit panel ruled the order invalid as contrary to the Fourteenth Amendment.
- USCIS released a July 25 implementation plan that would, if the order is upheld, withhold routine citizenship documentation, define covered categories, and offer registration options so affected children could align with a parent’s lawful status.
- The dispute has drawn opposing coalitions of state officials and lawmakers, polling shows broad public support for retaining birthright citizenship, and legal scholars warn of potential creation of non-citizen or stateless U.S.-born children if the order is sustained.