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WorldPublished: 1 July 2026 at 23:37

Supreme Court Rejects Trump's Bid to End Birthright Citizenship; Facts Contradict His Claims

The US Supreme Court ruled that children born in the US are citizens under the 14th Amendment, rejecting Trump's executive order. Trump's repeated claims that the US is the only country with birthright citizenship and that it drives widespread abuse are not supported by evidence.

Foto: France 24

The US Supreme Court dealt a major blow to Donald Trump's effort to end birthright citizenship, ruling that children born in the United States are citizens under the Constitution regardless of their parents' immigration status. The decision, announced Tuesday, rejects Trump's executive order signed on the first day of his second term, which sought to deny automatic citizenship to babies born to parents who are in the US unlawfully or temporarily. The court found that such children are "citizens at birth" under the 14th Amendment.

The ruling is a significant setback for an immigration policy that has been central to Trump's second-term agenda. For years, Trump and senior members of his administration have denounced birthright citizenship as unconstitutional and alleged it is widely exploited by undocumented immigrants. Vice President JD Vance last year called it "the dumbest immigration policy in the world," while White House adviser Stephen Miller described it on social media as "the most preposterous of all constitutional abominations."

However, several of the administration's broader claims about birthright citizenship are not supported by available evidence. Trump has repeatedly claimed that the United States is "the only country" that grants citizenship based on birthplace, which is false. While many countries do not offer unrestricted birthright citizenship, dozens still do. According to data compiled by the Pew Research Center, at least 32 countries—predominantly across North and South America—automatically grant citizenship to nearly everyone born within their borders, including Canada, Mexico, and Argentina. Around 50 others provide more limited forms of birthright citizenship, often based on a parent's citizenship or ancestry.

Trump has also argued that birthright citizenship encourages "birth tourism": the practice of deliberately traveling to the US to give birth so a child acquires American citizenship. Following the Supreme Court ruling, he revived the claim on Truth Social, sarcastically congratulating Chinese President Xi Jinping on what he called a "birthright win," after previously alleging that wealthy families from China travel to the US for this purpose.

The true scale of birth tourism remains difficult to measure. No federal agency tracks births linked to the practice, making reliable national estimates scarce. One of the most widely cited estimates, published in 2020 by the Center for Immigration Studies, suggested that between 20,000 and 26,000 babies were born annually to women who traveled to the US primarily to obtain citizenship for their children. That represents well under 1% of the 3.61 million births recorded in the United States that year.

Despite the Supreme Court ruling, the Trump administration says it will intensify its crackdown on alleged birth tourism schemes, directing prosecutors to pursue investigations into businesses and individuals accused of facilitating the practice. This fact-check analysis was reported by France 24's Truth or Fake segment.

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