Live Coverage: Birthright Citizenship SCOTUS Oral Arguments
Listen Live: Trump v. Barbara Oral Arguments
Oral arguments have started in Trump v. Barbara. Listen now as the ACLU's National Legal Director, Cecillia Wang, presents our case to the Supreme Court.
A Message From the ACLU’s Trump v. Barbara Case Team
We're heading into the Supreme Court soon to argue on behalf of every child born in the United States
President Trump wants to strip away the right to birthright citizenship – the core principle that children born in America are citizens of America, with very limited exceptions. He wants to overturn over a century of Supreme Court precedent, law, and our very Constitution. He thinks that he alone can redefine who belongs in this country and what it means to be American. He's wrong.
Our ACLU community has shown up en masse to support the Constitution – including the over 315,000 people who signed our petition and whose names we're displaying in D.C. with us.
As we head into the court, we'll be thinking about supporters like you — and the thousands of families and children we're fighting for.
Together, we'll defend this American promise.
ACLU Responds to Trump Plan to Attend SCOTUS Arguments Today
Hi everyone, I'm Anthony D. Romero, the Executive Director of the ACLU. Yesterday, President Trump announced his plan to attend today's Supreme Court arguments in Trump v. Barbara, the nationwide class action brought by the ACLU and our partners on behalf of children who would be denied citizenship under Trump's executive order.
If President Trump wishes to come to the Supreme Court to watch the ACLU school him in the meaning of the Constitution and birthright citizenship, we will be glad to sit alongside of him in that very court.
Any effort to distract from the gravity and importance of this case will not succeed. The Supreme Court is up to the task of interpreting and defending the Constitution even under the glare of a sitting president a couple dozen feet away from them.
This is one of the most important cases in the last hundred years. The outcome of this case will very well decide the rights and liberties of over 200,000 children born to immigrant parents each year.
The 14th Amendment guarantees that children born in the United States are citizens. Period.
“My Child is Now a Political Debate”: Hear from Impacted Families
"I would like my baby to grow up in the country where he was born, experiencing the good the U.S. has to offer. But right now, I can barely see those good things anymore."
Families targeted by President Trump's cruel executive order targeting birthright citizenship are worried about what the future holds for their children.
Right now, their children are protected from the order, and there is no reason for families to fear. But the fight is not over — and today, the Supreme Court will hear oral arguments in the case that will decide their future.
Oral Arguments in Trump v. Barbara Begin Soon
Good morning everyone, and thanks for joining us. The ACLU and our co-counsel — the ACLU's of New Hampshire, Maine, and Massachusetts, the Legal Defense Fund, Asian Law Caucus, and Democracy Defenders Fund — are at the Supreme Court today for oral arguments in Trump v. Barbara, where we're defending birthright citizenship. And our very own National Legal Director, Cecillia Wang, will be arguing the case.
On the first day of his second term, President Donald Trump signed an executive order seeking to dismantle the right to birthright citizenship for nearly all children born in the U.S., even though the 14th Amendment guarantees that right. Within hours, the ACLU and our partners sued to block that cruel action. Federal courts have since repeatedly blocked the administration from implementing the executive order, finding it violates the Constitution, over a century of Supreme Court precedent, and a longstanding federal statute.
Ending birthright citizenship would upend the law and the lives of hundreds of thousands of families by creating a permanent subclass of people born in the United States who are denied their rights as American citizens.
The Constitution, not the President, defines who is a citizen.
You can read more about Trump v. Barbara here. Refresh this page throughout the day to see more live updates.