Friday, June 10, 2026 - United States President Donald Trump has announced plans to request that the US Supreme Court rehear a major immigration case after the court recently struck down his executive order aimed at ending automatic birthright citizenship.
The high court rejected the administration's attempts to
restrict the long-standing practice, but the president maintained that he will
immediately petition for a formal rehearing.
Taking to his social media platform, Truth Social, the
president on Thursday, strongly criticized the decision, asserting that
American citizenship is not something to be compromised and declaring the high
court's legal conclusion fundamentally wrong.
The 6–3 ruling against the administration's directive
delivered a substantial setback to the executive branch's efforts to overhaul
national immigration policy. Upon taking office on January 20, 2025, President
Trump had signed an executive order designed to prevent children born in the US
to parents on temporary legal statuses or without legal documentation from
automatically acquiring American citizenship.
Following the judicial defeat, the president characterized
the outcome as detrimental to the country and urged congressional lawmakers to
pursue legislative restrictions. However, that path faces steep hurdles, given
consistent public support for birthright citizenship and the court's written
opinion suggesting that any structural change would require a full
constitutional amendment.
Legal analysts note that the administration's chances of
securing a new hearing remain exceedingly low. The Supreme Court rarely grants
petitions for rehearing, and several decades have passed since the court last
allowed a retrial after a final ruling had been officially issued in an argued
case.
The administration has pursued a wide-ranging overhaul of
nearly all facets of US immigration since early 2025. While the birthright
citizenship directive was struck down, the federal government recently secured
several other judicial victories regarding immigration enforcement.
These included court clearances allowing the executive branch
to phase out Temporary Protected Status (TPS) designations for nationals of
certain crisis-hit countries, alongside the implementation of strict border
enforcement measures designed to prevent asylum seekers from entering US
territory to initiate protection claims.
Nevertheless, the Supreme Court drew a firm line regarding
birthright citizenship, ruling that the administration's executive order
directly violated the explicit language of the Fourteenth Amendment of the US
Constitution, which confers automatic citizenship upon individuals born in the
United States and subject to the jurisdiction thereof.
Civil rights organizations strongly praised the judicial
decision, noting that it reaffirms a foundational constitutional promise
regarding equality of birth. Conversely, policy research data highlighted the
potential long-term demographic impacts had the executive order stood.

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