Is
America a Country for Americans? The Supreme Court Will Decide
Citizenship
must involve complete loyalty to the U.S. or else there is no sovereignty.
Joseph Ford
Cotto | February 27, 2026 www.americanthinker.com
Citizenship is not a technicality. It is not a loophole. It is not a prize
slipped across a hospital bassinet because geography happened to cooperate.
Citizenship is the highest legal bond between an individual and a sovereign
nation.
If that bond means anything, it must mean allegiance. That is the principle
at the center of President Donald J. Trump’s Executive Order 14160, signed on
Jan. 20, 2025, titled Protecting the Meaning and Value of
American Citizenship.
The order directs federal
agencies not to recognize automatic citizenship for certain children born in
the United States after Feb. 19, 2025. When the mother was unlawfully
present, or present only temporarily, and the father was neither a citizen nor
a lawful permanent resident, the child becomes ineligible for citizenship.
Its rationale is straightforward. The Fourteenth Amendment grants
citizenship to those born in the U.S. and “subject to the jurisdiction
thereof.” That final clause is not ornamental language. It is a constitutional
requirement.
Opponents moved quickly. Lawsuits were filed almost immediately.
Federal district courts issued preliminary
injunctions, including a nationwide block from a Maryland judge on Feb. 5,
halting enforcement before the policy could take effect. For a time, it
appeared that the familiar pattern would repeat itself, executive action frozen
by sweeping lower court orders.
Then the Supreme Court intervened in a critical procedural dispute.
On June 27, in Trump v. CASA, the Court ruled 6
to 3 to limit the use of universal injunctions by lower courts, finding no
broad historical basis for them in most cases. The justices did not resolve the
merits of the birthright citizenship order, but they did something profoundly
important. They reaffirmed that nationwide policy questions belong before the
Supreme Court itself, not in the hands of a single district judge.
That set the stage for the main event.
On Dec. 5, the Supreme Court granted certiorari
in Trump v. Barbara, agreeing to hear the constitutional
challenge to Executive Order 14160 during its ongoing term, with oral arguments
scheduled for April 1, 2026.
The Court deserves enormous credit for taking the case. The country cannot
function indefinitely on assumptions about citizenship that were never fully
tested against the constitutional text.
The most powerful defense of the order appears in
an amicus brief filed Jan. 27, 2026, in support of the petitioners in
Supreme Court case No. 25-365. That brief does not rely on rhetoric. It relies
on history, statutory development, Supreme Court precedent, and the framers’
own explanations.
Its core argument is simple, yet powerful.
The phrase “subject to the jurisdiction thereof” has always meant complete
political allegiance, not mere physical presence. English common law shaped
that understanding. In Calvin’s Case in 1608, Lord Coke
explained that subject status depended on ligeantia, meaning
allegiance and obedience to the sovereign, not simply being born within
territorial boundaries. Allegiance was reciprocal. Protection flowed from
loyalty.
That concept carried into American law.
The Civil Rights Act of 1866 declared citizens
to be those born in the U.S. and not subject to any foreign power.
Sen. Jacob Howard later explained that the Fourteenth Amendment’s
jurisdiction language would exclude foreigners, aliens, and the families of
ambassadors. Sen. Lyman Trumbull defined jurisdiction as complete
jurisdiction, meaning not owing allegiance to anybody else.
These statements were not casual observations. They were explanations of
what the Amendment was designed to accomplish.
The post ratification record reinforces the
same principle. In the Slaughter House Cases in 1872, the
Supreme Court observed that the jurisdiction clause excludes children of
ministers and citizens of foreign states born within the U.S. In Elk
v. Wilkins in 1884, the Court held that birth within the U.S. was not
enough where complete allegiance was lacking.
Citizenship required full political subjection, not partial or divided
loyalty.
Opponents point to United States v. Wong Kim Ark in 1898.
But that case involved parents
who were lawful permanent residents domiciled in the U.S. with the government’s
consent. The Court emphasized lawful residence and the sovereign’s permission.
It did not address children born to parents present in violation of federal
law.
Extending Wong Kim Ark to that context assumes what must
be proven.
Modern courts have read Wong
Kim Ark carefully. In Tuaua v. United States, the D.C.
Circuit stressed the importance of complete political jurisdiction and direct
allegiance. The amicus brief argues that collapsing the distinction between
lawful, consent based presence and unlawful presence erases the constitutional
requirement of allegiance.
The practical stakes are real.
Jennifer Pak reported that
official Chinese estimates placed annual birth tourism numbers in the U.S. at
approximately 50,000. Salvatore Babones has estimated figures as high as
100,000 per year. Peter Schweizer has argued that over a decade the number of
children born through such practices could range between 750,000 and 1.5
million. China Daily has openly advertised automatic
citizenship under the Fourteenth Amendment as an incentive for expectant
mothers.
These numbers underscore a hard truth. If citizenship attaches automatically
without regard to allegiance or lawful status, the incentive structure changes.
The Constitution becomes a magnet rather than a covenant. The amicus brief
contends that the framers anticipated this danger and wrote the jurisdiction
clause to prevent it.
Textual analysis strengthens that case.
The Fourteenth Amendment speaks of
being “subject to the jurisdiction thereof,” not merely “within the
jurisdiction.” That distinction appears elsewhere in the amendment. The
difference in phrasing suggests a difference in scope. Total political
allegiance is not the same as temporary subjection to local laws.
The brief synthesizes English
common law, the drafting history of 1866, early Supreme Court decisions, and
modern precedent. It concludes that children born to those who remain under the
political allegiance of another sovereign and who entered or stayed unlawfully
are not fully subject to the jurisdiction of the U.S. in the constitutional
sense.
That conclusion is not radical. It is anchored in text and history. It
respects Congress’s role in naturalization. It restores meaning to words too
long treated as surplus.
If the Supreme Court upholds Executive Order 14160, thereby clarifying the
Fourteenth Amendment, the decision will resonate far beyond immigration policy.
It will affirm that citizenship is defined by constitutional principle, not by
gaming the system. It will elevate the value of American citizenship by tying
it unmistakably to allegiance and consent. It will limit the ability of foreign
interests and unlawful entrants to manufacture status through geography alone.
Most importantly, it will return control over America herself to the proper
American people and their Constitution. In an era when sovereignty is often
treated as an inconvenience, such a ruling would declare that the bond of
citizenship still matters, still carries weight, and still demands loyalty.
That is not exclusion. That is self-government.
If citizenship can be claimed without allegiance, then sovereignty becomes a
suggestion and the Constitution a relic. This case forces a choice between
sentiment and structure, between drift and definition. The amicus brief proves
that the Fourteenth Amendment demands loyalty, not opportunism.
Should the Court affirm that truth, it will not merely decide a policy
dispute. It will decide whether U.S. citizenship is sacredly reserved for
Americans themselves, or formalized as a valuable commodity for alien birth
tourists.