President Trump’s Birthright Citizenship Executive Order: Too Much Detail, Too Little Authority -- Guest Post by Scott Titshaw and Stephen Yale-Loehr
There are three categories of birthright citizenship recognized around the world. Two of these, citizenship based on place of birth and citizenship inherited from parents at birth, have roots dating back hundreds of years . The third category, hybrid citizenship rules, evolved in the twentieth century. The United States recognizes inherited citizenship for children born abroad to U.S. citizens , but it has always relied primarily on birthplace citizenship. For over a century, the Fourteenth Amendment of the U.S. Constitution has, with limited exceptions, granted citizenship to everyone born in the United States . Congress assumed this simple birthright citizenship rule when it enacted and later amended the Immigration and Nationality Act (INA). That assumption now permeates our immigration and citizenship statutes . This reliance on birthplace citizenship is now being questioned. On the first day of his second term, President Trump issued an Executive Order that would overturn...