Trump Makes Historic Supreme Court Appearance That No President Has Ever Done in American History

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Trump Makes History: First President to Attend Supreme Court Arguments on Birthright Citizenship

President Donald Trump departed the White House this afternoon en route to the Supreme Court, becoming the first sitting president in American history to personally attend oral arguments. Trump is observing as the nine justices consider his Day One executive order ending birthright citizenship for children of illegal immigrants.

The presidential motorcade, led by the armored Beast limousine, traveled the short mile up Constitution Avenue to One First Street. No president has ever sat through Supreme Court oral arguments, making this an unprecedented intersection of executive and judicial power.

Trump signed the executive order titled “Restoring Constitutional Integrity to Citizenship” on January 20, 2025, his first day back in office. The order directs federal agencies to stop recognizing automatic citizenship for children born to non-citizen parents, particularly those in the country illegally.

The 14th Amendment states that all persons “born or naturalized in the United States, and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens.” Trump’s order argues this language was never intended to grant citizenship to children of illegal immigrants. The amendment was crafted in 1868 to secure citizenship for freed slaves after the Civil War.

Senator Jacob Howard, who authored the citizenship clause, explicitly stated during congressional debates that it excluded “persons born in the United States who are foreigners, aliens, who belong to the families of ambassadors or foreign ministers.” The phrase “subject to the jurisdiction thereof” was designed to exclude children of diplomats and illegal aliens owing allegiance to foreign powers.

Despite this clear intent, the 1898 Supreme Court case United States v. Wong Kim Ark extended citizenship to children of legal immigrants. Over time, this precedent expanded to include anchor babies – children born to illegal immigrants who then leverage family ties for chain migration.

Government data shows approximately 300,000 babies are born annually to undocumented mothers, creating instant citizenship pathways that bring in extended families. This practice has cost American taxpayers an estimated $150 billion annually in welfare, education, and healthcare benefits according to immigration research groups.

Trump’s executive order cuts this pipeline by requiring true allegiance to the United States, not mere birth on American soil. The order instructs the State Department, Department of Homeland Security, and other agencies to interpret the 14th Amendment according to its original meaning.

Blue-state attorneys general and open-borders organizations immediately sued to block the order. Lower courts packed with Biden appointees issued nationwide injunctions, echoing the judicial sabotage Trump faced during his first term. However, the conservative Supreme Court supermajority fast-tracked the case to today’s arguments.

Solicitor General John Sauer, known for his sharp defenses of executive power, argued the government’s case. Opposition lawyers claimed the order upends “settled law,” but Sauer countered that precedent must yield to constitutional text and original meaning.

Justices pressed opponents on a key question: If illegal aliens aren’t “subject to” U.S. jurisdiction – as evidenced by their violation of immigration law – how can their children claim automatic citizenship?

Trump’s presence in the courtroom gallery sent a powerful message about the stakes involved. Supporters gathered outside chanting “End Birthright Now!” and “America First!” while counter-demonstrators waving foreign flags were vastly outnumbered.

Conservative legal scholars expect a 6-3 ruling upholding the executive order by summer. Chief Justice John Roberts has trended originalist in recent years, while Justices Thomas and Alito have long criticized birthright citizenship overreach. Trump’s three appointees – Gorsuch, Kavanaugh, and Barrett – prioritize the Constitution’s original public meaning.

A favorable ruling would revolutionize immigration policy. State departments would stop issuing passports to anchor babies. ICE could prioritize deportations without citizen family members as anchors. The decision would signal to the world that America controls its own citizenship standards.

This historic day represents Trump delivering on core campaign promises: secure borders, merit-based immigration, and American sovereignty. After decades of “comprehensive immigration reform” euphemisms masking amnesty schemes, Trump rejects half-measures.

The mile journey from White House to Supreme Court may be short in distance, but it represents a seismic shift in American immigration policy. History bends once again to Trump’s vision of America First.

Daily Beltway
Daily Beltwayhttp://187.77.217.189:3600
Your trusted source for conservative news from the White House and Capitol Hill. White House correspondent coverage you can trust.

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