Supreme Court hears birthright citizenship case. What were key takeaways?

In a lengthy oral argument that ranged from procedural matters to questions about the Trump administration’s commitment to the rule of law, the U.S. Supreme Court debated narrowing a nationwide pause of President Donald Trump’s executive order redefining birthright citizenship.

Hearing one of the most important cases of the term, the justices discussed only in snatches what has the potential to be one of President Trump’s most consequential executive actions. Instead, in more than two hours of questions, the high court focused on a procedural issue that could have major consequences for how courts resolve lawsuits involving the federal government.

The birthright citizenship order, issued hours after Mr. Trump’s inauguration on Jan. 20, would reinterpret the 14th Amendment and make the children of temporary or unlawful immigrants ineligible for automatic U.S. citizenship. Twenty two states and immigrant rights groups sued, and a trio of federal judges stopped the order from taking effect. Because the courts are likely to strike the order down as unconstitutional, the judges said, they issued nationwide injunctions preventing it from taking effect while their rulings are appealed.

Why We Wrote This

Forum shopping is hurting the United States, a majority of justices appeared to agree Thursday. But a majority also seemed to agree that the 14th Amendment doesn’t need reinterpreting.

It is these nationwide injunctions that the Trump administration is asking the Supreme Court to review. Specifically, the administration is arguing that the injunctions should be narrowed. While they are in effect, the government says it cannot begin detailing how the birthright citizenship order would be implemented. Narrowing the injunctions would also, in theory, allow the government to begin enforcing the order in portions of the country.

But this procedural question could also have profound consequences for how the federal judiciary operates. Nationwide injunctions have become increasingly common – and increasingly controversial, including on the high court – but they can also play an important role in preserving the legal status quo while courts weigh major legal and constitutional questions.

During the argument Thursday, the justices broadly agreed that nationwide injunctions are problematic. They disagreed, however, on what should replace them. And two conservative justices appeared sympathetic to the idea that this case – with 22 states suing – might actually merit a sweeping injunction.

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