Today, June 30, 2026, in a major victory for immigrant families and for every child born on U.S. soil, the U.S. Supreme Court today struck down President Trump’s executive order that sought to end automatic citizenship at birth — including for children of undocumented or temporary-status parents, but also more broadly for every child born in the United States.
The Court ruled 6-3 that the executive order violated the Citizenship Clause of the 14th Amendment, a guarantee that has applied to virtually all babies born here, regardless of their parents’ status, for more than 150 years.
The Court Ruling
The case, Trump v. Barbara, was brought by the ACLU and several civil rights organizations on behalf of families who would have been affected by the executive order, which the President signed on his first day in office in 2025. Lower courts had blocked Trump’s executive order from ever taking effect, and today’s ruling makes that block permanent and nationwide.
Writing for the majority, Chief Justice John Roberts affirmed that the 14th Amendment’s guarantee of citizenship to “all persons born … in the United States” applies to virtually every child born here, regardless of their parents’ immigration status. The decision relies on the Court’s landmark 1898 ruling in United States v. Wong Kim Ark, which has anchored birthright citizenship law for well over a century.
What This Means for Our Community
This is welcome and important news for immigrant families. In practical terms, the ruling means:
- Citizenship at birth is unchanged. A child born in the United States — regardless of their parents’ visa status, asylum status, or lack of documentation — remains automatically a U.S. citizen at birth, exactly as before.
- Birth certificates remain valid proof of citizenship. Families do not need to navigate any new federal eligibility process, database check, or additional paperwork to establish a newborn’s citizenship.
- Continued access to citizenship-dependent benefits, including Social Security numbers and passports, without new immigration-status screening for parents.
- A strong constitutional precedent reaffirmed. The ruling reinforces that this protection comes from the Constitution itself, not a statute Congress can simply rewrite.
That said, as noted below, the President has signaled he intends to keep pushing on this issue, so it’s worth staying informed.
What’s Next?
We want to be candid with our clients: this fight is not necessarily over. President Trump has urged Congress to legislate around the ruling, and the decision was not unanimous — three justices dissented. We will continue to monitor any legislative or legal developments closely and will update you immediately if anything changes that affects your family’s situation.
For now, today’s decision preserves more than 150 years of settled law and constitutional protection for every child born on American soil.
If you have questions about how this ruling affects your family’s specific situation, please contact our office to schedule a consultation. We may be reached at 1 415 397 0808, law@tancinco.com or through our website: www.tancinco.com.