The Supreme Court on Thursday issued two significant rulings that strike at the heart of the Trump administration's executive actions on immigration and transgender rights. The decisions, both handed down on the final day of the term, represent a sharp rebuke to the president's use of executive power and his attempts to reshape social policy unilaterally.
In the first case, the court upheld the automatic right to citizenship for children born on U.S. soil, regardless of their parents' immigration status. The ruling invalidates a 2019 executive order that sought to end birthright citizenship, a practice rooted in the 14th Amendment. Chief Justice John Roberts, writing for the 6-3 majority, stated that "the Constitution is clear: birthright citizenship is a right protected by the 14th Amendment, and no executive order can override it." The decision was met with relief by immigrant rights groups, who had argued that the order would have created a permanent underclass of stateless individuals.
In a second blow, the court struck down the administration's ban on transgender individuals serving in the military. The 5-4 ruling found that the policy, which was announced via Twitter in 2017 and later formalized, violated equal protection guarantees under the Fifth Amendment. Justice Anthony Kennedy, in his final opinion before retiring, wrote that "discrimination on the basis of gender identity serves no legitimate military interest and imposes burdens on a class of individuals who have served our country with distinction." The decision restores the status quo ante, allowing transgender personnel to serve openly and receive medical care.
Both rulings were decided along ideological lines, with conservative justices Clarence Thomas, Samuel Alito, and Neil Gorsuch dissenting in the citizenship case, while Thomas, Alito, and Gorsuch were joined by Justice Brett Kavanaugh in the transgender case. President Trump reacted swiftly on Twitter, calling the decisions "politically motivated" and promising to issue new executive orders. Legal scholars note, however, that any new order would face similar constitutional hurdles and would likely be blocked by lower courts.
The timing of the rulings is particularly charged. With midterm elections looming, the decisions energize both the president's base and his critics. Democrats heralded the rulings as a check on executive overreach, while Republicans decried the court as an activist institution overstepping its bounds. The decisions also set the stage for a potential constitutional amendment debate on birthright citizenship, a move that would require a two-thirds majority in both houses of Congress and ratification by three-quarters of the states, a near impossible threshold in the current political climate.
From a policy perspective, the immediate impact is clear. The Pentagon must now revise its policies to accommodate transgender personnel, while the Department of Homeland Security will resume issuing citizenship certificates to children born on American soil. But the broader message is about the limits of presidential power. As Justice Roberts noted in a separate concurrence, "We do not have a government of men, but of laws. And those laws must be followed by all, including the executive."
The decisions leave the Trump administration with few options beyond legislative action, which remains unlikely given the divided Congress. For now, the rulings stand as a reminder of the judiciary's role in upholding constitutional principles against popular pressure. As the nation processes the twin blows, the court itself is poised to become a central issue in the upcoming election campaigns, with both sides claiming the mantle of constitutional fidelity.










