In a decision that has sent tremors through the populist echo chamber, the US Supreme Court has upheld birthright citizenship, delivering a constitutional slap to the Trump administration’s nativist fantasies. The ruling, which landed like a gin-soaked brick through a stained-glass window, affirms that anyone born on American soil is, in fact, an American. This is not a radical concept; it is the 14th Amendment, a bit of text that has been around since 1868, when people were still arguing about whether black people counted as people. Spoiler: they do.
Chief Justice John Roberts, writing for the majority, declared that the “original public meaning” of the Citizenship Clause clearly includes children of non-citizens. This is a devastating blow to the Trumpian brain trust, which had argued that the phrase “subject to the jurisdiction thereof” somehow excluded undocumented immigrants. Apparently, the justices were not persuaded by the innovative legal theory that “jurisdiction” means “only if your parents remembered to fill out Form 1099-Immigrant.”
The White House response was predictably apoplectic. Press Secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders, or possibly a faulty AI chatbot trained on Fox News transcripts, issued a statement decrying the decision as “activist” and “not what the founders intended.” The founders, of course, intended a lot of things, including the Three-Fifths Compromise and the right to duel, but we’ve moved on. Mostly.
This ruling is a massive victory for the approximately 250,000 children born annually to undocumented parents. These children, often called “anchor babies” by those with the emotional intelligence of a damp sock, are now firmly Americans. They can grow up to become lawyers, doctors, or even political commentators who will one day defend their own citizenship against xenophobic goblins.
The dissenting justices, led by Clarence Thomas, argued that the 14th Amendment was never meant to apply to the children of illegal immigrants. This is rich coming from a man who believes in “originalism,” which is history for people who wish they could still own slaves. Thomas’s dissent was joined by Samuel Alito and Neil Gorsuch, forming a trifecta of grim mischief.
Meanwhile, President Trump fired off a tweet that was, by his standards, almost coherent: “Birthright citizenship is dead! But not really because the Supreme Court just killed it. Wait, they upheld it? Sad!” The tweet was later deleted, presumably by a staffer who realised that shouting into the void does not change the Constitution.
The practical impact of this ruling is immense. It means that the Trump administration cannot unilaterally strip citizenship from children born on US soil, a policy that would have created a stateless class of human beings. It also means that the administration’s broader assault on legal immigration faces another judicial speed bump. The case, interestingly, was brought by a group of pregnant women who were afraid of giving birth in a country that might suddenly declare their babies non-citizens. One cannot blame them for being cautious in an era where the President confuses germ theory with trade policy.
In the court of public opinion, the ruling is likely to be met with a shrug by most Americans, who have more pressing concerns, like whether their job will exist next week or if they can afford insulin. But for the political class, it is a reminder that the Constitution is not a suggestions box. It is a binding contract, one that even a reality TV star with access to nuclear codes cannot tear up.
So raise a glass of cheap gin, America. Your Supreme Court has done something sensible. Do not expect it to become a habit.











