The US Supreme Court has delivered a decisive blow to Donald Trump's immigration agenda, upholding the constitutional right to birthright citizenship. The ruling, which reaffirms that anyone born on American soil is automatically a US citizen, has reignited debate on this side of the Atlantic about the United Kingdom's own citizenship laws.
For working families in the North, this decision may feel distant. But the principle is universal: who belongs, and who decides? The UK’s Conservative government has been tightening citizenship rules for years, making it harder for children born here to non-British parents to claim citizenship automatically. The Home Office’s 'hostile environment' policy has left many families in limbo, unsure if their children will be accepted as British.
Birthright citizenship, or jus soli, is the law in the US and many other countries. The UK ended automatic birthright citizenship in 1983, replacing it with a system based on parental status. Now, a child born in the UK is only a citizen if at least one parent is a British citizen or settled here. Advocates argue this creates a two-tier system, where some children are British from birth and others are not, even if they have never known another home.
Trade unions have raised concerns about the impact on workers. Migrant workers often face precarious employment, and if their children are denied citizenship, they may be afraid to challenge poor conditions or low wages. The TUC has called for a review, arguing that citizenship should not be a barrier to fair treatment at work.
The ruling in the US is a reminder that citizenship is not just about passports; it is about rights. The right to vote, to access healthcare, to stand for office. It is also about dignity. For the estimated 100,000 children in the UK who are born to parents without settled status, the uncertainty is a daily burden.
The government defends its system as fair and necessary to control immigration. But critics point to cases like the Windrush scandal, where people with a legal right to be here were wrongly targeted. They argue that the current rules are confusing and punitive.
Meanwhile, in the US, the Supreme Court’s decision is seen as a landmark victory for civil rights. Trump had sought to end birthright citizenship by executive order, arguing it encouraged 'anchor babies'. The Court disagreed, citing the 14th Amendment.
For the UK, the debate will likely intensify. Labour has pledged to scrap the 'hostile environment', but has not committed to restoring full birthright citizenship. Liberal Democrats and the SNP have called for a more generous system.
At the kitchen table, this is about more than law. It is about whether a child born in Bradford or Birmingham is seen as one of us. The US ruling may not change UK law, but it has put the spotlight back on a question that will not go away: who gets to be British?








