Profile Picture
  • All
  • Search
  • Images
  • Videos
  • Maps
  • News
  • Copilot
  • More
    • Shopping
    • Flights
    • Travel
  • Notebook
  • Top stories
  • Sports
  • U.S.
  • Local
  • World
  • Science
  • Technology
  • Entertainment
  • Business
  • More
    Politics
Order byBest matchMost fresh
  • Any time
    • Past hour
    • Past 24 hours
    • Past 7 days
    • Past 30 days

Birthright citizenship on line. Supreme Court to decide

Digest more
Top News
Overview
 · 3d · on MSN
The Supreme Court will decide whether Trump’s birthright citizenship order violates the Constitution
The Supreme Court agreed on Friday to take up the constitutionality of President Donald Trump’s order on birthright citizenship declaring that children born to parents who are in the United States ill...

Continue reading

 · 4d
Supreme Court to decide on birthright citizenship. What is it?
Idaho State Journal · 10h
Trump order ending birthright citizenship to be argued at US Supreme Court
 · 1d
Supreme Court appears poised to vastly expand presidential powers
The Supreme Court hears Monday arguments in a case that could end the independence of independent agencies, overturn a 90-year-old precedent, and reshape the balance of power between Congress and the ...

Continue reading

 · 1d
Supreme Court appears poised to rule in favor of Trump on independent agency firings
 · 2d
The Supreme Court weighs Trump's bid to fire independent agency board members
Opinion
1hOpinion

Readers Write: Birthright citizenship, St. Paul’s finances, local income taxes, George Floyd Square

The Supreme Court has agreed to hear President Donald Trump’s executive order ending birthright citizenship for the children of illegal immigrants. The case primarily turns on five words in the 14th Amendment: “and subject to the jurisdiction thereof.”
Opinion
4don MSNOpinion

What longstanding legal precedent says about birthright citizenship and the process to restrict it: Analysis

When the Supreme Court agreed to hear the Trump administration's petitions seeking to resurrect Executive Order 14160 -- the president's sweeping attempt to gut the Fourteenth Amendment's guarantee of birthright citizenship -- it effectively placed one of the Constitution's most settled commitments on the docket.
2d

Former DOJ official warns ‘very disturbing things’ happened around Biden’s autopen pardons

Former Deputy Assistant Attorney General Tom Dupree discusses the Supreme Court's case on birthright citizenship, President Donald Trump's criticism of Cuellar and concerns over former President Joe Biden’s autopen pardons.
  • Privacy
  • Terms