Auditeurs:
Meilleurs auditeurs :
play_arrowRADIO DROMAGE

On April 1, the United States Supreme Court heard oral arguments in a case called Barbara v. Trump. This case, brought by the ACLU and other immigration advocates, challenges an executive order that the President signed last January — on the very first day of his second term in office — which aims to undo birthright citizenship. The executive order, titled “Protecting the Meaning and Value of American Citizenship,” specifically sought to limit this constitutional right to people born in the U.S. to at least one parent who is also a U.S. citizen or lawful permanent resident.
This guide provides a brief historical overview of birthright citizenship and explains what the litigation surrounding this issue means for people who may currently be pregnant and for those who gave birth after the executive order was signed.
Birthright citizenship is a type of citizenship that is granted to people upon birth on U.S. soil. This legal principle was enshrined into law by the 14th Amendment of the U.S. Constitution and has been interpreted since 1898 to mean that anyone, regardless of race, who is born in the U.S. is automatically a U.S. citizen.
The language in section 1 of the 14th amendment states three things:
Trump’s executive order focused on the first part of section one of the 14th amendment by attempting to narrow the scope of people who could be considered U.S. citizens upon birth.
The executive order signed by Trump attempts to prevent the following people from acquiring birthright citizenship:
In other words, if the Supreme Court sides with Trump, any babies born to parents without lawful status after February 19, 2025 would not be considered U.S. citizens.
Because of all of the lawsuits that were filed challenging the executive order, nothing new has gone into effect yet. This means that if you are pregnant and will give birth soon or gave birth after February 19, 2025, your baby will be or is a U.S. citizen, regardless of the immigration status of the parents. The Supreme Court will issue a final decision on this issue sometime in June, so for now, nothing has changed. Your baby’s citizenship rights, assuming they are born in the U.S., are protected.
For more information, check out this know-your-rights flyer and this web page.
The post Is birthright citizenship still in effect? What to know as Supreme Court weighs major case appeared first on The Haitian Times.
Écrit par: Viewcom04

For every Show page the timetable is auomatically generated from the schedule, and you can set automatic carousels of Podcasts, Articles and Charts by simply choosing a category. Curabitur id lacus felis. Sed justo mauris, auctor eget tellus nec, pellentesque varius mauris. Sed eu congue nulla, et tincidunt justo. Aliquam semper faucibus odio id varius. Suspendisse varius laoreet sodales.
close1
play_arrowK-Dans
2
play_arrowDjakout #1
3
play_arrowKlass