Washington – in accordance with President Donald Trump's executive order to end the republicans on Thursday, revealed the Republican laws that would change the federal immigration law to limit the scope of citizenship, although the right in the US constitution is involved.
Trump's executive order on Mondays was already confronted with convinced legal challenges by the Democratic Attorney General and the ACLU, whereby oral arguments had been completed on Thursday before the Federal Supreme Court in the state of Washington.
The sponsor of the House Bill, HR 569, GOP Texas Rep. Brian Babin, said he had welcomed the legal challenges for Trump's executive order and his invoice.
“We appreciate and wanted the challenges,” he said. “This way we can bring it to the UK's Supreme Court. This thing could take up to three years for it to rise at the High Court and let us see (rule).”
The Republican Republican of Arizona, Andy Biggs, who was also at the press conference, said that the GOP law draft was submitted to court despite a case of the Supreme Court in 1898, which had maintained citizenship as in the 14th amendment.
Other Republicans at the press event were the reps. Mike Collins from Georgia, Diana Harshbarger from Tennessee, Brandon Gill from Texas, John Rose from Tennessee, Tom Tiffany from Wisconsin and Ralph Norman from South Carolina.
“In the end, I think and I predict and predict that the Supreme Court of the United States will decide that this will be constitutionally under constitutional law,” this special legal process, “said Biggs.
Trump has appointed a third of the Supreme Court, which consolidated a conservative 6-3 majority.
In 1898 the Supreme Court confirmed the birth law care of the 14th change – which means that citizenship is guaranteed by every child born in the country, with the exception of children born for foreign diplomats.
Trumps Monday, which ends the citizenship on Monday, indicates the federal government of not recognizing or granting a documentation of the citizenship of a child who was born after February 19, to parents who are without proper approval, or children with a parent who is in the United States in the United Visa and another parent who is not to be received in the United States.
There are approximately 5.5 million US children who were born at least one parent and are an immigrant without papers and 1.8 million US children with two undocumented parents.
Babin's legislation would change to the Federal Immigration Act, the law on immigration nationality. It is said that citizenship would be born in the United States who have at least one parent, the US citizen or a Green Card owner or an immigrant with a legal status that serves in the military.
It is not about the potential that some parents could have a different legal immigration status such as work or student visa. According to the text, it would only affect the children who were born in accordance with the law of the law – although there are probably immediate legal challenges.
“This is about ensuring citizenship, a cornerstone of our national identity that is protected, respected and oriented with the principles on which this country was built,” said Babin.
Last updated 1:36 p.m., February 4, 2025