Because when it comes to birthright citizenship, the virtue signaling and armchair excoriation is not just silly -- it's dead ...
On Monday, President Trump signed an executive order seeking to end birthright citizenship, and Tuesday ... A 20-year-old man named Wong Kim Ark, born and living in San Francisco's Chinatown, was ...
Before joining the bench, however, he wrote an essay directly addressing birthright citizenship and said the 14th Amendment and Wong Kim Ark case protected children of undocumented immigrants.
Several readers defend birthright citizenship as a constitutional right. One questions that view and says it should be ...
More than 20 states have sued the Trump administration, saying it has disregarded over 125 years of legal precedent which has guaranteed that a person born in the U.S. is automatically a citizen.
The debate today depends on whether, in 1868, foreigners were considered 'subject to the jurisdiction' of the United States.
A Chinese man born in the San Francisco's Chinatown whose case would go on to set the precedent for who gets to be a U.S. citizen.
U.S. President Donald Trump has said since his first administration that he wants to end birthright citizenship, a ...
The great-grandson of Wong Kim Ark — whose landmark 1898 Supreme Court case helped establish a birthright citizenship for all ...
A president cannot amend the Constitution by himself, and a Trump order to end birthright citizenship would doubtless face ...
In the few days since he returned to the White House, President Donald Trump’s sweeping executive orders and mass pardons ...
NPR's Throughline hosts and producers, Rund Abdelfatah and Ramtin Arablouei, tell us the story of how birthright citizenship began in 1898 with the Supreme Court case, U.S. vs. Wong Kim Ark.