China Daily

Trump targets birthright citizenshi­p

Experts, officials call possible executive order ‘unconstitu­tional’

- By CHEN YINGQUN in Beijing and AI HEPING in New York Xinhua contribute to this story. Contact the writers at chenyingqu­n@chinadaily.com.cn

US President Donald Trump has triggered controvers­y after raising the possibilit­y of ending birthright citizenshi­p in the United States by signing an executive order, a move experts say would be unconstitu­tional.

Trump said on Tuesday that he has discussed with White House counsel the idea of bringing a halt to giving automatic citizenshi­p to babies born in the US who are of noncitizen parents.

The move is believed to be Trump’s effort to appeal to constituen­ts who see illegal immigratio­n as a top concern.

Trump also went off track by saying that the US is the only country that automatica­lly gives citizenshi­p to anyone born in the country.

Actually, many other countries, including Canada and Mexico, also grant citizenshi­p to children born within their borders.

Trump’s words were immediatel­y opposed by legal experts and officials.

“Well you obviously cannot do that,” Republican US House Speaker Paul Ryan said in a radio interview on Tuesday. “You cannot end birthright citizenshi­p with an executive order.”

Trump is attempting to please his base by denying birthright status to foreign babies born in the US, said Brookings Institutio­n Senior Fellow Darrell West.

“It is a way to sound tough on immigratio­n without getting Congress to pass a bill,” West said.

“Trump plans to implement this idea through an executive order. That approach is not likely to be constituti­onal.”

Saikrishna Prakash, a con- stitutiona­l expert and University of Virginia Law School professor, said Trump is doing something that’s going to upset a lot of people, but ultimately this will be decided by the legal system.

“This is not something he can decide on his own,” he said.

Yang Jingmin, a researcher with the Center for China and Globalizat­ion, a think tank in Beijing, said an executive order is likely to be challenged and overruled in court.

The first sentence of the 14th Amendment passed after the Civil War (1861-65) establishe­s the principle of “birthright citizenshi­p”: “All persons born or naturalize­d in the United States, and subject to the jurisdicti­on thereof, are citizens of the United States and of the state wherein they reside.”

However, Yang said that the signal sent by Trump was worth pondering.

“What Trump expressed and wants to do will probably affect the public opinion of the US, and actions that support opening-up and conform to the spirit of the Constituti­on will probably be under pressure, “she said.

Xie Guoao, founder of Crownbaby Internatio­nal Life Science & Technology Group, said tens of thousands of Chinese have gone to the US to have children, aiming for citizenshi­p and education rights.

“I think Trump cannot alter the Constituti­on and the rights of the children born in the country will not be changed easily, but it also sends out signals that related polices might be tightened in the future,” he said.

The issue of immigratio­n has dominated political discussion­s in the US again in the past few weeks, as Trump views illegal immigratio­n as one of the nation’s most pressing matters for the midterm elections next week.

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