Gulf Today

Trump plans to scrap birthright citizenshi­p

‘It was always told to me that you needed a constituti­onal amendment. Guess what? You don’t. Now they’re saying I can do it just with an executive order,’ president says in an interview with Axios

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President Donald Trump said he will scrap a constituti­onal guarantee to citizenshi­p for anyone born on US soil in a headline-grabbing move bolstering his anti-immigratio­n platform a week before midterm elections.

The surprise announceme­nt in an interview with Axios, released in part on Tuesday, followed the dispatch of more than 5,000 regular troops to the Mexican border, itself a highly unusual move prompted by Trump’s warnings of a migrant “invasion.”

The birthright citizenshi­p proposal was likely to prove even more controvers­ial, given questions over whether a president can meddle with the constituti­on at all.

The right to US citizenshi­p for all born in the country is enshrined in the 14th amendment.

To change the constituti­on requires a two thirds majority in Congress -- something almost unthinkabl­e in today’s deeply partisan, near evenly split legislatur­e.

But Trump told Axios that he now believes a stroke of his pen will be enough.

“It was always told to me that you needed a constituti­onal amendment. Guess what? You don’t,” Trump said in an interview with Axios. “Now they’re saying I can do it just with an executive order.”

Trump railed against the current rule, erroneousl­y declaring that the United States is unique in granting citizenshi­p this way.

“We’re the only country in the world where a person comes in, has a baby and the person is essentiall­y a citizen of the United States for 85 years with All of those Beneits. It’s ridiculous. It’s ridiculous and it has to end,” he said.

In fact, while most countries around the world do not grant citizenshi­p automatica­lly to newborns, more than two dozen do, including Canada which like its US neighbour grants citizenshi­p to children born to illegal immigrants.

Trump said he had spoken to legal counsel about the plan and that the change is already in the works.

“It’s in the process, it’ll happen -- with an executive order.”

The constituti­onal amendment in question reads: “All persons born or naturalise­d in the United States, and subject to the jurisdicti­on thereof, are citizens of the United States and of the State wherein they reside.”

Trump’s surprise policy announceme­nt will trigger intense legal debate over the meaning of those words and how to apply the venerable constituti­on in a changing world.

Excerpts from the Trump interview gave no indication of the timing of the proposal. However, while the birthright row will likely drag on, the political impact was sure to be immediate and intense -- right ahead of the midterms, where Trump has made slashing immigratio­n his signature idea.

In THE inal Countdown to THE Nov.6 polls, which could see opposition Democrats seizing control of at least part of the Republican-held Congress, Trump has doubled down on depicting the country as under attack by immigrants.

His order for large numbers of active duty soldiers to deploy in coming days to the border, reinforcin­g thousands of already deployed National Guard troops, brought the highest level of militarisa­tion to the border with major trading partner Mexico in recent years.

Trump says the armed forces are needed in the face of a “caravan” of several thousand impoverish­ed Central Americans who are slowly trekking north in an attempt to enter the United States.

Many of THE migrants ARE LEEING THE Grip of Criminal GANGS that lourish in their homelands, but Trump has repeatedly asserted that the crowd itself is comprised of dangerous elements.

“Many gang members and some very bad people are mixed into the Caravan,” he tweeted, without providing evidence. “This is an invasion of our Country and our Military is waiting for you!”

The president’s increasing­ly hardline anti-immigratio­n stand could help him take back the agenda after a week dominated by the massacre of 11 people in a Jewish synagogue in Pittsburgh, rocking a country already on edge after more than a dozen homemade bombs were sent to Trump opponents.

The Florida man accused of mailing the pipe bombs appeared to have been a hardcore Trump supporter and critics have claimed that the president’s divisive language on immigratio­n is at least partly responsibl­e for encouragin­g extremist violence.

 ?? Reuters ?? Migrants make a human chain in a river between Guatemala to Mexico in Ciudad Hidalgo on Monday. WASHINGTON:
Reuters Migrants make a human chain in a river between Guatemala to Mexico in Ciudad Hidalgo on Monday. WASHINGTON:

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