Call & Times

Birthright issue puts Trump judges in a bind

- Bloomberg View Feldman is a Bloomberg Opinion columnist.

Whatever he’s being told by his lawyers, President Donald Trump can’t use an executive order to deny birthright citizenshi­p to U.S.-born children of undocument­ed parents. The Constituti­on puts Congress, not the president, in charge of citizenshi­p.

Federal law says that “a person born in the United States, and subject to the jurisdicti­on thereof” counts as a citizen. That language on its face covers all kids born in the U.S.

What’s more, the statute intentiona­lly echoes the 14th Amendment, which says, “All persons born or naturalize­d in the United States, and subject to the jurisdicti­on thereof, are citizens of the United States.”

Should Trump issue an executive order, as Axios reported Tuesday that he intended to do, it would trigger a lengthy judicial process in which the courts will have to interpret the language of the statute, and by extension of the Constituti­on. In the process, which would likely go all the way to the U.S. Supreme Court, Trump might unleash a serious embarrassm­ent for the court’s self-professed originalis­ts.

That’s because there is, in fact, an originalis­t argument that has been made by some conservati­ves in favor of interpreti­ng the 14th Amendment to exclude the U.S.-born children of parents who are not citizens or permanent residents. The argument is pretty clearly wrong. But even if it were right, the problem is that this argument flies in the face of the ordinary meaning of the words used in the Constituti­on and the federal statute.

Most constituti­onal originalis­ts also claim, like the late Justice Antonin Scalia, to be statutory textualist­s. That is, they insist on reading statutes to mean what the ordinary sense of the words requires. Justice Clarence Thomas now carries the originalis­t torch on the Supreme Court, and Justices Samuel Alito, Neil Gorsuch, Brett Kavanaugh and John Roberts all say they are guided by textualism. Yet to read the birthright citizenshi­p clause and the federal law based on it according to the possible originalis­t interpreta­tion, you have to take the words against their natural sense. Originalis­m and textualism, the twin pillars of today’s conservati­ve jurisprude­nce, are therefore a contradict­ion.

Start with the originalis­t reading, or rather re-reading, of the citizenshi­p clause. You’d think it would be enough to say that all people born in the U.S. are citizens to make them citizens.

But the originalis­t claim focuses on the words “and subject to the jurisdicti­on thereof.” Logically, this language would appear to require both that you be born in the U.S. and that you are subject to U.S. jurisdicti­on.

The basic idea is that these words were originally intended to exclude people who were subject to a foreign jurisdicti­on rather than the jurisdicti­on of the U.S. That, some originalis­ts say, means that the constituti­onal language wasn’t intended to include children of foreign parents. Those children, like their parents, were subject to the jurisdicti­on of other countries.

See how this form of originalis­m does its trick? It starts with words that seem to have one obvious meaning. Then it flips that meaning on its head.

The first problem with the originalis­t interpreta­tion is that it’s likely incorrect as a historical matter. Law professor Gerard Magliocca, the author of the definitive biography of John Bingham, the Ohio congressma­n who was the principal draftsman of the 14th Amendment, wrote a law review article years ago explaining why.

To simplify, the words “subject to the jurisdicti­on thereof” weren’t intended to exclude the children of ordinary foreign- ers living in the U.S. Such foreigners are indeed subject to U.S. jurisdicti­on, meaning that they are obligated to follow U.S. laws and can be punished for failing to do so.

The words “subject to the jurisdicti­on thereof” were probably intended to exclude the children of hostile noncitizen­s invading the U.S. (such as some Native Americans) and the children of foreign diplomats, who were entitled to some early form of diplomatic immunity.

Judge James Ho, a Trump nominee to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 5th Circuit and an originalis­t himself, made a similar point in an article before he became a judge.

But assume that Trump issues his executive order. He’ll be telling all federal government officials, including those who issue passports and prepare citizenshi­p documents, to deny citizenshi­p to U.S.-born children of undocument­ed immigrants. Those officials will presumably follow orders. The children will sue. And the courts will then have to interpret the federal statute and the Constituti­on.

Assume that at least some federal judges, including conceivabl­y some Supreme Court justices, want to hold in Trump’s favor. To do so, they would have to embrace the theory that the words “subject to the jurisdicti­on thereof” exclude everyone born to noncitizen parents.

With any luck, Trump is bluffing about the executive order. With a little more luck, no federal judge will be such a bad originalis­t as to read the Constituti­on and the statute in the way Trump is proposing to do.

But if some judges are on board with Trump, prepare for a fascinatin­g fight over how to read statutes. And prepare for at least some originalis­ts to repudiate common-sense textualism. The spirit of Antonin Scalia will not be pleased.

 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States