“Re: birthright citizenship, Solicitor General John Sauer told Chief Justice John Roberts we’re ‘in a new world,’ which sounds to me like he believes in the ‘living Constitution’ that led to decisions like Roe v. Wade. Or is this just another example of the hypocrisy of so-called conservatives who advance principles (like strict constructionism) whenever it’s convenient, and quickly abandon them when it’s not? It’s amusing to see at least one Supreme Court justice refuse to play along.” — David
Hi David,
Yes, last week’s birthright citizenship hearing in Trump v. Barbara had an upside-down quality to it.
In the part of the hearing you refer to, Sauer argued that the modern practice of “birth tourism” justifies Donald Trump’s anti-birthright citizenship executive order. Roberts noted that the practice “certainly wasn’t a problem in the 19th century,” when birthright citizenship was cemented in the Constitution’s 14th Amendment. Sauer conceded the historical point but said that “we’re in a new world … where 8 billion people are one plane ride away from having a child who’s a U.S. citizen.” That prompted the chief justice’s instantly famous response: “Well, it’s a new world. It’s the same Constitution.”
Sauer’s appeal to modernity reflected a simple reality of the case that’s been clear from the moment that Trump issued his order, which was quickly rejected in the lower courts as “blatantly unconstitutional”: If the high court straightforwardly applies the originalist and textualist framework that the conservative legal movement has successfully fought to establish as mainstream, then it’s an easy case against the administration. Through his order, issued on his first day back in office, Trump is effectively trying to single-handedly overturn the Constitution, federal law and more than 100 years of high court precedent that have stood for a basic premise of American life: If you’re born here, you’re a citizen.
On the other hand, if the court deems it appropriate to take policy concerns into account, then all bets are off. For what it’s worth, the justices’ questions and comments at the hearing suggested that Trump will lose this case, though we won’t know for sure until we have the decision later in the spring or early summer.
And it wasn’t only the chief justice who called out the administration’s policy gambit at the hearing.
Another example came in an exchange between Sauer and Justice Brett Kavanaugh. The Trump-appointed justice noted that the government lawyer had mentioned the citizenship practices of other countries “several times,” which led Kavanaugh to remind him that “we try to interpret American law with American precedent based on American history.” The justice wondered, then, why it matters how European countries go about granting citizenship. “I guess I’m not seeing the relevance as a legal constitutional interpretive matter necessarily, although I understand it’s a very good point as a policy matter,” Kavanaugh said.








