birthright citizenship, Supreme Court
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11don MSNOpinion
Yesterday, in a 6–3 decision in Trump v. CASA, the United States Supreme Court sided with the Trump administration in a case involving an executive order that purports to eliminate birthright citizenship.
Constitutional rights have to be enforceable. They can’t rely on the goodwill of the government. This utter lack of accountability is a charter for abuse. And that abuse is happening right now.
By limiting the ability of a single judge to halt executive actions across the nation, the court has restored balance to the judicial system.
The Supreme Court, ruling in the birthright citizenship case, reined in federal judges' ability to issue nationwide injunctions.
Supreme Court limits nationwide injunctions in birthright case The decision issues some limits on the power of federal judges to universally block President Trump's executive order on birthright ...
Supreme Court Limits Judges’ Ability to Issue Nationwide Injunctions, a Win for Trump The decision could reshape the way U.S. citizenship is granted, even temporarily.
Over the past month, the U.S. Supreme Court issued over 20 rulings, addressing a variety of issues. These decisions could affect millions of Americans and have significant implications for issues impacting UT.
Friday’s decision limits the circumstances under which the court can issue nationwide injunctions — orders that stop a federal law or policy from being enforced while court battles play out.
The Supreme Court spent much of its most recent term responding to a fire hose of requests for emergency relief sought by the Trump administration, as President Trump's efforts to implement key aspects of his second-term agenda were stymied by lower courts on several fronts.