Birthright Battle Escalates

Trump allies move to restrict pregnant visitors after a birthright citizenship ruling.

L 50%
4 of 8 articles on this topic (50%) were written by left-leaning sources.
R 50%
4 of 8 articles on this topic (50%) were written by right-leaning sources.

Main Story

Mostly Left
The core narrative of this topic, summarized from reporting across multiple outlets. This captures the key facts that most outlets agree on.

The Justice Department moved quickly to target so-called “birth tourism” after the Supreme Court rejected President Donald Trump’s effort to restrict birthright citizenship. A memo from Assistant Attorney General Colin McDonald directed federal prosecutors to prioritize investigations and prosecutions of schemes involving people who come to the United States to give birth so their children receive citizenship. The shift follows the Court’s ruling that the 14th Amendment protects citizenship for children born on U.S. soil, undercutting Trump’s executive order. Administration officials signaled they would pursue enforcement actions around temporary visitors, tourists and undocumented immigrants even after losing the broader constitutional fight.

Joe.My.God.
New York Post
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The Guardian
TIME Magazine

Coverage Angles

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Backup Citizenship Push

Mostly Right

Trump allies and Republicans began floating new ways to limit birthright citizenship after the Supreme Court ruling, including proposals aimed at pregnant visitors to the United States. Rep. Andy Ogles accused the Court of betraying the country while pushing legislation, and Stephen Miller suggested the administration could consider barring pregnant tourists or immigrants.

FOX News
Truthout
Western Journal