Op-Ed: The Supreme Court Just Weakened Judicial Oversight—And Put Birthright Citizenship in Jeopardy 

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Photo of Kevin Seraaj, journalist and publisher of the Orlando Advocate
Kevin Seraaj, J.D., M.Div., publisher, Orlando Advocate

On June 26, the Supreme Court handed down a decision that, while procedural on its face, could have sweeping consequences for the constitutional rights of millions. In a 6–3 ruling, the Court held that federal judges generally cannot issue nationwide injunctions against executive actions—unless doing so is necessary to protect the specific plaintiffs in a case. This may sound like a technical limitation, but make no mistake: it’s a powerful green light for executive overreach.

by Kevin Seraaj, J.D., M.Div., OrlandoAdvocate.com

The case centers on President Trump’s controversial executive order seeking to deny birthright citizenship to children born in the United States to undocumented or temporary-status parents. That policy directly contradicts over a century of settled interpretation of the 14th Amendment—and threatens to create a patchwork of citizenship in a country founded on the promise of equal protection under the law.

In declining to block the order nationwide, the Court has opened the door for it to take effect in any state not directly involved in the lawsuits. Legal experts predict this could happen within 30 days, barring further challenges.

The NAACP Legal Defense Fund rightly sounded the alarm. As Sam Spital, LDF’s Associate Director-Counsel, stated: “This ruling opens the door for a plainly unconstitutional policy to take effect in large parts of the country.”

And he’s right. With this decision, we’ve entered a perilous phase where constitutional protections are no longer uniformly shielded by the courts. A child’s rights may now depend not just on where they were born, but on which jurisdiction decided to fight back.

There is still time to act. Lower courts can—and must—narrowly tailor their revised injunctions to continue blocking implementation wherever possible. More importantly, new class-action lawsuits are already underway to protect the broader population.

The judicial branch is often called the guardian of the Constitution. But guardianship demands vigilance—and when judicial tools are stripped away, the rest of us must step up. Because birthright citizenship is not just a legal principle. It is a declaration of who we are as a nation.

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