Majority opinion:
pinion) OCTOBER TERM, 2025
Syllabus
NOTE: Where it is feasible, a syllabus (headnote) will be released, as is
being done in connection with this case, at the time the opinion is issued.
The syllabus constitutes no part of the opinion of the Court but has been
prepared by the Reporter of Decisions for the convenience of the reader.
See United States v. Detroit Timber & Lumber Co., 200 U. S. 321, 337.
1
SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
Syllabus
TRUMP, PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES, ET AL.
v. BARBARA ET AL.
CERTIORARI BEFORE JUDGMENT TO THE UNITED STATES
COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT
No. 25–365. Argued April 1, 2026—Decided June 30, 2026
The question presented is whether the Constitution guarantees citizen-
ship to children born in the United States of parents who are unlaw-
fully or temporarily present in the country. Under the Citizenship
Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment, “[a]ll persons born or natural-
ized in the United States and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are
citizens of the United States and of the State wherein they reside.” On
January 20, 2025, President Trump issued Executive Order No. 14160,
titled Protecting the Meaning and Value of American Citizenship. The
Order provides that children born in the United States of parents who
are unlawfully or temporarily present here are not “subject to the ju-
risdiction” of the United States—and thus do not qualify for citizenship
under the Fourteenth Amendment or the Immigration and Nationality
Act (INA), which uses the same language. 90 Fed. Reg. 8449. Several
parents filed suit, some in the name of their children, arguing that the
Executive Order violates the Fourteenth Amendment and the INA.
The District Court agreed, provisionally certified a nationwide class of
children who would be denied citizenship by the Order, and prelimi-
narily enjoined the Order’s enforcement. This Court granted certiorari
before judgment.
Held: Children born in the United States to parents unlawfully or tem-
porarily present are “subject to the jurisdiction” of the United States
and are citizens at birth under the Fourteenth Amendment’s Citizen-
ship Clause. Pp. 2–26.
(a) The Citizenship Clause must be understood in light of its histor-
ical context, from the English common law to the widespread condem-
nation of the Court’s decision in Dred Scott v. Sandford, 19 How. 393.2 TRUMP v. BARBARA
Syllabus
Pp. 2–9.
(1) Under the English common law, children “born within the [sov-
ereign’s] dominions” owed a natural “allegiance” to the sovereign who
protected them at birth, 1 W. Blackstone, Commentaries on the Laws
of England 354, 356 (Blackstone), regardless of how “momentary and
uncertain” their presence, Calvin’s Case, 7 Co. Rep. 1a, 6a, 77 Eng.
Rep. 377, 384. Such children were therefore “natural-born subject[s].”
Doe v. Jones, 4 T. R. 300, 308, 100 Eng. Rep. 1031, 1035. The same
rule applied to children born of parents subject to expulsion. See, e.g.,
4 Blackstone 166. The rule’s exceptions were narrow: children born in
lands the sovereign did not control, children born in areas temporarily
outside the sovereign’s control, and children of foreign ministers (by a
fiction of extraterritoriality). Calvin’s Case, 7 Co. Rep., at 18a–18b, 77
Eng. Rep., at 399.
This common law of citizenship—known as jus soli, or right of the
soil—crossed the Atlantic and prevailed in “each and all of the states”
after American independence. 2 J. Kent, Commentaries on American
Law 39, n. a (Kent). The rule was applied even to the novel situation
of quasi-sovereign Indian tribes, who maintained “dominion[s]” of
their own such that Indians born under those dominions were not “cit-
izens” but members of “alien and sovereign tribes.” Goodell v. Jackson
ex dem. Smith, 20 Johns. 693, 714–715 (N. Y. Ct. Corr. Errors). In a
Nation of immigrants, jus soli’s broad scope took on particular im-
portance, assuring that children of foreigners—including those here on
a “temporary sojourn,” Lynch v. Clarke, 1 Sand. Ch. 583, 638, 663–664
(N. Y. Ch.)—would be American citizens by birth alone. Pp. 2–6.
(2) In Dred Scott v. Sandford, the Court departed from the com-
mon law and adopted the view that blood, not soil, determined citizen-
ship; it held that those descended from slaves could not be citizens. 19
How., at 419. The decision was met with shock, see D. Potter, The
Impending Crisis, 1848–1861, p. 281; 3 Writings of Abraham Lincoln
55, and abolitionists swore to undo what the Court had done, see 2 Life
and Writings of Frederick Douglass 259, 415, 424. Pp. 6–8.
(3) In the midst of the Civil War, Attorney General Edward Bates
issued a landmark opinion citing key authorities, including Calvin’s
Case and Kent’s Commentaries, rejecting the premise that “citizenship
is ever hereditary,” and declaring that “every person born in the coun-
try is, at the moment of birth, prima facie a citizen, . . . without any
reference to race or color.” 10 Op. Atty Gen. 382, 394, 399. The excep-
tions were “few”—“the small and admitted class of the natural-born
composed of the children of foreign ministers and the like.” Id., at 397.
Following the war, Congress sought to turn Bates’s opinion into law
by enacting the Civil Rights Act of 1866, which made citizens of “all
persons born in the United States and not subject to any foreign power,Cite as: 609 U. S. ___ (2026)
3
Syllabus
excluding Indians not taxed.” §1, 14 Stat. 27. The Act was simply
assumed to invoke the common law rule. See Cong. Globe, 39th Cong.,
1st Sess., 1116 (Rep. Wilson); id., at 1832 (Rep. Lawrence). Pp. 8–9.
(b) What the Civil Rights Act began, the Fourteenth Amendment,
and its repudiation of Dred Scott, would finish. Pp. 9–12.
(1) The Fourteenth Amendment’s Citizenship Clause mirrored the
common law’s criteria for citizenship, starting with territory (a child
must be “born . . . in the United States”) and ending with sovereign
power (a child must be “subject to the jurisdiction” of the United
States). A child born on American soil and subject to American law
was made an American citizen. Even the language of the Clause is
that of the common law, echoing cases and treatises that described the
common law rule. See, e.g., Lynch, 1 Sand. Ch., at 668; Kent 38 and n.
a. And its principal author explained that its language was “simply
declaratory of . . . the law of the land already.” Cong. Globe, 39th
Cong., 1st Sess., 2890 (Sen. Howard). Pp. 9–10.
(2) The Citizenship Clause’s key phrase—“subject to the jurisdic-
tion”—refers to the power of the United States to govern those within
its territory. N. Webster, An American Dictionary of the English Lan-
guage 732 (def. “jurisdiction”); J. Worcester, Dictionary of the English
Language 1435 (def. “subject”). The scope of that power was settled
largely by Schooner Exchange v. McFaddon, 7 Cranch 116, where
Chief Justice Marshall explained that “jurisdiction” referred to “the
full and complete power of a nation within its own territories,” “sus-
ceptible of no limitation not imposed” by the nation itself. Id., at 136.
The narrow exceptions to jurisdiction arose where exercising jurisdic-
tion would “degrade the dignity” of “foreign sovereigns”—most fre-
quently in the case of “foreign ministers.” Id., at 136–139. But private
individuals who traveled to the United States for “business or caprice”
were “amenable to the jurisdiction of the country.” Id., at 144. Chil-
dren born in the United States to parents unlawfully or temporarily
present here are thus subject to the Nation’s jurisdiction. Pp. 10–12.
(c) The Court’s precedent in United States v. Wong Kim Ark, 169
U. S. 649, confirms this rule. Pp. 13–16.
(1) For nearly two decades after the Amendment’s ratification, the
Executive Branch viewed the Citizenship Clause as “simply an affir-
mance of the common law,” with the limited exception of “the children
of foreign ministers,” and others “with rights of extraterritoriality.”
Memorandum of Secretary of State H. Fish to Mr. Marsh (May 19,
1871), in 2 Digest of the International Law of the United States §183,
p. 394. But the end of the Reconstruction era brought uncertainty.
Around that time, the State Department began to deny citizenship to
those with “dual or doubtful allegiance,” id., at 402, and several schol-
ars proposed a new international-law based theory of the Citizenship4 TRUMP v. BARBARA
Syllabus
Clause, focused on the parents’ status, not the child’s, F. Wharton,
Conflict of Laws §10, p. 35. Only if a child’s parents were “domiciled
in the United States” was the child “internationally subject to the ju-
risdiction of the United States,” as the Citizenship Clause (they said)
required. Id., §12, at 41–42 (emphasis added). Acknowledging that
the common law took a different view, these writers insisted that jus
soli had not been made part of the Constitution. Pp. 13–14.
(2) In Wong Kim Ark, the Court held that the Fourteenth Amend-
ment was “declaratory” of the “fundamental rule of citizenship by
birth” that prevailed at common law, 169 U. S., at 688, excluding only
those recognized as exempt “from the jurisdiction of this country”—the
“children of ambassadors” and those born in the nations of Indian
tribes, id., at 675, 681–683, 693. All others were citizens at birth,
whether born to permanent residents or temporary visitors. See id.,
at 676, 687–688. The Court wrote that the words “ ‘subject to the ju-
risdiction thereof’ ” “must be presumed to have been understood . . . in
the same sense” as Chief Justice Marshall used them in Schooner Ex-
change. Wong Kim Ark, 169 U. S., at 687. Under that understanding,
aliens who traveled to the United States for “business or pleasure” re-
ceived no “exemption from the jurisdiction of the country.” Id., at 686.
To the contrary, they were subject to that jurisdiction for as long as
they remained here—and any children born to them were American
citizens under the Fourteenth Amendment. See id., at 682–688.
Pp. 14–16.
(d) Arguments for limiting birthright citizenship to those domiciled
in the United States fail. These arguments err in their definition of
“allegiance,” contending that natural allegiance was no longer suffi-
cient for citizenship and that some greater quantum of allegiance
(based on domicile) was required. There is scant evidence for this dra-
matically revisionist view; sources from 1776 to 1868 defined “alle-
giance by birth” just as the British did—as “the tie or duty” owed by
one who is “born within the dominions and under the protection of a
particular sovereign.” Inglis v. Trustees of Sailor’s Snug Harbour in
City of New York, 3 Pet. 99, 155.
Domicile and national citizenship are distinct concepts; one who es-
tablishes a domicile in a new country does not automatically become a
citizen thereof, nor does he automatically lose his prior citizenship.
The congressional debates over the Civil Rights Act of 1866 and the
Fourteenth Amendment confirm the common law rule. Statements
embracing the common law rule were far more frequent and explicit
than ambiguous references to “temporary sojourners.” See, e.g., Cong.
Globe, 39th Cong., 1st Sess., 1117. For a Congress intent on putting
the question of citizenship “once and forever [to] rest,” Cong. Globe,
42d Cong., 1st Sess. 575, a domicile-based qualification would haveCite as: 609 U. S. ___ (2026)
5
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introduced significant uncertainty. Yet the word “domicile” appears
just twice in the discussion of the relevant provision of the Civil Rights
Act, see Cong. Globe, 39th Cong., 1st Sess. 1160; id., at 1117, and in
only one speech from the Citizenship Clause debates, see id., at 3031–
3032. Sources from after the ratification of the Fourteenth Amend-
ment do not put in doubt the understanding of the Citizenship Clause
at the time of (and after) its ratification. In any case, postenactment
history cannot override the text. If Congress intended to limit Ameri-
can citizenship to the children of those domiciled in the United States,
nothing in the succinct language of the Citizenship Clause conveyed
that design; words appearing frequently in the Executive Order—
“mother,” “father,” “lawful,” “temporary”—are absent from the Clause.
Attempts to narrow Wong Kim Ark by noting that the Court’s opin-
ion repeatedly referred to the domicile of Wong’s parents fail because
the holding’s underlying reasoning cannot be squared with a domicile
requirement; the Court exhaustively canvassed the text and history of
the Citizenship Clause and at no point identified any evidence that the
ratifiers thought themselves to be imposing a domicile limitation.
Pp. 17–26.
Affirmed.
ROBERTS, C. J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which
SOTOMAYOR, KAGAN, BARRETT, and JACKSON, JJ., joined. JACKSON, J.,
filed a concurring opinion, in which SOTOMAYOR, J., joined as to the in-
troduction and Part I. KAVANAUGH, J., filed an opinion concurring in the
judgment and dissenting in part. THOMAS, J., filed a dissenting opinion,
in which GORSUCH, J., joined. ALITO, J., and GORSUCH, J., filed dissenting
opinions.Cite as: 609 U. S. ____ (2026)
1
Opinion of the Court
NOTICE: This opinion is subject to formal revision before publication in the
United States Reports. Readers are requested to notify the Reporter of
Decisions, Supreme Court of the United States, Washington, D. C. 20543,
pio@supremecourt.gov, of any typographical or other formal errors.
SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
_________________
No. 25–365
_________________
DONALD J. TRUMP, PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED
STATES, ET AL., PETITIONERS v. BARBARA, ET AL.
ON WRIT OF CERTIORARI BEFORE JUDGMENT TO THE UNITED
STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT
[June 30, 2026]
CHIEF JUSTICE ROBERTS delivered the opinion of the
Court.
At issue in this case is whether the Constitution guaran-
tees citizenship to children born of parents unlawfully or
temporarily present in the United States.
I
The Fourteenth Amendment provides:
“All persons born or naturalized in the United States
and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of
the United States and of the State wherein they re-
side.”
On January 20, 2025, President Trump issued Executive
Order No. 14160, titled Protecting the Meaning and Value
of American Citizenship. The Order provides that children
born of persons unlawfully or temporarily present in the
United States are not “subject to the jurisdiction” of the
United States—and thus do not qualify for citizenship un-
der the Fourteenth Amendment or the Immigration and2 TRUMP v. BARBARA
Opinion of the Court
Nationality Act (INA), which uses the same language. 90
Fed. Reg. 8449.1
Several parents filed suit, some on their own behalf, oth-
ers on behalf of (and in the name of ) their children. They
argued that the Executive Order violates the Fourteenth
Amendment and the INA. The District Court agreed. 790
F. Supp. 3d 80, 101–102 (NH 2025). It provisionally certi-
fied a nationwide class of children who would be denied cit-
izenship by the Order and preliminarily enjoined the Or-
der’s enforcement. Id., at 105–106. We granted certiorari
before judgment. 607 U. S. 1079 (2025).
II
To understand the Citizenship Clause of the Fourteenth
Amendment, it is first necessary to understand the context
in which it arose—and the opinion of this Court, Dred Scott
v. Sandford, 19 How. 393 (1857), that it rejected.
A
The story of citizenship in the United States begins with
the English common law. Before the Revolution, the Amer-
ican colonists—like all in the British Empire—were consid-
ered subjects of the sovereign. See Inglis v. Trustees of
Sailor’s Snug Harbour in City of New York, 3 Pet. 99, 120–
121 (1830). That arose not from royal fiat, but from what
the common law conceived as the relationship between the
sovereign and the people. The King, Blackstone explained,
owes those “born within the dominions” a duty of
——————
1 In full, the Executive Order declares that “the privilege of United
States citizenship does not automatically extend to persons born in the
United States: (1) when that person’s mother was unlawfully present in
the United States and the father was not a United States citizen or law-
ful permanent resident at the time of said person’s birth, or (2) when that
person’s mother’s presence in the United States at the time of said per-
son’s birth was lawful but temporary . . . and the father was not a United
States citizen or lawful permanent resident at the time of said person’s
birth.” Exec. Order No. 14160, 90 Fed. Reg. 8449 (2025).Cite as: 609 U. S. ____ (2026)
3
Opinion of the Court
“protection.” 1 W. Blackstone, Commentaries on the Laws
of England 354 (1765) (Blackstone); see also id., at 358.
And “in return for that protection,” those “born within the
dominions” owe the King a “duty” of “allegiance” (some-
times rendered “ligeance”). Id., at 354, 356. Children born
with that allegiance were “natural-born subject[s].” Doe v.
Jones, 4 T. R. 300, 308, 100 Eng. Rep. 1031, 1035 (K. B.
1791) (Kenyon, C. J.). As Lord Coke put it in the celebrated
Calvin’s Case, 7 Co. Rep. 1a, 77 Eng. Rep. 377 (K. B. 1608),
a “dual and reciprocal tie” thus connects “the Sovereign and
[his] subject[s].” Id., at 4b–5a, 77 Eng. Rep., at 382 (trans-
lated from Latin).
Because the sovereign’s power (and thus his duty) was
limited in various respects, so too was the scope of this rule.
He could not demand allegiance from—for he could not pro-
tect—those born in lands that he did not control. Id., at
18a, 77 Eng. Rep., at 399. (Among that group were the peo-
ple born in the King’s lost dominions—“France, Aquitain,
Normandy, &c.”—over which he claimed an “absolute right”
but had no actual power to rule. Ibid.) The same held true
even in discrete areas within his kingdom that were tempo-
rarily outside his control. See id., at 18a–18b, 77 Eng. Rep.,
at 399 (if “enemies” were to “possess” a “castle or fort,” their
children would not be born “under the King’s ligeance”).
And the same held true for ambassadors (and their fami-
lies), who were considered—by a fiction of extraterritorial-
ity—to remain on foreign soil and thus “under the ligeance”
of their home country. Id., at 18a, 77 Eng. Rep., at 399; see
also Schooner Exchange v. McFaddon, 7 Cranch 116, 138–
139 (1812) (Marshall, C. J., for the Court).
In all other respects, however, the sovereign’s power—
and his claim to the people’s allegiance—was complete. A
foreign mother could enter the British Isles, give birth, and
leave with her child the very next day, and that child would
remain a British subject. Why? Because the child owed an
implied allegiance to the sovereign who protected him at his4 TRUMP v. BARBARA
Opinion of the Court
birth—no matter how “momentary and uncertain” his pres-
ence in the King’s realms.2 Calvin’s Case, 7 Co. Rep., at 6a,
77 Eng. Rep., at 384; see also Doe, 4 T. R., at 308, 100 Eng.
Rep., at 1035. The same rule applied to children born in the
realm of parents subject to expulsion. For example, chil-
dren of “gypsies” (today, called Romani or Roma people)
born in the realm were natural-born subjects, notwith-
standing that British law at the time “directed” the Roma
people “to avoid the realm” under “pain of imprisonment”
or even death. 4 Blackstone 166 (1769); see Brief for Gerard
N. Magliocca as Amicus Curiae 2–4; cf. H. Hirota, Expelling
the Poor 114–115 (2017) (describing outcry in 1855 when
Massachusetts deported a pauper Irish mother with her
American-born infant, who was acknowledged to be a “na-
tive born citizen”). For those children, and all others born
in Britain, the rule was the same: With protection came al-
legiance, and with allegiance came the status of a natural-
born subject.
This view crossed the Atlantic with the colonists—and
was adopted with little fanfare after the Revolution, as
“subject[s]” of the sovereign became “citizens” of the States.
See State v. Manuel, 20 N. C. 144, 152 (1838). This common
law of citizenship—known as jus soli, or right of the soil—
prevailed in “each and all of the states” after American in-
dependence, and continued to emphasize reciprocal “alle-
giance” and “protection.” 2 J. Kent, Commentaries on
American Law 38–39, n. a, 40 (6th ed. 1848) (Kent). By “the
doctrine of natural allegiance,” all “who [we]re born within
the jurisdiction of a State” were citizens. W. Yates, Rights
——————
2 The mother, too, owed the British King allegiance “for so long [a] time
as [she] continue[d]” in his territory. 1 Blackstone 358. But her alle-
giance was just “local and temporary”—the product of her presence in
the British realm. J. Wharton, Law Lexicon 40 (E. Hopper ed., 2d Am.
ed. 1860). Unlike the lasting allegiance of her natural-born son, the
mother’s allegiance was extinguished as soon as she left the British do-
minions.Cite as: 609 U. S. ____ (2026)
5
Opinion of the Court
of Colored Men 36 (1838) (Yates); see W. Rawle, A View of
the Constitution of the United States of America 86 (2d ed.
1829).
When the newly independent Americans confronted a
novel situation, unknown to England—that of the quasi-
sovereign Indian tribes—they turned to the principles of
the common law. Did the tribes truly govern their people?
Or were their people wholly subsumed within the United
States? Echoing Coke and Blackstone, Chancellor Kent an-
swered with the common law. “We have purchased the
greater part of their lands, destroyed their hunting
grounds, . . . and gradually abridged their native independ-
ence,” Kent acknowledged. Goodell v. Jackson ex dem.
Smith, 20 Johns. 693, 711 (N. Y. Ct. Corr. Errors 1823).
Even so, he reasoned, the “United States ha[s] never dealt
with those people, within our national limits, as if they were
extinguished sovereignties.” Id., at 714. They were instead
“dependent nations” that maintained “dominion[s]” of their
own. Id., at 712, 714. Indians born under those dominions,
he concluded, were not “citizens or subjects of the United
States,” but members of “alien and sovereign tribes.” Id., at
715. Others followed Kent’s lead, see J. Kettner, The De-
velopment of American Citizenship, 1608–1870, pp. 294–
296 (1978) (Kettner), all the while emphasizing that the
“very few exceptions” to the sovereign’s power were narrow
indeed, H. Binney, Alienigenae of the United States 16 (2d
ed. 1853) (Binney).
In a Nation of immigrants—an “asylum for mankind,” in
Thomas Paine’s words—jus soli’s broad scope took on par-
ticular importance. Common Sense (1776), in 1 Writings of
Thomas Paine 101 (M. Conway ed. 1894). The young Re-
public attracted tens of thousands of émigrés from the Old
World—Scotch-Irish, French, German, Welsh, and many
more, some of whom hoped to stay only a short time, others
of whom hoped never to leave. See M. Jones, American Im-
migration 64–91 (1960). No matter their intentions,6 TRUMP v. BARBARA
Opinion of the Court
however, they could be assured that their children would be
American citizens by birth alone. As Justice Story said,
“[n]othing is better settled.” Inglis, 3 Pet., at 164 (opinion
concurring in part and dissenting in part). The very first
American legal treatise agreed. See 1 Z. Swift, A System of
the Laws of the State of Connecticut 164, 167 (1795) (“chil-
dren of aliens” are citizens, for they owe a “duty” at birth to
the “government, under whose protection [they] came into
existence”). As did the antebellum era’s foremost case on
the topic, Lynch v. Clarke, 1 Sand. Ch. 583 (N. Y. Ch. 1844).
Lynch reiterated that “the common law rule was the law of
the land” for the children of “citizens” and “foreigners”
alike—including those foreigners here merely on a “tempo-
rary sojourn.” Id., at 638, 663–664. The promise of Ameri-
can citizenship, Lynch declared, extends to “all persons
born within the jurisdiction of the United States.” Id., at
668 (internal quotation marks omitted).
B
The common law “made no distinction on account of race
or color.” United States v. Rhodes, 27 F. Cas. 785, 789 (No.
16,151) (CC Ky. 1866) (Swayne, J.). But the slave States
did. As the Civil War approached, more and more Southern
States sought to deny citizenship to black Americans—and
openly rejected the common law to reach that result. See
Kettner 320–324. It was “not the place of a man’s birth”
that made him a citizen, these States said, “but the rights
and privileges he may be entitled to enjoy.” Amy v. Smith,
11 Ky. 326, 332 (1822). On that view, “[t]he prejudice . . . of
caste” was “unconquerable.” Bryan v. Walton, 14 Ga. 185,
202 (1853). Not even emancipation could “confer citizen-
ship,” these States held, because free African Americans
still suffered from “social and civil degradation” based on
“the taint of blood.” Id., at 198. With the common law aban-
doned, almost 500,000 free black Americans in the South
were left little more than “strangers.” African MethodistCite as: 609 U. S. ____ (2026)
7
Opinion of the Court
Episcopal Church v. New Orleans, 15 La. 441, 443 (1860);
see I. Berlin, Slaves Without Masters 136–137 (1974).
In the odious decision of Dred Scott v. Sandford, this
Court imposed the Southern States’ beliefs onto the Nation.
19 How. 393. Chief Justice Taney, writing for the Court,
concluded that “the words ‘people of the United States’ and
‘citizen[s]’” had an unexpressed (and atextual) racial com-
ponent—one that excluded all those descended from slaves.
Id., at 419. Even if Massachusetts or Connecticut chose to
grant citizenship to the freedmen, they still could not par-
ticipate in national affairs. See id., at 422–423. They were
“born in the country,” Chief Justice Taney acknowledged,
and thus “did owe allegiance to the Government”—the pre-
cise criteria for citizenship at common law. Id., at 420. But
they were “not included, and were not intended to be in-
cluded, under the word ‘citizens’ in the Constitution.” Id.,
at 404. For them, blood, not soil, was made the rule.
Dred Scott was met with shock. Ever since “the Declara-
tion of Independence,” Justice Curtis wrote, “the received
general doctrine has been, in conformity with the common
law”—that all “free persons born within” a State are “citi-
zens of the United States.” Id., at 576–577 (dissenting opin-
ion). Justice McLean said much the same. “Being born un-
der our Constitution and laws,” he explained, “make[s] him
a citizen.” Id., at 531 (dissenting opinion). Northern news-
papers condemned Dred Scott as “a wicked and false judg-
ment,” “an atrocious doctrine,” “a deliberate iniquity,” and
a “willful perversion.” D. Potter, The Impending Crisis,
1848–1861, p. 281 (1976). The decision was, in Lincoln’s fa-
mous words, an “astonisher in legal history.” 3 Writings of
Abraham Lincoln 55 (A. Lapsley ed. 1905).
Abolitionists swore to undo what the Court had done. “By
birth,” Frederick Douglass insisted, “we are American citi-
zens.” 2 Life and Writings of Frederick Douglass 259 (P.
Foner ed. 1950). “The Constitution knows all the human
inhabitants of this country as ‘the people,’” he explained, no8 TRUMP v. BARBARA
Opinion of the Court
matter their “color, class, or clime.” Id., at 415, 424. “[A]ll
I ask of the American people is, that they live up to the Con-
stitution, adopt its principles, imbibe its spirit, and enforce
its provisions.” Id., at 424. “When this is done,” Douglass
predicted, “the glorious birthright of our common human-
ity” will once again “become the inheritance of all the in-
habitants of this highly favored country.” Ibid.
C
The Court had overruled the common law, but the peo-
ple—eventually—would overrule the Court. It took more
than a decade—and the addition of names such as Antie-
tam, Gettysburg, and Chancellorsville to our national
canon—but Douglass’s vision of “our common humanity”
would be fulfilled.
The Reconstruction Congress did not start from scratch.
In the midst of the Civil War, President Lincoln’s Attorney
General, Edward Bates, had issued a landmark opinion
that sought to displace Dred Scott in favor of the common
law. Citing the key authorities (among them Calvin’s Case
and Kent’s Commentaries), Bates rejected the premise that
“citizenship is ever hereditary.” 10 Op. Atty. Gen. 382, 399
(1862). “[E]very person born in the country,” he wrote, “is,
at the moment of birth, prima facie a citizen . . . without
any reference to race or color, or any other accidental cir-
cumstances.” Id., at 394. He acknowledged that there were
some limits—hence “prima facie,” not “conclusive.” See id.,
at 394, 396–397. But those exceptions were “few,” simply
“the small and admitted class of the natural-born composed
of the children of foreign ministers and the like.” Id., at
397. To Bates, it was soil—not blood—that “furnishes the
rule, both of duty and of right.” Id., at 394; see also 10 Op.
Atty. Gen. 328, 328–329 (1862) (referring to Lynch for its
“full and clear statement” of the common law).
A year after General Lee’s surrender at Appomattox,
Congress sought to turn Bates’s opinion into law. TheCite as: 609 U. S. ____ (2026)
9
Opinion of the Court
result was the Civil Rights Act of 1866. The Act declared
that “all persons born in the United States and not subject
to any foreign power, excluding Indians not taxed, are
hereby . . . citizens of the United States.” §1, 14 Stat. 27.
To the Reconstruction Congress, the Act was simply as-
sumed to invoke the common law rule—as Bates had in his
“ablest and most exhaustive opinion,” Cong. Globe, 39th
Cong., 1st Sess., 1116 (1866) (Rep. Wilson), and as the New
York Court of Chancery had “[i]n the great case of Lynch vs.
Clarke,” id., at 1832 (Rep. Lawrence). Indeed, the bill’s
sponsor, Senator Lyman Trumbull, enthusiastically agreed
with the bill’s critics that it would make citizens of “the chil-
dren of Chinese and Gypsies born in this country.” Id., at
498. “[E]ven the infant child of a foreigner born in this land
is a citizen” under this bill, Trumbull declared. Id., at 1757.
The specter of Dred Scott, however, loomed over Con-
gress’s efforts. Opponents of the Act contended that Con-
gress could not grant such expansive citizenship (and set
aside this Court’s precedent) by statute alone. See, e.g.,
Cong. Globe, 39th Cong., 1st Sess., at 497–498 (Sen. Van
Winkle); id., at 499 (Sen. Cowan). To quiet those con-
cerns—and to permanently enshrine the common law in the
Constitution—Congress turned to the Fourteenth Amend-
ment.
III
A
What the Civil Rights Act began, the Fourteenth Amend-
ment would finish. Like the Act, the Fourteenth Amend-
ment was intended to repudiate Dred Scott. This time, how-
ever, the goal was even grander—to put the “great question
of citizenship” “beyond the legislative power” altogether, to
settle the issue once and for all. Cong. Globe, 39th Cong.,
1st Sess., at 2891, 2896 (Sen. Howard).
The Fourteenth Amendment achieved its aim. The Citi-
zenship Clause mirrored the common law’s criteria for10 TRUMP v. BARBARA
Opinion of the Court
citizenship. The Clause starts, like the common law, with
territory—a child must be “born . . . in the United States,”
not elsewhere (even to American parents). And the Clause
ends, again like the common law, with sovereign power—a
child must be “subject to the jurisdiction” of the United
States, unlike (say) the families of foreign ministers. A
child born on American soil and subject to American law
was made an American citizen.
Even the language of the Clause is that of the common
law. Lynch held that American citizenship extended to “all
persons born within the jurisdiction of the United States.”
1 Sand. Ch., at 668. So did Chancellor Kent. See Kent 38,
and n. a (“all persons born within the jurisdiction and alle-
giance of the United states” are citizens). So did the first
legal treatise on the rights of free black Americans. See
Yates 36 (all “who are born within the jurisdiction of a
State” are citizens). And so did the famed antebellum law-
yer Horace Binney. See Binney 20 (children “born within
the limits and under the jurisdiction of the United States”
are citizens). Little wonder, then, that the Citizenship
Clause’s principal author would explain that its language
was “simply declaratory of . . . the law of the land already.”
Cong. Globe, 39th Cong., 1st Sess., at 2890 (Sen. Howard).
That law was clear. Any child who was born “under the
protection of ” the United States—that is, any child for
whom no extraterritorial fiction applied—was made a citi-
zen, for he owed a natural “allegiance” (and thus “obedi-
ence”) to the Nation. Lynch, 1 Sand. Ch., at 668; see Cong.
Globe, 39th Cong., 1st Sess., at 570 (Sen. Morrill) (the “es-
sential elements of citizenship” are “allegiance on the one
side and protection on the other”).
B
Even putting the common law to one side, the Citizenship
Clause’s key phrase—“subject to the jurisdiction”—requires
the same result. The word “jurisdiction” was hardlyCite as: 609 U. S. ____ (2026)
11
Opinion of the Court
unknown to the drafters and ratifiers of the Fourteenth
Amendment. Congress chose to use an established legal
term and the Clause must be interpreted in that light.
In 1868, as today, “jurisdiction” (in the context of a sover-
eign) refers to the “[p]ower of governing or legislating.” N.
Webster, An American Dictionary of the English Language
732 (C. Goodrich & N. Porter eds. 1865); see also, e.g., 1 B.
Abbott, Dictionary of Terms and Phrases Used in American
or English Jurisprudence 671 (1879) (“The authority of gov-
ernment; the sway of a sovereign power”). To be “subject
to” the jurisdiction of the United States, then, is to “liv[e]
under” its “dominion,” J. Worcester, Dictionary of the Eng-
lish Language 1435 (1860), a meaning reinforced by the
Clause’s territorial focus on those born “in” the United
States. The Citizenship Clause uses jurisdiction in its ordi-
nary sense—referring to the power of the United States to
govern those within its territory.
The scope of that power was well settled in 1868, largely
by “the celebrated case” of Schooner Exchange v. McFad-
don, 7 Cranch 116. See H. Wheaton, Elements of Interna-
tional Law §96, p. 154 (8th ed. 1866). Expounding on “gen-
eral principles,” Chief Justice Marshall explained that
“jurisdiction” referred to “the full and complete power of a
nation within its own territories.” 7 Cranch, at 136. That
“absolute” power was “susceptible of no limitation not im-
posed” by the nation itself. Ibid. All sovereigns, however,
were understood to have impliedly waived their jurisdiction
in “certain peculiar circumstances”—in essence, where ex-
ercising jurisdiction would “degrade the dignity” of “foreign
sovereigns.” Id., at 136–137. As in the context of jus soli,
those peculiar circumstances arose most frequently in the
case of “foreign ministers.” See id., at 138–139. “[E]very
sovereign would hazard his own dignity,” after all, if his of-
ficials abroad were made to “owe temporary and local alle-
giance to a foreign prince.” Id., at 139.12 TRUMP v. BARBARA
Opinion of the Court
The limits of that exception were carefully defined. Still
within the United States’ power were the “private individ-
uals” of a foreign nation who had “spread themselves
through [our territory] as business or caprice may direct.”
Id., at 144. “[I]t would be obviously inconvenient and dan-
gerous to society, and would subject the laws to continual
infraction,” Chief Justice Marshall explained, “if such indi-
viduals or merchants . . . were not amenable to the jurisdic-
tion of the country.” Ibid. “Nor can the foreign sovereign
have any motive for wishing such exemption,” he continued,
with respect to its sojourning subjects who were “not em-
ployed by” the sovereign or “engaged in national pursuits.”
Ibid. Just like jus soli, a sovereign’s jurisdiction made no
exception for those only temporarily present within the sov-
ereign’s territory. Instead, nearly everyone within the ter-
ritorial boundaries of the United States was “amenable to”
the Nation’s jurisdiction. Ibid.
The ordinary legal meaning of the text of the Clause thus
neatly captures the common law rule, with its broad reach
and narrow exceptions. The same groups included (and ex-
cluded) by jus soli were included (and excluded) by the con-
ventional understanding of jurisdiction. Excluded by both
were the children of foreign ministers and members of 19th-
century Indian tribes over whom the United States had
ceded a part of its territorial jurisdiction to preserve its re-
lationship with a foreign sovereign (or quasi-sovereign).
No such intersovereign concerns apply to children born of
parents unlawfully or temporarily present in the United
States; no foreign sovereign would “have any motive for
wishing” them outside this Nation’s authority. Ibid. Those
children are thus subject to the jurisdiction of the United
States. They satisfy both elements of the Citizenship
Clause: they are “born . . . in the United States” and “sub-
ject to the jurisdiction thereof.” Under the Constitution,
they are citizens at birth.Cite as: 609 U. S. ____ (2026)
13
Opinion of the Court
IV
Our precedent—the seminal case of United States v.
Wong Kim Ark, 169 U. S. 649 (1898)—confirms this rule.
A
For nearly two decades after the Fourteenth Amend-
ment’s ratification, the Executive Branch viewed the Citi-
zenship Clause as “simply an affirmance of the common law
of England and of this country.” Memorandum of Secretary
of State H. Fish to Mr. Marsh (May 19, 1871), in 2 Digest of
the International Law of the United States §183, p. 394 (F.
Wharton ed. 2d ed. 1887) (Digest). Under that view, “the
status of citizenship” was “fixed by the place of nativity, ir-
respective of parentage”—with the limited exception of “the
children of foreign ministers, and of other persons who may
be within our territory with rights of extraterritoriality.”
Ibid.
In 1872, for instance, Attorney General George Williams
was called upon to determine the citizenship of a child born
of Austrian parents only “temporarily residing” in New
York City. 14 Op. Atty. Gen. 154. Citing the Citizenship
Clause (and Bates’s 1862 opinion), Williams explained that
“a person born in this country, though of alien parents who
have never been naturalized, is, under our law, deemed a
citizen of the United States by reason of the place of his
birth.” Id., at 155. Thus the child “is a native of this coun-
try,” Williams concluded, “and as such was originally
clothed with American nationality.” Ibid. Secretary of
State Hamilton Fish agreed. See Memorandum to Baron
Lederer (Dec. 24, 1872), in 2 Digest 395–396. So did federal
courts. Like the Executive Branch, they saw the Clause as
merely “declaratory of the rule of the common law.” McKay
v. Campbell, 16 F. Cas. 161, 165 (No. 8,840) (DC Ore. 1871);
see also In re Look Tin Sing, 21 F. 905, 908–910 (CC Cal.
1884) (Field, J.); Ex parte Chin King, 35 F. 354, 355–356
(CC Ore. 1888).14 TRUMP v. BARBARA
Opinion of the Court
As the era of Reconstruction faded, however, so too did
the promise of birthright citizenship. Uncertainty came
with the first Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882, ch. 126, 22
Stat. 58, and the election of President Cleveland, the first
Democrat to hold the office since the Civil War. See F.
Douglass, Speech (Apr. 16, 1885), in 4 Life and Writings of
Frederick Douglass 413 (1955). It was around this time
that the State Department began to deny citizenship to
those with “dual or doubtful allegiance,” 2 Digest 402; and
it was around this time that several scholars proposed a
new theory of the Clause, one based on “international law,”
F. Wharton, Conflict of Laws §10, p. 35 (2d ed. 1881) (Whar-
ton).
This new theory focused on the parents’ status, not the
child’s. It was only if a child’s parents were “domiciled in
the United States,” they argued, that the child was “inter-
nationally subject to the jurisdiction of the United States,”
as the Citizenship Clause (they said) required. Id., §12, at
41–42 (emphasis added); see also A. Morse, A Treatise on
Citizenship 248 (1881). These writers acknowledged that
the common law took a different view, see id., at 238, and
n. 1, and acknowledged “that the language of the [F]our-
teenth [A]mendment . . . is very broad,” A. Morse, Citizen-
ship of Children of Aliens Born in the United States, 30 Al-
bany L. J. 420 (1884). But they insisted that jus soli had
been “universally” rejected by other nations and had not
been made part of the Constitution. Ibid.
B
In Wong Kim Ark, this Court rejected that view, conclud-
ing that no “rule of international law” had qualified “the
ancient rule of citizenship by birth within the dominion.”
169 U. S., at 667.
At issue was the citizenship of Wong Kim Ark, born in
San Francisco to Chinese parents. See id., at 652. In
Wong’s telling, the case was not close. “[T]here can be noCite as: 609 U. S. ____ (2026)
15
Opinion of the Court
just doubt,” he argued, “that the Amendment was intended
to be based upon the doctrine derived from the common law,
that the character of a natural born citizen is incidental to
birth only.” Brief for Appellee in United States v. Wong Kim
Ark, O. T. 1896, No. 132, p. 78 (filed by Counselor Ashton);
see also id., at 38 (discussing “the celebrated case of Lynch
vs. Clark”). The Government disagreed. It admitted that
“the opinions of the Attorneys-General, the decisions of the
Federal and State courts, and, up to 1885, the rulings of the
State Department all concurred in the view that birth in
the United States conferred citizenship,” based on “the com-
mon law doctrine of allegiance” and “the authority of the
decision of Chancellor Sandford in Lynch v. Clarke.” Brief
for United States in United States v. Wong Kim Ark, O. T.
1896, No. 132, p. 28. But the Executive no longer endorsed
that view. “[T]he common-law doctrine of England,” it ar-
gued, had in fact never been “the doctrine of the United
States,” and was not made the law by virtue of the Citizen-
ship Clause. Id., at 6.
In an opinion by Justice Gray, the Court rejected the Gov-
ernment’s position. Justice Gray explained that the Four-
teenth Amendment was merely “declaratory” of the “funda-
mental rule of citizenship by birth” that prevailed at
common law. 169 U. S., at 688. That “same rule,” he wrote,
“was in force in all the English Colonies”—“and continued
to prevail under the Constitution.” Id., at 658. And its con-
tours were clear. It excluded those recognized as exempt
“from the jurisdiction of this country”—the “children of am-
bassadors” and other representatives of foreign sovereigns,
as well as those born in the “alien nations” of Indian tribes.
Id., at 675, 681–683, 693.
All others were citizens at birth, whether born to perma-
nent residents or temporary visitors. See id., at 676, 687–
688. Indeed, Justice Gray noted, no one had even “con-
tested” this conclusion for “more than fifty years after the
adoption of the Constitution”—until the matter was16 TRUMP v. BARBARA
Opinion of the Court
“elaborately argued” before the New York Court of Chan-
cery in Lynch v. Clarke. 169 U. S., at 664. And there the
question was “decided upon full consideration by Vice
Chancellor Sandford in favor of their citizenship.” Ibid.
“The same doctrine was repeatedly affirmed in the execu-
tive departments,” Justice Gray wrote, not to mention by
Kent and Binney—each of whom affirmed that “[t]he child
of an alien, if born in the country, is as much a citizen as
the natural-born child of a citizen.” Id., at 664–665. In
adopting the common law, Justice Gray explained, the Cit-
izenship Clause adopted this same rule. See id., at 676.
Justice Gray then turned to Schooner Exchange to con-
firm what the common law made clear. “The words . . . ‘sub-
ject to the jurisdiction thereof,’” he wrote, “must be pre-
sumed to have been understood and intended by the
Congress . . . in the same sense in which the like words had
been used by Chief Justice Marshall in the well known case
of The Exchange.” 169 U. S., at 687. On that understand-
ing, aliens who traveled to the United States for “business
or pleasure” received no “exemption from the jurisdiction of
the country.” Id., at 686. To the contrary, they were subject
to that jurisdiction for as long as they remained here—and
any children born to them were American citizens under
the Fourteenth Amendment. See id., at 682–688.
What the Court held in Wong Kim Ark was simple: the
Citizenship Clause incorporated the common law and
granted citizenship to nearly all children born in the United
States. Not surprisingly, then, in the 128 years since, we
have repeatedly understood the rule of Wong Kim Ark to
guarantee citizenship to all children born in the United
States and subject to its power. See, e.g., United States ex
rel. Hintopoulos v. Shaughnessy, 353 U. S. 72, 73 (1957);
INS v. Rios-Pineda, 471 U. S. 444, 446 (1985). We see no
reason to depart from that view today.Cite as: 609 U. S. ____ (2026)
17
Opinion of the Court
V
The Government and the principal dissent share many of
our premises. They agree that the Citizenship Clause was
intended to incorporate the “background principles” of the
common law. Brief for Petitioners 15–16; see, e.g., post, at
2–3, 86 (THOMAS, J., dissenting). They agree that, under
the common law, “citizenship turns on allegiance.” Brief for
Petitioners 40; see, e.g., post, at 1, 17–18 (THOMAS, J., dis-
senting). And they agree that “Dred Scott departed from
that traditional, allegiance-based view of citizenship”—a
departure that Congress “repudiated” in the Clause. Brief
for Petitioners 16–17; see, e.g., post, at 1–2, 26–27 (THOMAS,
J., dissenting).
Where the Government and the principal dissent err is
with their definition of “allegiance.” They concede that Cal-
vin’s Case and Blackstone state the rule that prevailed be-
fore the Declaration of Independence—that a natural “alle-
giance” arises for all children who are “born here . . . under
the protection of the sovereign.” Tr. of Oral Arg. 64–65, 136;
see post, at 75–76 (THOMAS, J., dissenting). Yet according
to the Government and the principal dissent, “the United
States’ conception of allegiance”—at some unspecified point
in time—broke “from Great Britain’s.” Brief for Petitioners
16. (The Government has variously dated this change to
the late-18th century, see Tr. of Oral Arg. 137, the early-
19th century, see id., at 26, 76, and the Reconstruction era,
see id., at 3; the principal dissent declines to offer a date.)
Natural allegiance, they contend, was no longer sufficient
for citizenship; some greater quantum of allegiance was re-
quired.
How much? The Government offers a smorgasbord of for-
mulations: “primary allegiance,” “sufficient allegiance,”
“full allegiance,” “requisite allegiance.” Brief for Petitioners
12, 14, 15, 17, 19, 21, 23, 29, 32, 42. (The principal dissent,
for its part, seems to have settled on “primary allegiance.”
Post, at 17, 22, 25, 29, 58.) What all these formulations18 TRUMP v. BARBARA
Opinion of the Court
supposedly share is that they turn on domicile—the place
of one’s permanent home. At some point before the ratifi-
cation of the Fourteenth Amendment, the argument goes, it
became “deeply rooted” in this country that “[d]omicile is
the key concept that creates allegiance.” Tr. of Oral Arg.
26.
The trouble is that there is scant evidence for this dra-
matically revisionist view. Certainly no one said that such
a change had occurred. Indeed, even as the antebellum
Americans hotly debated whether the Declaration of Inde-
pendence had abrogated one aspect of the British common
law—that natural allegiance was indefeasible, no matter a
person’s desire to expatriate—all agreed that such alle-
giance was owed in the first place. See Lynch, 1 Sand. Ch.,
at 657 (“perpetual allegiance . . . does not stand upon the
same reason or principle as the common law doctrine of al-
legiance by birth”); Murray v. Schooner Charming Betsy, 2
Cranch 64, 120 (1804) (noting unsettled question of
whether an American citizen “can divest himself absolutely
of ” his citizenship, but simply presuming that any “person
born within the United States” was a natural-born citizen).
The only evidence the Government and the principal dis-
sent can muster to show that some alternative (“primary”)
conception of allegiance displaced the common law is a “fu-
neral oration” for President Lincoln. Brief for Petitioners
23; see post, at 22–23. Ahistorical modifiers aside, the Gov-
ernment and the dissent identify no source that defined al-
legiance at birth as being based on domicile in the period
from 1776 to 1868.3 Sources from that period instead de-
fined “allegiance by birth” just as the British did—as “the
tie or duty” owed by one who is “born within the dominions
——————
3 The principal dissent comes closest with the decision of New York’s
intermediate appellate court in Ludlam v. Ludlam, 31 Barb. 486 (N. Y.
Gen. Term 1860). When New York’s highest court heard the case, how-
ever, it did not follow the lower court’s reasoning; it relied instead on
Lynch v. Clarke. See Ludlam v. Ludlam, 26 N. Y. 356, 376 (1863).Cite as: 609 U. S. ____ (2026)
19
Opinion of the Court
and under the protection of a particular sovereign.” Inglis,
3 Pet., at 155 (opinion of Story, J.); see also, e.g., 1 N. Web-
ster, An American Dictionary of the English Language
(1828) (“[e]very native” owes a “natural or implied alle-
giance” “to the government under which he is born”).
Of course, some wished to change the rule. But even
those who wished to limit jus soli did not deny that children
born of temporary visitors owed natural allegiance to the
United States. They instead thought that domicile might
serve as a “reasonable qualification” to the common law
rule (namely, that citizenship derives solely from the
“[n]atural allegiance” owed “to the government of the terri-
tory of a man’s birth”). J. Story, Commentaries on the Con-
flict of Laws §§21, 48, pp. 22, 48 (1834) (Story).
The principal dissent (but not the Government) at times
seems to directly equate domicile and national citizenship.
See post, at 9–10, 12–14, 40–41. That is wrong. “It is, in
fact, a general axiom of international law, that there may
be domicil where there is no nationality, and nationality
where there is no domicil.” F. Wharton, Conflict of Laws
§40a, p. 47 (1872); see also A. Cockburn, Nationality 204
(1869). After all, one who establishes a domicile in a new
country does not automatically become a citizen thereof.
(He has to be naturalized.) Nor does he automatically lose
his prior citizenship. (He has to expatriate.) Thus, the prin-
cipal dissent ultimately acknowledges that domicile alone
was insufficient to make someone “formally” a “citizen.”
Post, at 9.
Of course, domicile was relevant to naturalization and ex-
patriation. But that by no means suggests it was a prereq-
uisite to national citizenship at birth. The principal dis-
sent’s reliance on cases concerning changes to a person’s
state citizenship is thus misplaced. See, e.g., post, at 6–7.
And the Government’s remaining support for the idea that
a domicile “qualification” to birthright citizenship was
“widely accepted” in the United States before the Civil War,20 TRUMP v. BARBARA
Opinion of the Court
Brief for Petitioners 22, consists of a single state-court case
about citizenship in the Republic of Texas, a proposed (but
never adopted) model code for the State of New York, and
another treatise that discussed the subject only in terms of
“the principles of natural reason,” which it expressly distin-
guished from “[t]he common law,” 1 H. Tucker, Commen-
taries on the Laws of Virginia 57–58 (1836).
The congressional debates over the Civil Rights Act of
1866 and the Fourteenth Amendment confirm our view.
The principal dissent (and the Government) lean heavily on
a handful of ambiguous floor statements referencing “tem-
porary sojourners” and “foreigners.” See, e.g., Cong. Globe,
39th Cong., 1st Sess., at 1117 (Rep. Wilson) (“it may be that
children born on our soil to temporary sojourners” do not
fall within the Act’s scope (emphasis added)); id., at 2890
(Sen. Howard) (the Citizenship Clause “w[ould] not, of
course, include persons born in the United States who are
foreigners, aliens, who belong to the families of embassa-
dors or foreign ministers”). Far more frequent and explicit,
however, were statements embracing the common law. See,
e.g., id., at 498 (Sen. Trumbull); id., at 570 (Sen. Morrill);
id., at 1124 (Rep. Cook); id., at 1832 (Rep. Lawrence); id.,
at 2768 (Sen. Wade); id., at 2891 (Sen. Conness); id., at 3032
(Sen. Henderson). And the debates make clear that no
member of Congress seriously grappled with a domicile-
based carveout to the “fixed, certain, and intelligible rule[]”
of the common law. Lynch, 1 Sand. Ch., at 658.
For a Congress intent on putting the question of citizen-
ship “once and forever [to] rest,” Cong. Globe, 42d Cong., 1st
Sess. 575 (1871) (Sen. Trumbull), a domicile-based qualifi-
cation would have introduced significant uncertainty. Un-
like the easy-to-apply common law, it would be “difficult, if
not impossible, to lay down any general rule” of domicile-
based citizenship, as domicile “often depend[s] upon the cir-
cumstances of each case, the combinations of which areCite as: 609 U. S. ____ (2026)
21
Opinion of the Court
infinite.” Inhabitants of Abington v. Inhabitants of North
Bridgewater, 40 Mass. 170, 177 (1839).
If Congress intended to hinge citizenship on each individ-
ual’s domicile—a question that “is sometimes a matter of
great difficulty to decide,” Story §45, at 43—it is reasonable
to expect there would have been at least some discussion of
the topic. Yet the word “domicile” appears just twice in the
discussion of the relevant provision of the Civil Rights Act.
See Cong. Globe, 39th Cong., 1st Sess., at 1160 (Rep. Shel-
labarger); id., at 1117 (Rep. Wilson). And it appears in only
one speech from the Citizenship Clause debates—as part of
an explanation of why State citizenship is distinct from na-
tional citizenship under the Constitution. See id., at 3031–
3032 (Sen. Henderson).
Perhaps recognizing the absence of ratification-era sup-
port for a domicile-based rule of national citizenship, the
Government and principal dissent both emphasize sources
from after the ratification of the Fourteenth Amendment.
They turn to the same international law treatises that un-
derpinned the Government’s attempts to limit birthright
citizenship in the 1880s.4 This fundamentally revisionist
scholarship—and the post-1884 Executive Branch actions
that relied upon it—do not put in doubt the understanding
of the Citizenship Clause at the time of (and after) its rati-
fication. As Senator Trumbull explained in 1871, the
——————
4 The principal dissent suggests that any scholar who wanted “to pre-
vent the children of Chinese immigrants from being citizens . . . would
not have proposed a domicile requirement,” because “many Chinese im-
migrants were already domiciled here.” Post, at 72. But several of the
scholars upon which the dissent relies (most prominently Francis Whar-
ton) did not agree. In their view, Chinese children born in America were
“not citizens” because the Chinese—“as a population”—could not be
“domiciled in the United States.” Wharton §12, at 41–42. Indeed, the
Government made the same argument in United States v. Wong Kim Ark,
169 U. S. 649 (1898). See Brief for United States in United States v.
Wong Kim Ark, O. T. 1896, No. 132, p. 26 (asserting that “all Chinese
persons, as a rule, are but temporary residents of this country”).22 TRUMP v. BARBARA
Opinion of the Court
Citizenship Clause recognized that “[e]very person born
within the jurisdiction” of the Nation was “a citizen of the
United States,” as had been true under “the common law of
this country as well as of England.” Cong. Globe, 1st Sess.,
42d Cong., at 575; see also, e.g., Memorandum of Secretary
of State H. Fish (1871), in 2 Digest 394; In re Look Tin Sing,
21 F., at 906, 909–910.
In any case, postenactment history cannot override the
text. If Congress intended to limit American citizenship to
the children of those domiciled in the United States, noth-
ing in the succinct language of the Citizenship Clause con-
veyed that design. Words appearing frequently in the Ex-
ecutive Order—“mother,” “father,” “lawful,” “temporary”—
are absent from the Clause. For a simple reason: they did
not matter. And while the Clause does ensure state citizen-
ship attaches for U. S. citizens in “the State wherein they
reside,” Amdt. 14, §1, the explicit invocation of residence for
state citizenship only highlights its absence from the crite-
ria for U. S. citizenship. See Slaughter-House Cases, 16
Wall. 36, 74 (1873) (a person can “be a citizen of the United
States without being a citizen of a State”).
When the principal dissent does grapple with the opera-
tive legal text—“subject to the jurisdiction” of the United
States—it has little to say. It argues only that a person is
“subject to the jurisdiction of the government of his domi-
cile.” Post, at 3. But that is not the question. The question
is whether a person is “subject to the jurisdiction” of the
government of the country in which he is physically pre-
sent, even if he is only there temporarily. He is (unless he
falls under one of the familiar exceptions, such as for am-
bassadors). For the reasons given by Chief Justice Mar-
shall in Schooner Exchange, the United States exercisesCite as: 609 U. S. ____ (2026)
23
Opinion of the Court
“full and complete power”—its “absolute and complete ju-
risdiction”—over temporary visitors. 7 Cranch 116, at 136.5
To avoid these problems, the principal dissent spends
much of its time on the text of the Civil Rights Act. See
post, at 2–4, 23–31, 35–36, 48–49, 59, 67–68, 87, 88–89.
(JUSTICE ALITO does the same—albeit in service of a differ-
ent result. See post, at 13–18, 20–21, 24–25, 36 (dissenting
opinion).) The Civil Rights Act made citizens of “all persons
born in the United States and not subject to any foreign
power.” 14 Stat. 27. The principal dissent contends that a
person is “not subject to any foreign power” if (and only if )
he is “domiciled in” the United States, for it is then (and
only then) that “his home nation” is forbidden from regulat-
ing his conduct. Post, at 3, 13–14. JUSTICE ALITO contends
that a person is “not subject to any foreign power” if (and
only if ) no other country would “automatically” make him
a “national[],” whether he is domiciled here or not. Post, at
37.
Neither theory works. As to the principal dissent, it is
simply not true that domicile in a new nation severs one’s
ties to the old one. See Story §540, at 451 (“Nations
——————
5 The Government briefly contends that Elk v. Wilkins, 112 U. S. 94
(1884) adopted its unconventional understanding of jurisdiction. That is
mistaken. Elk addressed the citizenship of a child “born a member of one
of the Indian tribes.” Id., at 99. And Elk hewed to the very same common
law rule announced by Chancellor Kent in 1823—indeed, it even cited
him. See id., at 100. The Court reasoned that tribal members were “no
more ‘born in the United States and subject to the jurisdiction thereof ’ ”
than “children born within the United States, of ambassadors or other
public ministers of foreign nations.” Id., at 102. In both contexts, after
all, the United States had voluntarily “cede[d] . . . a part of its territorial
jurisdiction” to another sovereign (or quasi-sovereign). Wong Kim Ark,
169 U. S., at 686. As the Court later confirmed, Elk “concerned only
members of Indian tribes within the United States.” Wong Kim Ark, 169
U. S., at 682. Beyond that unique intersovereign relationship, the
Court’s decision “had no tendency to deny citizenship to children born in
the United States of foreign parents . . . not in the diplomatic service of
a foreign country.” Ibid.24 TRUMP v. BARBARA
Opinion of the Court
generally assert a claim to regulate the rights, duties, obli-
gations, and acts of their own citizens, wherever they may
be domiciled.”). If the test truly is whether a person is
“amenable to the laws” of two governments at once, post, at
14 (THOMAS, J., dissenting), then it is a test that every child
born to a foreign parent fails—a result that even the prin-
cipal dissent cannot stomach. JUSTICE ALITO seems to rec-
ognize this bind, so he would create an ad hoc exception for
those whose parents have “done everything within their
power . . . to become Americans.” Post, at 27. He does not
explain how that exception can be squared with his view of
the text, which (to repeat) is that anyone “automatically”
made a “national[]” of his “parents’ native country” was not
entitled to citizenship under the Civil Rights Act.6 Post, at
37. In our estimation, the Act raises more questions than
answers—and was replaced by the Fourteenth Amend-
ment, which “better” expresses the views of the Reconstruc-
tion Congress anyway. Cong. Globe, 39th Cong., 1st Sess.,
at 2894 (Sen. Trumbull). This Court said as much in Wong
Kim Ark. See 169 U. S., at 675, 688 (“any possible doubt”
about the meaning of the Civil Rights Act “was removed” by
the change to “the affirmative words” of the Citizenship
Clause).
For the dissents and the Government, Wong Kim Ark is
essentially irrelevant. They attempt to narrow that prece-
dent by noting that the Court’s opinion repeatedly referred
to the domicile of Wong’s parents. That is true. But “the
reasoning underlying” the holding of Wong Kim Ark cannot
——————
6 JUSTICE KAVANAUGH proposes a similar ad hoc exception to his own
interpretation of the Citizenship Clause. Under his rule, the Clause gen-
erally does not promise citizenship to children whose parents are “not
U. S. citizens.” See post, at 9 (opinion concurring in judgment and dis-
senting in part). Yet it must grant citizenship under the “facts and cir-
cumstances” presented in Wong Kim Ark—even though Wong’s parents
were not U. S. citizens. Post, at 5, n. 3. Like the exception proposed by
JUSTICE ALITO, JUSTICE KAVANAUGH’s exception is at war with his sup-
posedly “unifying” principle of the Clause. Post, at 9.Cite as: 609 U. S. ____ (2026)
25
Opinion of the Court
be squared with a domicile requirement of the sort the Gov-
ernment envisions. Bucklew v. Precythe, 587 U. S. 119, 136
(2019). As we have already explained, the Court exhaust-
ively canvassed the text and history of the Citizenship
Clause. It traced an unbroken line from the English com-
mon law, into the founding and antebellum eras, and
through the debates, to the Clause’s ratification. Yet at no
point did the Court identify any evidence in the historical
record that the ratifiers of the Fourteenth Amendment
thought themselves to be imposing a domicile limitation.
In the end, it is the dissent in Wong Kim Ark that makes
the strongest case for a domicile-based theory of American
citizenship. There, Chief Justice Fuller resisted the appli-
cation of the English common law rule because it “recog-
nized no exception in the instance of birth during the mere
temporary or accidental sojourn of the parents.” 169 U. S.,
at 718. He admitted that, in England, “the question of dom-
icil[e] is entirely distinct from that of allegiance” because
“[t]he one relates to the civil, and the other to the political,
status.” Ibid. But he believed that “a different view as to
the effect of permanent abode on nationality ha[d] been ex-
pressed in this country.” Ibid. Under this different view,
the Fourteenth Amendment “prevent[ed] the acquisition of
citizenship by” “the children of aliens, whose parents owed
local and temporary allegiance merely, remaining subject
to a foreign power.” Id., at 721. The Government and to-
day’s dissenters agree. But this view commanded only a
dissent in 1898, and neither time nor circumstance has
changed the fact that it is not the law.
* * *
Again and again, the dissents cast the common law as
“feudal,” “medieval”—a remnant of “the darkness of the
middle ages.” Post, at 4–5, 45, 54, 64, 75–78 (opinion of
THOMAS, J.); see post, at 1 (opinion of GORSUCH, J.); post, at
2, 4, 27 (opinion of ALITO, J.).26 TRUMP v. BARBARA
Opinion of the Court
That was not the view of the Reconstruction Congress.
Where the dissents see feudalism, the Framers of the Four-
teenth Amendment saw emancipation. By the time of the
Glorious Revolution in 1688, in fact, the tie created by birth
was less a “duty” than a “right”—the foundation of the “an-
cient liberties” of “free-born subjects.” H. Muller, Subjects
and Sovereign 16–18, 57–58 (2017). That is why Blackstone
described the “privileges” owed to the “natural-born.” 1
Blackstone 361–362. That is why the colonists demanded
the “rights of Englishmen” more than 250 years ago. B.
Bailyn, The Ideological Origins of the American Revolution
192 (1967). And that is why abolitionists lauded the “an-
cient and universal” rule of citizenship by birth alone as “an
ordinance of Heaven.” Yates 36–37; see also M. Jones,
Birthright Citizens 89–107 (2018).
Citizenship, then and now, was the right to have rights—
to freely participate in our political community. The Fram-
ers of the Fourteenth Amendment extended that promise to
“every free-born person in this land.” Cong. Globe, 39th
Cong., 1st Sess., at 600 (Sen. Trumbull). We keep that
promise today.
The judgment of the District Court for the District of New
Hampshire is affirmed.
It is so ordered.Cite as: 609 U. S. ____ (2026)
1
JACKSON, J., concurring
SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
_________________
No. 25–365
_________________
DONALD J. TRUMP, PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED
STATES, ET AL., PETITIONERS v. BARBARA, ET AL.
ON WRIT OF CERTIORARI BEFORE JUDGMENT TO THE UNITED
STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT
[June 30, 2026]
JUSTICE JACKSON, with whom JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR joins
as to the introduction and Part I, concurring.
I join the Court’s opinion in full. I write separately to
respond to some of the themes in the principal dissent. De-
spite his longstanding endorsement of a “colorblind” Con-
stitution, JUSTICE THOMAS now surprisingly suggests that
the Citizenship Clause was a race-conscious remedial
measure, relating only to “freed slaves such as Dred Scott,”
post, at 56, and those who shared with them certain char-
acteristics, post, at 1 (“no other homeland”); post, at 21
(“called America home”). It is for this reason, he says, that
“children who were born in the United States but [to par-
ents] not domiciled here” are not entitled to claim birthright
citizenship. Post, at 3–4. But that narrow vision of the
Fourteenth Amendment bears little relationship to the his-
tory of its ratification. Even worse, JUSTICE THOMAS’s tell-
ing elides the entire point of the Second Founding: The Re-
construction Amendments were an anticaste,
antisubordination reset for the Nation, not a mere spot
treatment for the dark stain of slavery.
I
It is common ground that the Fourteenth Amendment
was “enacted . . . with the one pervading purpose of secur-
ing equal citizenship for the freed slaves.” Post, at 902 TRUMP v. BARBARA
JACKSON, J., concurring
(internal quotation marks omitted). Also true is the fact
that this Court “has time and again denied Americans that
promise.” Post, at 90.1 But consensus about the Fourteenth
Amendment’s central motivation does not justify JUSTICE
THOMAS’s myopic treatment of it. The Amendment caused
a paradigm shift in the trajectory of our Nation; the teacher
who scolds a student for bullying a classmate hopes the stu-
dent learns the broader lesson of treating everyone with
kindness, not just that one kid.
In the aftermath of the Civil War, those who championed
the Fourteenth Amendment—both within and beyond Con-
gress—understood the assignment. Their work product
used “language that transcended race and region,” and
thereby “changed and broadened the meaning of freedom
for all Americans.”2 Instead of the limited salve the princi-
pal dissent makes it out to be, the Citizenship Clause re-
flects this universalist approach.
A
Consider, first, the voices of those outside the chambers
of the Senate and the House of Representatives, whose ad-
vocacy and organizing culminated in the Fourteenth
——————
1 I suspect, though, that JUSTICE THOMAS and I disagree about when
and how that promise has been denied by this Court. My list is long (and
sadly only getting longer). For a sampling, consider: Civil Rights Cases,
109 U. S. 3 (1883); Plessy v. Ferguson, 163 U. S. 537 (1896); De Lima v.
Bidwell, 182 U. S. 1 (1901) (otherwise known as the Insular Cases);
Downes v. Bidwell, 182 U. S. 244 (1901) (same); Korematsu v. United
States, 323 U. S. 214 (1944); Milliken v. Bradley, 418 U. S. 717 (1974);
McCleskey v. Kemp, 481 U. S. 279 (1987); Parents Involved in Commu-
nity Schools v. Seattle School Dist. No. 1, 551 U. S. 701 (2007); Shelby
County v. Holder, 570 U. S. 529 (2013); Students for Fair Admissions,
Inc. v. President and Fellows of Harvard College, 600 U. S. 181 (2023)
(SFFA); Louisiana v. Callais, 608 U. S. ___ (2026).
2 E. Foner, Reconstruction: America’s Unfinished Revolution 1863–
1877, pp. 257–258 (1988) (emphasis added).Cite as: 609 U. S. ____ (2026)
3
JACKSON, J., concurring
Amendment.3 First in the North (as States abolished slav-
ery), and then in the South (after Emancipation and the
Union’s victory in the Civil War), Black people who were
generally not permitted at the polls or in the halls of power
mobilized nevertheless to advance the universalist vision of
belonging and citizenship that eventually won the day.
The odds were long and the stakes were high. Indeed,
around the time they gained their freedom, former slaves
faced a crisis similar in relevant respects to the American
immigrant experience. With little in terms of possessions
and even less in terms of opportunities to make a living for
themselves and their families, freed Blacks were not ush-
ered warmly into the broader community (with apologies or
compensation), set up for success, or even given the rights
and privileges others enjoyed. Though they’d tilled the soil
for centuries and had labored to build every building, once
freed, they were basically treated as “strangers” in a not-
so-strange land.4
This was not for lack of trying to survive and belong on
the freedmen’s part. They constructed churches, schools,
and mutual-aid societies—safe zones amidst America’s
racialized social and economic order.5 Outside those
enclaves, however, freed Blacks were characterized as
unassimilable and incapable of full civic participation.6
——————
3 Cf. Wolford v. Lopez, 609 U. S. ___, ___, n. 15 (2026) (JACKSON, J., dis-
senting) (slip op., at 28, n. 15) (explaining the importance of ensuring
that Black experiences and perspectives “are not (here again) excluded
from” our analysis of the relevant history).
4 African Methodist Episcopal Church v. City of New Orleans, 15 La.
Ann. 441, 443 (1860); see also ante, at 6–7 (majority opinion) (citing I.
Berlin, Slaves Without Masters 136–137 (1974)). Regarding freedmen in
the North prior to the Civil War, see also J. Horton & L. Horton, In Hope
of Liberty 125–176 (1997).
5 Ibid.
6 See D. Nieman, To Set the Law in Motion: The Freedmen’s Bureau
and the Legal Rights of Blacks, 1865–1868, p. 72 (1979) (Nieman); see
also K. Stampp, The Era of Reconstruction 1865-1877, p. 12 (1965)4 TRUMP v. BARBARA
JACKSON, J., concurring
Their humanity was disregarded.7 Serious doubts about
their claims to citizenship were also being sown.8 The
reason was clear: “[A]n integrated, race-blind society under
the rubric of ‘all men are created equal’—required a societal
commitment to” antisubordination principles and practices,
i.e., “a well-resourced effort to undo the damage done to
black people by slavery.”9 But “even the most ardent
opponents of slavery recoiled” from that prospect.10
One solution that gained traction in the early 1800s was
to physically separate the freedmen and other Black people
from the general polity. Antislavery Northerners and pro-
slavery Southerners found common cause in the idea that
freed Blacks would surely “be happiest in a black-led repub-
lic, beyond the contempt of and competition with white
——————
(Stampp) (“In the nineteenth century most white Americans, North and
South, had reservations about the Negro’s potentialities—doubted that
he had the innate intellectual capacity and moral fiber of the white man
and assumed that after emancipation he would be relegated to an infe-
rior caste”).
7 See I. Wilkerson, Caste: The Origins of Our Discontents 153 (2020)
(Wilkerson) (“The crimes of homicide, of rape, and of assault and battery
were felonies in the slavery era as they are today . . . [b]ut the country
allowed most any atrocity to be inflicted on the black body”); see also,
e.g., id., at 147–148 (describing Alabama surgeon James Marion Sims,
widely known as “the founding father of gynecology,” who pioneered pro-
cedures by operating on Black female slaves without anesthesia; Sims
said the surgery was “ ‘not painful enough to justify the trouble’ ”); see
generally D. Smith, Less Than Human: Why We Demean, Enslave, and
Exterminate Others 119 (2012) (“The dehumanization of African Ameri-
cans did not end with the creation of the new nation in 1776, or with the
abolition of slavery in 1865. Books and pamphlets published during the
latter part of the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries continued to
assert that they were beasts”).
8 See O. Power-Greene, Against Wind and Tide: The African-American
Struggle Against the Colonization Movement 15–16 (2014).
9 See N. Guyatt, Bind Us Apart: How Enlightened Americans Invented
Racial Segregation 247 (2016) (Guyatt).
10 Ibid.Cite as: 609 U. S. ____ (2026)
5
JACKSON, J., concurring
Americans.”11 This vision of “paternal caste” prompted the
creation of the American Colonization Society, which estab-
lished the colony of Liberia and pushed for freed Blacks to
relocate there voluntarily.12 Once freed Blacks were out of
sight, they would (thankfully) be out of mind, eliminating
any need for a racial reckoning in America.
Meanwhile, many States pushed the envelope, passing
“Black Laws” (in the pre-War North) and “Black Codes” (in
the post-War South), intending to make it difficult for freed
Blacks to live and work there.13 Violence, too, played a sig-
nificant role in the isolation effort. Those who opposed abo-
lition banded together with those who resented the extra
competition in the job market to form marauding mobs,
——————
11 M. Jones, Birthright Citizens: A History of Race and Rights in Ante-
bellum America 37–38 (2018) (Jones); see also Guyatt 268–269.
By the middle of the century, colonization was so popular that it found
favor with leading abolitionists, including President Abraham Lincoln.
During an August 1862 meeting at the White House between Lincoln
and a “committee of free Negroes,” Lincoln described a fund Congress
had created “for the purpose of ‘colonizing people of African descent,’ a
cause he had long favored.” C. Sandburg, Abraham Lincoln: The Prairie
Years and the War Years 316 (1954). The problem, as Lincoln described
it to his visitors, was that “ ‘[y]our race suffers very greatly, many of
them, by living among us, while ours suffers from your presence.’ ” Ibid.
He continued: “ ‘Your race are suffering, in my judgment, the greatest
wrong inflicted on any people. But even when you cease to be slaves, you
are yet far removed from being placed on an equality with the white
race.’ ” Ibid. Colonization would allow free Blacks to thrive, without
forcing Whites to accommodate their demands for equal treatment and
legal protection. Interestingly, Lincoln held a universalist view of
citizenship despite his support for the colonization movement. See infra,
at 10–11.
12 Jones 37; see also E. Foner, The Second Founding: How the Civil War
and Reconstruction Remade the Constitution 12 (2019) (Foner, The Sec-
ond Founding); Guyatt 267, 271–272.
13 For Black Laws, see, e.g., K. Masur, Until Justice Be Done 16–18,
230–231 (2021) (Masur); Foner, The Second Founding 13. For Black
Codes, see, e.g., id., 47–49; Nieman 72–76; Masur 309–310; Wolford, 609
U. S., at ___–___ (slip op., at 26–32) (JACKSON, J., dissenting) (discussing
Black Codes).6 TRUMP v. BARBARA
JACKSON, J., concurring
ransacking Black neighborhoods, homes, and stores.14 And
local law enforcement? They did little to help. Before
Emancipation, per the federal Fugitive Slave Act, state of-
ficers pursued and arrested Blacks suspected of having es-
caped slavery. Afterwards, the cavalry looked the other
way when Black neighborhoods were terrorized by vigilante
violence.15 The Ku Klux Klan would form, and then flour-
ish, starting in 1866.16
——————
14 See D. Blight, Frederick Douglass: Prophet of Freedom 473 (2018)
(Blight); Jones 95, 105; K. Lewis, A Curse Upon the Nation: Race, Free-
dom, and Extermination in America and the Atlantic World 176, 182–
183 (2017). Frederick Douglass’s first-hand account from the Baltimore
of 1834 provides insight into White resentment over freed Blacks’ entry
into the labor market:
“The circumstance which led to [my being fired] was the committing of
an outrage upon me, by the white apprentices of the ship-yard. The fight
was a desperate one, and I came out of it shockingly mangled. I was cut
and bruised in sundry places, and my left eye was nearly knocked out of
its socket. The facts which led to this brutal outrage upon me illustrate
a phase of slavery which was destined to become an important element
in the overthrow of the slave system, and I may therefore state them with
some minuteness. That phase was this—the conflict of slavery with the
interests of white mechanics and laborers. In the country this conflict
was not so apparent; but in cities, such as Baltimore, Richmond, New
Orleans, Mobile, etc., it was seen pretty clearly. The slaveholders, with
a craftiness peculiar to themselves, by encouraging the enmity of the
poor laboring white man against the blacks, succeeded in making the
said white man almost as much a slave as the black slave himself.” F.
Douglass, Life and Times of Frederick Douglass 223–224 (1892).
15 See Masur 234–235. The violence, of course, continued after the War
and during Reconstruction. The Colfax, Louisiana, massacre of 1873, for
example, was “[t]he bloodiest single instance of racial carnage in the Re-
construction era.” Foner, Reconstruction, at 437. Two hundred and
eighty Black people were ruthlessly slaughtered on Easter Sunday.
“[T]he Colfax massacre taught many lessons, including the lengths to
which some opponents of Reconstruction would go to regain their accus-
tomed authority.” Ibid.
16 Foner, Reconstruction, at 342, 428–429; see also id., at 430 (“[T]he
Klan aimed to regulate blacks’ ‘station in society’ ”).Cite as: 609 U. S. ____ (2026)
7
JACKSON, J., concurring
Still, most freed Blacks resisted the pressure to self-
deport.17 Instead, many started organizing toward the
creation of the kind of Nation the colonizationists opposed—
one that guaranteed liberty and justice for all. In the
decades leading up to the ratification of the Fourteenth
Amendment, Black Americans organized and gathered at
more than 600 local and national conventions across the
country.18 There, delegates erected the political and
intellectual scaffolding for the Fourteenth Amendment and,
later, for the Black Civil Rights Movement more
generally.19
Critically for present purposes, these visionaries already
understood themselves to be American citizens. “The re-
frains ‘we are Americans’ and ‘we are citizens’ echoed in
conferences throughout the North.”20 Moreover, “[b]irth-
right figured importantly” as “delegates frequently charac-
terized their status as that of native-born citizens.”21 The
——————
17 See generally Brief for Historians Martha S. Jones et al. as Amici
Curiae 11–16.
18 See Colored Conventions Project, Conventions Records (Feb. 12,
2025), https://www.coloredconventions.org/about-records/ (archived at
https://perma.cc/3ZD2-3WHS) (collecting “minutes, proceedings, news-
paper articles, speeches, letters, transcripts, and images”); see also M.
Sinha, The Rise and Fall of the Second American Republic: Reconstruc-
tion, 1860–1920, p. 158 (2024); J. Fox, The Constitution of Black Aboli-
tionism: Reframing the Second Founding, 23 U. Pa. J. Const. L. 267,
272–334 (2021).
19 See E. Ball, Performing Politics, Creating Community: Antebellum
Black Conventions as Political Rituals in The Colored Conventions
Movement: Black Organizing in the Nineteenth Century (P. Foreman, J.
Casey & S. Patterson eds., 2021), pp. 155–157.
20 Jones 63; see also Address of the Colored National Convention to the
People of the United States, in Proceedings of the Colored National Con-
vention, Held in Rochester, July 6th, 7th, and 8th, 1853, p. 8 (“We ad-
dress you not as aliens nor as exiles, humbly asking to be permitted to
dwell among you in peace; but we address you as American citizens as-
serting their rights on their own native soil”).
21 Jones 63; see also Proceedings of the National Convention of Colored
Men, Held in the City of Syracuse, N. Y., Oct. 4, 5, 6, and 7, 1864, p. 428 TRUMP v. BARBARA
JACKSON, J., concurring
delegates argued that, as such, they had the requisite alle-
giance, so, at a minimum, the Federal Government owed
them the duty of protection.22
The famed orator Frederick Douglass was one of these
delegates. Capturing the spirit of the moment, Douglass
proclaimed that Chief Justice Taney—the author of the ma-
jority opinion in Dred Scott v. Sandford, 19 How. 393
(1857)—“[could] do many things, but he [could not] . . .
change the essential nature of things.”23 In the absence of
the artificial evils of slavery and racial subordination,
Douglass explained, “the glorious birthright of our common
humanity, will become the inheritance of all the inhabit-
ants of this highly favored country.”24
Do note this: The citizenship thesis of the Colored Con-
ventions was thus not that some new status should be cre-
ated and conferred on freed Blacks. It was instead that
——————
(Syracuse Convention) (“[H]ere were we born, for this country our fathers
and brothers have fought, and here we hope to remain in full enjoyment
of enfranchised manhood, and its dignities”).
22 This was, of course, an invocation of the principle of “jus soli,” see
ante, at 4, which was well-known and widely accepted during this histor-
ical period. Delegates at the Colored Conventions drew upon its twin
duties—allegiance owed and protection given—to demand not only that
their rights as humans be honored, but also that “due attention should
be given to our needs.” Syracuse Convention 42. The delegates pointedly
observed that “[t]he laws which have made white men great, have de-
graded us, because we were colored, and because we were reduced to
chattel slavery.” Proceedings of the Colored People’s Convention of the
State of South Carolina, Held in Zion Church, Charleston, Nov. 1865, p.
23 (S. C. Convention). So, they argued, in slavery’s wake, the law needed
to make things right: It had to provide “[e]quality—expressed in such
language as equal liberty, equal justice, equal rights, and equal citizen-
ship.” Foner, The Second Founding, at 13; see also id., at 94 (“We claim
exactly the same rights, privileges, and immunities as are enjoyed by
white men—we ask nothing more, and will be content with nothing less”
(quoting The Colored Mass Convention held in Mobile (1867)).
23 Speech on the Dred Scott Decision (May 1857), in Two Speeches by
Frederick Douglass (1857) pp. 27–30, 31, 32–46.
24 Id., at 46.Cite as: 609 U. S. ____ (2026)
9
JACKSON, J., concurring
freed Blacks already had a rightful claim to citizenship be-
cause they had been born on American soil. After all, the
Nation, from its founding, had “boldly proclaim[ed] that all
men are born free and equal, and that consequently life, lib-
erty, and the pursuit of happiness, are inherent in every in-
dividual, vested inalienably by natural birthright.”25 No
ideal was more inherently American. Now, “rest[ing their]
cause on the republican standard of the revolutionary Fa-
thers,” freed Blacks were “knock[ing] at the doors of the
constitution and demand[ing] an entrance.”26 And “[i]f . . .
asked what evidence [they] bring to sustain [their] qualifi-
cations for citizenship, [they would] offer them certificates
of . . . BIRTH and NATIVITY.”27 Would the Nation live up
to its promise?
Such universalist appeals were a conscious choice. Yes,
Black Americans had suffered a singular wrong. And yes,
they had “‘fought and bled’” for the Union, paying a steep
price for their freedom.28 But the delegates did not rest on
these laurels. Rather, they drew upon the moral and polit-
ical force of the universal principles that were already core
to the Nation’s identity.
That bears repeating: Freed Blacks did not advocate for
a unique set of rules that catered only to their situation.
Nor did they seek to advance their own position relative to,
or at the expense and exclusion of, other marginalized
groups. Instead, those whose gatherings helped galvanize
——————
25 Minutes of the State Convention of the Colored Citizens of the State
of Michigan, Held in Detroit (Oct. 26–27, 1843), in 1 The Proceedings of
the Black State Conventions, 1840–1865 (P. Foner & G. Walker eds.,
1979), p. 192; see also Foner, The Second Founding, at 94 (“The former
slaves . . . self-consciously viewed themselves as individuals ‘newly in-
vested with all the rights of an American citizen.’ ”).
26 Minutes of the State Convention of the Coloured Citizens of Penn-
sylvania, Convened at Harrisburg (Dec. 13–14, 1848), p. 20.
27 Ibid.
28 Post, at 1 (THOMAS, J., dissenting) (quoting 2 Life and Writings of
Frederick Douglass 256 (P. Foner ed. 1950)).10 TRUMP v. BARBARA
JACKSON, J., concurring
the push for full equality understood that “[a] diverse origin
does not disprove a common nature, nor does it disprove a
united destiny.”29 The firmest foundation for freedom
would require an anticaste reset—“both for his sake and for
ours”30—and would benefit all.
During his U. S. Senate candidacy, Abraham Lincoln de-
veloped a similar vision. In the lead-up to the now-famous
Lincoln-Douglas debates, Lincoln explained that the prom-
ise of liberty and equality in the Declaration of Independ-
ence “was held sacred by all, and thought to include all.”31
Lincoln expressly and intentionally linked the fate of Black
Americans and immigrant groups (“among us perhaps half
our people who are not descendants at all” of the Founders),
and noted that the Nation’s future hinged on a universal
definition of citizenship that excluded neither.32 He ex-
plained that the Declaration’s promise that “all men are
created equal” was the “electric cord . . . that links the
hearts of patriotic and liberty-loving men together,” regard-
less of race or descent.33
The case was made. First, there was war. And then, the
delegates’ (and Lincoln’s) universalist view of citizenship
made its mark on the Constitution.
——————
29 F. Douglass, The Claims of the Negro Ethnologically Considered: An
Address, Before the Literary Societies of Western Reserve College, July
12, 1854, p. 34.
30 F. Douglass, Composite Nation, Delivered in the Parker Fraternity
Course, Boston, 1867, p. 21 (1867); see also ibid. (“I want a home here
not only for the negro, the mulatto and the Latin races, but I want the
Asiatic to find a home here in the United States, and feel at home
here. . . . Right wrongs no man”).
31 Abraham Lincoln, Speech at Springfield, Illinois (June 26, 1857), in
2 Collected Works of Abraham Lincoln, p. 404 (1953).
32 Abraham Lincoln, Speech at Chicago, Illinois (July 10, 1858), in 2
id., at 499 (1953).
33 Id., at 500.Cite as: 609 U. S. ____ (2026)
11
JACKSON, J., concurring
B
The Civil Rights Act of 1866—the predecessor to the Cit-
izenship Clause, see ante, at 8–9—was initially drafted as
a spot treatment. Senator Lyman Trumbull’s first proposal
homed in on the freedmen and provided merely that “all
persons of African descent born in the United States are
hereby declared to be citizens of the United States.”34 If
that language had prevailed, the view JUSTICE THOMAS as-
serts today might be well founded. See post, at 4–5 (finding
birthright citizenship’s “feudal” origins inconsistent with
Congress’s focus on “secur[ing] equal rights for the freed
blacks”).
But Senator Trumbull changed his mind. The day after
he submitted that first proposal, he requested to “withdraw
[the original] and . . . offer another in lieu of it to the same
purport, changing the phraseology.”35
Consistent with the views espoused by activists, Trum-
bull’s new proposal adopted a distinctly universalist regis-
ter: “All persons born in the United States, and not subject
to any foreign power, are hereby declared to be citizens of
the United States, without any distinction of color.”36 This
is the language Congress would eventually enact as part of
the Civil Rights Act of 1866. And the Civil Rights Act of
1866 would go on to become the basis for the Fourteenth
Amendment’s Citizenship Clause.
Senator Trumbull’s progression from specific to universal
was more than mere word choice. In the face of the virulent
anti-immigrant—and, in particular, the anti-Chinese and
the anti-Romani—sentiment of that era, language target-
ing just freed former slaves would have been the path of
least (or less) resistance. But Senator Trumbull, along with
those colleagues who took up the same mantle during the
——————
34 Cong. Globe, 39th Cong., 1st Sess. 474 (1866).
35 Id., at 498.
36 Ibid.12 TRUMP v. BARBARA
JACKSON, J., concurring
ratification debates, expressly rejected that narrow fram-
ing.
Do not miss this context. Throughout the mid-19th cen-
tury, Chinese immigrants to America were often portrayed
as “‘coolies,’” a racist slur implying indentured servitude
and allegiance to a Chinese master.37 Some Members of
Congress brought that sentiment to the Civil Rights Act’s
citizenship-related debates. Notably focusing his attention
beyond freed former slaves, Senator Edgar Cowan, for ex-
ample, argued that German immigrants’ children born in
Pennsylvania should be citizens, but Chinese immigrants’
children should not—because Germans and Chinese were
different.38 In response, Senator Trumbull emphasized
that the law he had drafted drew no such distinctions.39
Undeterred, Senator Cowan would warn again—this
time during debates on the Fourteenth Amendment—that
the Citizenship Clause would let Chinese immigrants
“overrun” California and “double or treble the population”
of that State.40 Senator John Conness of California, where
anti-Chinese sentiment was arguably most pronounced, re-
sponded that “the children begotten of Chinese parents in
——————
37 J. Shugerman, An Originalist Case for Birthright Citizenship 77
U. C. L. J. (forthcoming 2026) (draft, at 3). When anti-Chinese sentiment
reached a fever pitch decades later, Congress enacted the Chinese Exclu-
sion Act and prohibited all Chinese immigration. See id., at 26. Justice
Harlan’s dissent in Plessy v. Ferguson—the “most celebrated Fourteenth
Amendment opinion” according the principal dissent, see post, at 37—
did not rise above such prejudice. Justice Harlan described Chinese im-
migrants as a “race so different from our own that we do not permit those
belonging to it to become citizens of the United States” and instead deem
them “absolutely excluded from our country.” 163 U. S., at 561 (dissent-
ing opinion). Justice Harlan thus drove a wedge between Black Ameri-
cans and other non-Black minorities.
38 Cong. Globe, 39th Cong., 1st Sess., at 498 (“The children of German
parents are citizens; but Germans are not Chinese”).
39 Ibid.; see also ante, at 9.
40 Cong. Globe, 39th Cong., 1st Sess., at 2891.Cite as: 609 U. S. ____ (2026)
13
JACKSON, J., concurring
California . . . shall be citizens.”41 In fact, he said, the Civil
Rights Act had already declared “that the children of all
parentage whatever . . . should be regarded and treated as
citizens of the United States.”42 No Senator rose to agree
with Senator Cowan or dispute what Senator Conness had
said.43 And no Senator said what the principal dissent says
today: that the text at issue conferred citizenship only on
freed Blacks and those in analogous situations.44
The debates went similarly with respect to the Roma peo-
ple, who were referred to at the time as “gypsies.”45 When
asked whether native-born Romani children would be birth-
right citizens of the United States under the proposed Civil
Rights Act, Senator Trumbull replied: “Undoubtedly.”46
President Andrew Johnson apparently agreed. In his mes-
sage vetoing the Act, Johnson noted with disapproval that,
under the law, “the Chinese of the Pacific States, Indians
subject to taxation, the people called gypsies, as well as the
——————
41 Ibid.
42 Ibid.
43 See id., at 2891–2897.
44 See Shugerman, 77 U. C. L. J. (draft, at 26). In response to this his-
tory, the principal dissent notes that Francis Wharton, a late-1800s legal
scholar and State Department official, posited that because foreigners
“ ‘born in the United States’ of ‘parents not being here domiciled’ ” are not
subject to the jurisdiction of the United States, Chinese children born in
this country “ ‘are not citizens.’ ” Post, at 39 (quoting Conflict of Laws 41
(2d ed. 1881)). But JUSTICE THOMAS leaves out the motivation behind
Wharton’s contention: not the Constitution, but that the Chinese were
insufficiently “civiliz[ed]” and that “[t]o admit such rights to an emigrat-
ing nation, would be not merely to establish a foreign sovereign, but a
foreign barbarism, within our national domain.” Conflict of Laws 26
(1872).
45 William Blackstone called the Roma people “Egyptians” and branded
them “outlandish.” See 4 Commentaries on the Laws of England 165
(1770). (He did not exclude them from the common-law rule of birthright
citizenship, however. See id., at 166.) The proper term for this group
today is “Romani” or the “Roma people.” See Brief for Gerard N. Mag-
liocca as Amicus Curiae 1, n. 2.
46 Cong. Globe, 39th Cong., 1st Sess., at 498.14 TRUMP v. BARBARA
JACKSON, J., concurring
entire race designated as blacks,” would be birthright citi-
zens.47 Without making any changes to the bill or respond-
ing that Johnson was mistaken in his understanding of it
(or otherwise capitulating to Johnson’s views in any re-
spect), Congress overrode that presidential veto.48
During the ratification debates, Senator Cowan took aim
at the Roma people too, characterizing them as undeserving
of birthright citizenship because they “wander[ed] in
gangs,” “infest[ed] society,” and “impos[ed] upon the simple
and weak everywhere.”49 And again, Senator Conness dis-
missed Senator Cowan’s prejudices: “The only invasion of
Pennsylvania within my recollection was an invasion very
much worse and more disastrous to the State, and more to
be feared and more feared, than that of Gypsies. It was an
invasion of rebels [at Gettysburg].”50
When ratified, the Citizenship Clause thus vindicated the
universalist vision of the delegates at the Colored Conven-
tions and their allies in Congress. Far from the principal
dissent’s representations, freed Blacks did not receive citi-
zenship as a reward for their military service or for having,
through no choice of their own, “no other homeland [and] no
allegiance to any foreign power.” Post, at 1. Instead, the
Amendment recognized their rightful claim to birthright
citizenship simply and solely by virtue of their having been
born on American soil. John Bingham—one of the Amend-
ment’s principal architects—said this clearly: The “rights
——————
47 A. Johnson, Veto Message (Mar. 27, 1866), in 6 Compilation of the
Messages and Papers of the Presidents 405 (J. Richardson, ed. 1897); see
Foner, Reconstruction, at 247–248.
48 E. Maltz, Civil Rights, the Constitution, and Congress, 1863–1869,
p. 70 (1990).
49 Cong. Globe., 39th Cong., 1st Sess., at 2891.
50 Id., at 2892.Cite as: 609 U. S. ____ (2026)
15
JACKSON, J., concurring
of citizenship” are universal because they are the “sacred
rights of person[hood].”51
With this recognition, the U. S. Constitution finally got
an anticaste engine. And with it, the Nation gained a new
font of legitimacy and vitality.
II
Fast forward 150 years, to 2026. Section One of the Four-
teenth Amendment still contains that same universalist
language, consistent with its origins and the ratifiers’ in-
tent. So, respondents say, our Constitution confers citizen-
ship upon almost anyone and everyone who is born on
American soil—to include the children of immigrants and
temporary sojourners not domiciled in the United States—
just as it did at the time of the Fourteenth Amendment’s
ratification.52
But the Government’s view (which the principal dissent
adopts) rejects this. Its argument focuses on the fact that
the Citizenship Clause had a particular purpose: to reverse
Dred Scott’s holding that Black Americans were not entitled
to citizenship. See Brief for Petitioners 13–14; post, at 1–2.
The reasoning is, in essence, that the Fourteenth Amend-
ment recognized freed Blacks as citizens because they had
“‘fought and bled’” in the Civil War, “had no other home-
land, owed no allegiance to any foreign power, and were
subject to no other authority.” Post, at 1; see also Brief for
Petitioners 16–18. Thus, the argument goes, the
——————
51 Id., at 1090. Bingham “believed the liberation of the slaves had
forced the United States to federalize the Bill of Rights and apply it to
all Americans.” Blight 479.
52 Brief for Respondents 7–23. At this point, the “almost” caveat per-
tains mainly to “the ‘children of ambassadors’ and other representatives
of foreign sovereigns.” Ante, at 15 (quoting United States v. Wong Kim
Ark, 169 U. S. 649, 675 (1898)). Congress addressed the founding-era
exclusion of “those born in the ‘alien nations’ of Indian tribes,” ante, at
15 (quoting Wong Kim Ark, 169 U. S., at 681), in 1924, with its enactment
of the Indian Citizenship Act, ch. 233, 43 Stat. 253.16 TRUMP v. BARBARA
JACKSON, J., concurring
Amendment’s guarantees are for only Black Americans and
those who fit their fought-and-bled-for-country, no-other-
homeland, domiciled mold. Post, at 1–3, 90.
That contention is ahistorical for the reasons laid out in
Part I, supra, and those explained in the Court’s opinion.
In my view, it is also difficult to square with the notion of a
“color-blind” Constitution, which has loomed large in the
Court’s Fourteenth Amendment jurisprudence.53 The
Court’s conception of a color-blind Constitution and the
Government’s (and principal dissent’s) cramped, group-spe-
cific reading of the Citizenship Clause are two sides of the
same coin, stemming from a basic misunderstanding of the
——————
53 See Allen v. Milligan, 608 U. S. ___, ___, ___ (2026) (per curiam) (slip
op., at 1, 3) (concluding, in light of “our colorblind Constitution,” that it
is likely unconstitutional for States to be ordered to draw maps that pro-
vide fair electoral opportunities for Black Americans, no matter the race-
conscious, remedial origin of the Fourteenth Amendment that made the
Voting Rights Act possible); SFFA, 600 U. S., at 213 (declaring that race-
conscious university admissions programs that promote diversity violate
the Fourteenth Amendment); see also Parents Involved, 551 U. S., at
747–748 (plurality opinion) (rejecting efforts to defend race-conscious
public-school placements against claims of unconstitutional discrimina-
tion brought by White students).
There are myriad ways in which the Court’s adherence to color-blind-
ness is mistaken, some of which I have addressed in other opinions. See
SFFA, 600 U. S., at 385 (JACKSON, J., dissenting); see also, e.g., id., at
206, 208 (majority opinion) (conflating “[e]liminating racial discrimina-
tion” with eliminating all “[d]istinctions between citizens solely because
of their ancestry” (internal quotation marks omitted)); Callais, 608 U. S.,
at ___ (slip op., at 17–18) (similar); Parents Involved, 551 U. S., at 747–
748 (declaring that “[t]he way to stop discrimination on the basis of race
is to stop discriminating on the basis of race,” including by ceasing any
race-conscious action designed to remediate the consequences of deeply
entrenched housing segregation). My concern now is that a fleeting na-
ture is among its many flaws. One wonders how the outcomes in the
above cases might have differed had the Court, like the Government and
the principal dissent today, relied upon the fact that the Fourteenth
Amendment was enacted to ensure that Black Americans are not treated
as second-class citizens, or had it at least acknowledged the connection
between the Amendment’s historical context and its remedial purpose.Cite as: 609 U. S. ____ (2026)
17
JACKSON, J., concurring
relevant history. As I have shown in this opinion, the Four-
teenth Amendment is not color-blind; rather, its core prin-
ciple is that our Nation does not tolerate racial caste—i.e.,
the systemic subordination that many (even some who op-
posed slavery) had wished to perpetuate after the Civil
War.54 So, the architects of the Second Founding did not
think or pretend that race didn’t matter. Quite to the con-
trary, they understood that race made an enormous differ-
ence to the lived experiences of all concerned—and to the
fate of our union. Indeed, it is for that very reason that a
radical restructuring was required.55 The Citizenship
Clause applies universally precisely because such universal
application was necessary to achieve the Amendment’s own
race-conscious remedial purposes.
Putting a finer point on this: When colonizationists ob-
jected to changing their norms to accommodate the equal
citizenship and rights of freedmen, freed Blacks and their
allies organized to push for a Constitution that would bring
their own antisubordination vision to fruition. See supra,
7–10. That kind of ambitious transformation—nothing less
than the remaking of the soul of a Nation beset by rank,
entrenched race-based prejudice and inequity—did not
come for free, or purely by the say-so of those who claimed
to be “color-blind.” It required heavy lifting, a fundamental
shift—the very thing for which the Fourteenth Amendment
——————
54 “A caste system is an artificial construction, a fixed and embedded
ranking of human value that sets the presumed supremacy of one group
against the presumed inferiority of other groups on the basis of ancestry
and often immutable traits, traits that would be neutral in the abstract
but are ascribed life-and-death meaning in a hierarchy favoring the dom-
inant caste whose forebears designed it. . . . [T]hroughout human history,
across time and space, [at least] three caste systems have stood out to
this day. The tragically accelerated, chilling, and officially vanquished
caste system of Nazi Germany. The lingering, millennia-long caste sys-
tem of India. And the shape-shifting, unspoken, race-based caste pyra-
mid in the United States.” Wilkerson 17.
55 Stampp 12.18 TRUMP v. BARBARA
JACKSON, J., concurring
stands: a repudiation of the notion that there is a “superior,
dominant, ruling class of citizens,” Plessy, 163 U. S., at 559
(Harlan, J., dissenting), and a willingness to see, and strive
to eliminate, all remaining vestiges of historical subjuga-
tion.
So the principal dissent is wrong to complain that the
Court “has repurposed the Fourteenth Amendment to pro-
tect . . . rights that the Reconstruction Congress never con-
templated.” See post, at 91. Delegates to the Colored Con-
ventions drew upon their own experiences to successfully
argue for a new Constitution—one that protected funda-
mental human rights, including an individual’s “‘right to
own his body and mind’” and “the right of personal security
and protection against injuries to our bodies or good
name.”56 Thus, even in cases where the protagonist was not
a Black American, this Court’s Fourteenth Amendment
cases have focused, at bottom, on the same universal liberty
and equality interests that motivated the Fourteenth
Amendment itself. The question is (and always has been):
Does the affected individual or group enjoy equal dignity?
And the correct answer is (and has always been) to heed the
Fourteenth Amendment’s universalist, antisubordination
command. Our Nation did not undergo something as pro-
found and world-shifting as “Reconstruction” for naught.
* * *
After the Civil War, Fredrick Douglass frequently re-
flected on the events of the time through the lens of biblical
stories. In one speech, Douglass described how God leveled
Sodom and Gomorrah on account of sin, and how, in the af-
termath, Abraham stood atop a nearby mountain to survey
what remained. “[T]he orator used the image of Abraham
——————
56 S. C. Convention 27; see also ibid. (asserting that “our bodies have
been outraged with impunity”); Syracuse Convention 41 (“As a people,
we have been denied ownership of our bodies, our wives, homes, children,
and the products of our own labor”).Cite as: 609 U. S. ____ (2026)
19
JACKSON, J., concurring
looking down upon the destroyed landscape to demand that
Americans look down upon their own recent self-destruc-
tion, and all but unjustified survival, and remember.”57
Douglass declared that his own aim was to “‘show that na-
tions should have memories.’”58
In the time since Douglass’s prescient observation, Amer-
icans have come to learn that fading memories are not the
only danger. The distortion of historical facts—retellings
that reimagine and repurpose past events to lend credence
to misbegotten aims—may be an even greater threat.
Yet here we are. The Government, the principal dissent,
and a handful of revisionist commentators now vigorously
promote an interpretation of the Citizenship Clause that di-
verges sharply not only from what the text says, but also
from the historical record as interpreted by the keepers of
“the call of remembrance” (trained historians).59 What is
more, this alternative account pitches Black Americans
against immigrants when the advocates who promoted the
Fourteenth Amendment did no such thing. Freed Blacks
fought for the shared humanity of all people. And the Great
Emancipator eventually foresaw that the only path forward
that could prevent a return—in any form—to slavery and
race-based subordination was to link the fates of all.
——————
57 Blight 482.
58 Ibid.
59 Ibid.; see Brief for Historians Martha S. Jones et al. as Amici Curiae;
Brief for Race Law Scholars as Amici Curiae 4–12; Brief for Originalist
Scholars Evan D. Bernick et al. as Amici Curiae; Brief for Gerard N.
Magliocca as Amicus Curiae 4–7. A substantial amount of scholarly work
has been done to unearth historical truths about the facts and circum-
stances that gave rise to the Reconstruction Amendments. In addition
to the sources I have cited throughout this opinion, see, for example, D.
Faust, This Republic of Suffering: Death and the American Civil War
(2008); E. Mathisen, The Loyal Republic: Traitors, Slaves, and the Re-
making of Citizenship in Civil War America (2018); K. Stampp, America
in 1857: A Nation on the Brink (1990).20 TRUMP v. BARBARA
JACKSON, J., concurring
Ultimately, then, it is the Government and JUSTICE
THOMAS who have “repurposed the Fourteenth Amend-
ment.” Post, at 91. By ignoring that our Constitution
stands firmly against caste and subjugation—on all axes
and in all manners—they deny the clear, universalist vision
shared and proclaimed by the Fourteenth Amendment’s
Framers: to “rebuild a shattered empire . . . to plant deep
and solid the corner-stone of eternal justice, and to erect
thereon a superstructure of perfect equality of every human
being before the law.”60
Of course, the ultimate irony is that for all the talk about
the detestable Dred Scott decision, the Government and the
principal dissent propose a return to its core tenet. Their
bottom line is that, for certain people, being born on Amer-
ican soil will not suffice to confer citizenship. It is that odi-
ous conclusion that the Citizenship Clause plainly rejects,
as the Court explains. Ante, at 26. I add only that the Four-
teenth Amendment’s universalist aims should forever be
the death knell for this kind of claim—one that seeks to
make bloodline the marker of birthright. The America that
was reborn from the rubble of the Civil War simply does not
countenance that inequitable result. Thankfully, a major-
ity of the Court remembered this today, and has dutifully
preserved the most basic animating principle of our Na-
tion’s founding—that all human beings are created equal—
once more.
——————
60 Address by Congressman Thaddeus Stevens, Bedford, Pa., Sept. 4,
1866, in Cincinnati Commercial, Sept. 11, 1866, p. 2, col. 1.Cite as: 609 U. S. ____ (2026)
1