Supreme Court strikes down Trump's birthright citizenship order
The US Supreme Court ruled 6-3 against President Trump's executive order seeking to end birthright citizenship, marking one of the most significant legal defeats of his presidency. The decision affirms that the 14th Amendment guarantees citizenship to anyone born on US soil. Multiple media outlets report the ruling as a major blow to Trump's immigration agenda. The case had been closely watched as a defining test of presidential executive power.
Following the Supreme Court's landmark ruling, media outlets published the full court opinion and analyzed its wider implications. The decision drew particular attention in China, where critics noted Trump had specifically targeted Chinese-born US citizens. NPR linked the birthright ruling to a broader trend of declining US murder rates. Canadian media examined how the now-blocked order would have affected Canadians living in the United States.
South African authorities deployed police units and placed the military on standby as anti-immigrant protests gathered momentum across major cities. Protesters are demanding stricter immigration enforcement, with tensions rising in urban areas over jobs and resources. The government has shuttered several city centers as a precaution. Observers warn that the demonstrations risk escalating into broader civil unrest in a country already grappling with high unemployment.
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