Should birthright citizenship be abolished?

AuthorVitter, Senator David
PositionDebate

The 14th Amendment to the Constitution has generally been understood to mean that all people born in the United States are automatically American citizens, regardless of whether their parents are citizens or even whether they're living in the U.S. legally or illegally. But giving U.S.-born children of undocumented immigrants all the rights and privileges of citizenship at birth has become a subject of controversy, and Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump has made it a campaign issue this year. He's said that ending "birthright citizenship" would discourage illegal immigration.

YES Every 93 seconds, a baby is born in the United States to immigrant parents who are here illegally. Currently, those babies are automatically U.S. citizens, with all the financial, legal, and social benefits of being an American. This gives their parents the opportunity to cash in on many of those benefits--all of which are paid for by American taxpayers.

This loophole to gain U.S. citizenship--and its related benefits--has also encouraged foreigners to have babies on U.S. soil instead of going through the legal immigration process. There's even a growing industry in China catering to wealthy women who come to the U.S. to give birth.

This rampant cycle is facilitated by a misinterpretation of the 14th Amendment, which states, "All persons born or naturalized in the United States, and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the United States." I believe the phrase "subject to the jurisdiction thereof" clearly suggests that Congress has the authority to pass a law specifying what the requirements are for being "subject to the jurisdiction thereof" and who those requirements apply to.

That's why I've introduced legislation that would grant automatic citizenship to those born in the U.S. only if they have at least one parent who is a legal citizen (including naturalized citizens), a legal immigrant, or an active member of the armed forces. I'm not trying to prevent immigrants from becoming citizens. Instead, I want to ensure that anyone who doesn't meet that requirement must go through the same application process for U.S. citizenship as those born to foreign parents outside the U.S.

Clearly, our entire immigration system needs a lot of work, but passing legislation that abolishes the practice of granting citizenship to everyone born here would be a good start. The U.S. welcomes hundreds of thousands of legal immigrants each year, and we should continue to do so. But it's time to actively prevent foreigners from coming to the...

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