Trump Leaves SCOTUS Midway Through Birthright Citizenship Hearing[1][3][5]

Published
Score
5

Why it matters

On April 1, 2026, President Donald Trump made history as the first sitting U.S. president to attend Supreme Court oral arguments, focusing on a challenge to his 2025 executive order denying birthright citizenship to children born in the U.S. unless at least one parent is a citizen or lawful permanent resident.[1][3][5] Trump, flanked by Attorney General Pam Bondi and Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick, sat in the front row but abruptly exited alone after about 90 minutes—shortly after the ACLU's counterarguments began—less than an hour before his next scheduled event.[3][5] Leaked video from a later Easter luncheon showed Trump mocking the justices, including his appointees, for asserting independence despite his nominations.[1]

The case tests the 14th Amendment's citizenship clause ("subject to the jurisdiction thereof"), with Trump's lawyers, including John Sauer, facing skepticism from justices like Chief Justice John Roberts and Trump appointee Amy Coney Barrett, who questioned historical interpretations and the order's legal foundation.[1][3][9] Lower courts had blocked the policy earlier, prompting the appeal.[1] Trump's Truth Social post afterward decried U.S. birthright citizenship as uniquely "stupid," despite similar policies in dozens of countries.[3]

This is newsworthy due to its norm-breaking nature—shattering presidential tradition of avoiding SCOTUS arguments to preserve judicial independence—and the high stakes for immigration policy amid protests and Trump's pattern of criticizing judges.[1][5][9] The dramatic exit and leaked mockery amplified media coverage, highlighting tensions between the administration and even conservative justices.[1][3]

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