Trump criticizes Supreme Court on tariffs, citizenship

Summary

Trump criticized the Supreme Court’s tariffs ruling and urged justices not to strike down his birthright citizenship order.

Why this matters

The dispute centers on a long-standing interpretation of the 14th Amendment and could affect how citizenship is determined in the United States. It also highlights Trump’s public pressure on the Supreme Court as it weighs his executive order.

President Trump on Monday criticized the Supreme Court after its ruling against his tariffs and after several justices appeared skeptical of striking down birthright citizenship.

“It’s too bad that the Supreme Court can’t watch and study the Mark Levin Show tonight on the Birthright Citizenship Scam,” Trump wrote in a Truth Social post, referring to Fox News host Mark Levin.

“If they saw it they would never allow that money making HOAX to continue,” Trump said.

Trump also criticized the court’s tariffs decision.

“They failed miserably on Tariffs, needlessly costing the USA Hundreds of Billions of Dollars in potential rebates for the benefit haters and scammers,” he wrote.

“Why??? Don’t do it again! The Country can only withstand so many bad decisions from a Court that just doesn’t seem to care,” he added, in an apparent appeal to the justices not to strike down his executive order on birthright citizenship.

Last year, Trump issued an executive order seeking to block the children of immigrants and temporary visitors from obtaining birthright citizenship. He has argued that the 14th Amendment applies only to children of U.S. citizens or lawful permanent residents.

Levin said Sunday on Fox News’s “Life, Liberty and Levin” that birthright citizenship was never mentioned in the Constitution.

“I’ve looked at the invisible ink. I can’t find it. Birthright citizenship. And yet, last week, there was a big argument in front of the Supreme Court and the justices, a couple of them were really wise, but most of them were like, kind of strange, getting into policy and politics and quirky examples and things of that sort,” he said.

Levin also said the authors of the 14th Amendment could not have intended to grant citizenship at birth to children of immigrants without legal status because there were no immigration restrictions in 1868.

For 125 years, however, the United States has interpreted the 14th Amendment to grant citizenship to people born on U.S. soil.

The Supreme Court heard arguments over Trump’s order last week. Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson asked whether mothers would be asked to produce documentation at hospitals, while Justice Neil Gorsuch asked how Native Americans would be categorized under the order.

Solicitor General D. John Sauer initially appeared unsure how to answer the question about Native Americans.

Trump urged the justices in his post to “USE THEIR POWERS OF COMMON SENSE FOR THE GOOD OF OUR COUNTRY.”

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