US Supreme Court upholds birthright citizenship
America's highest court blocked the attempt to end citizenship for those born on US soil. Why it matters here too.
Across the Atlantic, a decision many families had been waiting for with bated breath: the US Supreme Court upheld birthright citizenship, blocking the attempt to end the right of anyone born on American soil to be a citizen of the country.
What was at stake
Birthright citizenship has been written into the US Constitution for more than 150 years. The idea is simple: anyone born in the United States is, in principle, an American citizen, regardless of their parents’ legal status. The push to restrict that principle triggered one of the tensest legal battles in years, and the court ended up reaffirming the traditional reading of the Constitution.
Why it touches us
Portugal has a huge emigrant community in the United States — from the Azores to New Jersey, from California to Massachusetts. For thousands of Portuguese-American families, this decision means the children and grandchildren born there keep their guaranteed US passport, no surprises.
It is also a reminder of how nationality rules are shifting everywhere, often in opposite directions. While the US keeps birthright citizenship, Portugal has just lengthened the timelines to obtain nationality — a topic we covered in detail around the Golden Visa and AIMA delays.
For anyone following these matters, it is worth reading the official source directly on the US Supreme Court website. Nationality, in the end, is one of those things we only value when it is at risk.
Image: Joe Ravi / Wikimedia Commons (CC BY-SA 3.0)