Supreme Court Upholds Birthright Citizenship

CIS Analysis Says Result Will Be Stronger Interior Enforcement

The Supreme Court today ruled that, with only narrow exceptions, children born in the United States are U.S. citizens regardless of their parents' immigration status. A new analysis from the Center for Immigration Studies examines the decision's legal reasoning and its likely impact on immigration policy - it is likely to intensify calls for stronger immigration enforcement.

Court Correctly Rules: Only Congress Can Fix the Broken Asylum and Removal Laws that Congress Created

Two new analyses by Center for Immigration Studies Senior Legal Fellow George Fishman conclude that a recent court ruling correctly reaffirms a fundamental constitutional principle: Congress, not the executive branch, writes the nation's immigration laws.

Welfare Use by Non-Citizens Across States in the U.S.

This new report finds that households headed by non-citizens access means-tested welfare programs at substantially higher rates than households headed by U.S.-born Americans in virtually every state.

Immigration Newsmaker: A Conversation with Rodney Scott

Interview with the head of America’s largest law enforcement agency

Rodney Scott, Commissioner of U.S. Customs and Border Protection, joined Center Executive Director Mark Krikorian for an in-depth conversation on the challenges facing CBP and the administration’s broader enforcement strategy.

Hearing on ‘Abuses of U.S. Immigration Policies and Resulting Impacts on Americans’

Before the Task Force on Defending Constitutional Rights and Exposing Institutional Abuses, Of the U.S. House of Representatives, Committee on Oversight and Government Reform 

There are steps Congress can take to help fight fraud, but when something this valuable is on offer – residence in the United States – there will always be some who seek to break the rules to get it.

Supreme Court Upholds Birthright Citizenship
Supreme Court Upholds Birthright Citizenship
Only Congress Can Fix What Congress Created
Only Congress Can Fix What Congress Created
Welfare Use by Non-Citizens
Welfare Use by Non-Citizens
A Conversation with Rodney Scott
A Conversation with Rodney Scott
Hearing on Abuses of Immigration Policies
Hearing on Abuses of Immigration Policies

CIS Analysis Says Result Will Be Stronger Interior Enforcement

The Supreme Court today ruled that, with only narrow exceptions, children born in the United States are U.S. citizens regardless of their parents' immigration status. A new analysis from the Center for Immigration Studies examines the decision's legal reasoning and its likely impact on immigration policy - it is likely to intensify calls for stronger immigration enforcement.

Two new analyses by Center for Immigration Studies Senior Legal Fellow George Fishman conclude that a recent court ruling correctly reaffirms a fundamental constitutional principle: Congress, not the executive branch, writes the nation's immigration laws.

This new report finds that households headed by non-citizens access means-tested welfare programs at substantially higher rates than households headed by U.S.-born Americans in virtually every state.

Interview with the head of America’s largest law enforcement agency

Rodney Scott, Commissioner of U.S. Customs and Border Protection, joined Center Executive Director Mark Krikorian for an in-depth conversation on the challenges facing CBP and the administration’s broader enforcement strategy.

Before the Task Force on Defending Constitutional Rights and Exposing Institutional Abuses, Of the U.S. House of Representatives, Committee on Oversight and Government Reform 

There are steps Congress can take to help fight fraud, but when something this valuable is on offer – residence in the United States – there will always be some who seek to break the rules to get it.

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DOJ Vows to Crack Down on Birth Tourism in Response to ‘Birthright’ Opinion

The silver lining in the dark Barbara cloud

There are few ways to spin the Supreme Court’s birthright citizenship opinion without referring to it as a huge loss for both immigration enforcement and the “the concept of U.S. citizenship”. But triggering a renewed and more focused (and overdue) federal crackdown on the odious practice of “birth tourism” would be the silver lining in the dark Barbara cloud.

The ‘Birthright Opinion’ Is In — and Trump Won’t Like It

Everyone born here — with only limited exceptions — is a U.S. citizen, and immigration hawks will now argue deportations are more important than ever

With the border now historically secure, Trump’s immigration agenda largely hinges on deportations — an issue that just gained new salience with the Court’s last opinion of its term finding that all children born here, regardless of their parents’ status, are — with only narrow exceptions — U.S. citizens. Cue the backlash.

Explaining Sec. Mullin’s ‘Controversial’ Statements on What ‘Ending TPS’ Means

Immigrant advocates should stop fearmongering, while hawks should focus their fire on the last administration

Regardless of your TPS views, calm down. Immigrant advocates should stop fearmongering, while hawks should focus their fire on the last administration, which allowed these TPS issues to fester and expanded TPS beyond anything Congress ever intended. While you can fault Markwayne Mullin for how he explained what lies ahead on TPS, he’s not to blame for the rules Congress created.