
The Trump administration is moving forward with intensified visa restrictions targeting foreign pregnant women who travel to the United States after the Supreme Court struck down a parallel executive order that sought to end automatic birthright citizenship, according to Attorney General Todd Blanche.
The official confirmed that the government’s offensive against what it terms “birth tourism” will continue through modifications to visa processes, rather than through constitutional changes.
RELATED: U.S. Senate Rejects Trump’s SAVE America Act Requiring Citizenship Proof to Vote
White House National Security Advisor and Deputy Chief of Staff Stephen Miller, the primary architect of the administration’s deportation policy, questioned the automatic citizenship rights acquired at age 18 and drew a comparison between physical presence in the country and the technical ability to pilot a commercial airliner.
The Supreme Court previously rejected the administration’s executive order on the matter in a 6-3 ruling, with Chief Justice John Roberts writing the majority opinion that dismissed the White House’s argument that the Constitution does not guarantee automatic citizenship by birth, according to the court’s published decision.
In response to the judicial setback, Miller attempted to discredit the verdict as one of the most destructive and outrageous decisions in the history of the nation’s highest court.
During an appearance on Fox News, Miller made remarks against migrant communities settled in the United States, stating that they originate from Third World countries that “on their own would have never invented the wheel”.
White House Advisor Stephen Miller delivered a racist tirade during an interview on June 1, criticising birthright citizenship for babies from third-world nations “who would have never invented the wheel.” He said the Trump administration would continue its effort to end… pic.twitter.com/qv5Ku2uT7d
— TRT World (@trtworld) July 2, 2026
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