Posted on August 13, 2018

Buoyed by Trump’s SCOTUS Pick, The Anti-Immigrant Movement Renews Its Attacks on the 14th Amendment

Stephen Piggott, SPLC, August 9, 2018

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For decades, the anti-immigrant movement has openly attacked birthright citizenship, the first clause in the 14th Amendment to the Constitution. It reads, “All persons born or naturalized in the United States, and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the United States and of the State wherein they reside.” Nativist groups argue that birthright citizenship should not apply to children born in the United States to undocumented parents. {snip}

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Early attacks on the 14th Amendment and the birth of the anti-immigrant movement

In 1979, white nationalist John Tanton, an environmentalist turned population control and eugenics advocate, started his flagship group, the Federation for American Immigration Reform (FAIR). In the early 80s, Tanton quickly established a legal arm, the Immigration Reform Law Institute (IRLI), along with a think tank, the Center for Immigration Studies (CIS). These three groups exist today, along with NumbersUSA, as the four most influential anti-immigrant groups in the country.

Tanton and his allies’ attacks on birthright citizenship began early. In 1994, Tanton and another white nationalist Wayne Lutton published the tract, The Immigration Invasion, which blamed immigrants for virtually all of America’s ills. Towards the end of the book, Tanton and Lutton offered a lengthy series of recommendations for what needed to be done to stop the “invasion.” “End the absurdity of granting U.S. citizenship simply by virtue of being born on U.S. soil, even if the parents are illegal aliens. Scholarly opinion holds that this does not require a constitutional amendment,” Tanton and Lutton wrote.

The “scholarly opinion” Tanton and Lutton refer to is a 1985 book published by Peter H. Schuck and Rogers M. Smith titled, Citizenship Without Consent. The book, often citied by the anti-immigrant movement, doesn’t call outright for the birthright citizenship clause to be stripped, but rather interprets it to mean that Congress can decide who is granted citizenship.

{snip} Scaife May was a close friend of Tanton’s and funded his network of anti-immigrant groups to the tune of tens of millions of dollars through her Colcom Foundation, set up before her suicide in 2005.

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Another seminal book for the anti-immigrant movement was published in 1995. Authored by white nationalist Peter Brimelow and written with funding from Tanton, Alien Nation also called for an end to birthright citizenship. “In an era of mass movement, the fact that the children of even illegal immigrants are automatically U.S. citizens is plainly outdated. It must be ended, by amending the Constitution if necessary,” Brimelow wrote.

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The 2000s: The anti-immigrant movement’s attacks on birthright citizenship become more organized

In 1999, the House Immigration Reform Caucus (HIRC), was founded. It was spearheaded by U.S. Representative Tom Tancredo of Colorado, one of the nativist movement’s staunchest allies. Tanton saw the importance of the Caucus. In 2001, he described how recruiting Republicans was “an idea that can actually move the battle lines … in our favor.”

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In 2007, State Legislators for Legal Immigration (SLLI) was founded, a similar venture to the HIRC but at the state level. Later in the year, SLLI announced it had entered into a “working partnership” with IRLI. SLLI debuted in 2007, but it wasn’t until 2011 when the group of legislators representing 40 states turned their attention towards the 14th Amendment.

{snip} Russell Pearce, another SLLI member from Arizona who introduced SB 1070, did not attended the press conference but provided the following quote for the press release, “The law is clear, the history is clear, the 14th Amendment is clear; natural-born citizens, are those born in the country, of parents who are citizens, for, if he is born there of a foreigner, it will be only the place of his birth, and not his country.”

SLLI’s approach, cooked up with the help of IRLI and Kobach, was two-fold: first, lawmakers would introduce these bills in order to redefine citizenship on the state level. Then they would challenge the birthright citizenship federal law through a state compact declaring that there is a difference between children born to undocumented immigrants and others. For the compact to take effect, Congress would have to approve it. {snip}

The state level legislation failed just badly as its federal counterparts, but the war would continue.

Renewed optimism in the Trump era

In August 2015, then-candidate Donald Trump released his immigration plan to the country, and it called to “End birthright citizenship. This remains the biggest magnet for illegal immigration. By a 2:1 margin, voters say it’s wrong policy, including Harry Reid who said ‘no sane country’ would give automatic citizenship to children of illegal immigrants.”

In April 2016, CIS issued a seminal document, “A Pen and a Phone – 79 immigration actions the next president can take.” Point 14 read, “Give a high-profile speech announcing that the United States will no longer tolerate birth tourism and the fraud committed against visa processing officials who are misled as to the perpetrator’s true intention of traveling to the United States. It must be made clear that perpetrators will be fined and/or jailed…” before concluding, “The Supreme Court has never ruled on the question of whether children born to tourists are to be considered U.S. citizens at birth.” Point 15 goes one step further, “Establish a policy of denying nonimmigrant visas to women in the third trimester of pregnancy, absent compelling circumstances and a certificate attesting that it is safe to travel for the woman and fetus, to be issued only by a pre-approved list of competent medical authorities in the country of origin.” Since taking office, Trump has implemented a number of the CIS suggestions.

Not to be outdone, FAIR published a similar report following the election in an attempt to push the President-elect to be true on the nativist policies he pledged during his campaign. Page 13 of FAIR’s report said the following about birthright citizenship:

“Based on a misinterpretation of the 14th Amendment, birthright citizenship is the practice of automatically granting U.S. citizenship to anyone born in the United States, regardless of the parents’ immigration status. America is the only industrialized nation that permits the children of illegal aliens to automatically become citizens. This policy encourages manipulative practices like birth tourism, where pregnant aliens will travel to the United States for just long enough to give birth and, once their child’s citizenship has been verified, return home. We must eliminate this magnet for illegal immigration .”

More important than the recommendations, however, is the shift on the Supreme Court since Trump has taken office. The rightward movement of the bench is clearly seen as a green light by nativists to push cases that could bring birthright citizenship before the court. In recent months, attention has turned to a case in Utah, where a family of American Samoans are arguing that because they were born in American Samoa, they are in fact American citizens under the birthright citizenship clause. {snip}

IRLI hopes that if the Utah court rules against the American Samoans, the climb towards the Supreme Court and ultimately a ruling on birthright citizenship could take place.

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The nativist organizations who were targeting the 14th Amendment in the 1990s are the same ones doing it today — groups founded by a white nationalist who once wrote that “for European-American society and culture to persist requires a European-American majority, and a clear one at that.”