President Donald Trump’s ongoing attempts to limit automatic birthright citizenship across the United States as part of his strict stance on immigration faced another setback on Friday.
A second federal appeals court declined to overturn a court order blocking the President’s executive order.
The 4th US Circuit Court of Appeals in Richmond, Virginia denied the Trump administration’s request to lift a nationwide injunction issued by a federal judge in Maryland, who deemed the order to be unconstitutional.
For well over a century, the federal government has recognized the birthright citizenship of children born in this country to undocumented or non-permanent immigrants.
“The government has not shown that it will be harmed in any meaningful way if it continues to comply, for the pendency of its appeal, with that settled interpretation of the law,” the appeals court said.
According to the court, the public interest was served by leaving the injunction in place, saying it would be hard to overstate the confusion and upheaval that would result from implementing Trump’s order.
This was the second time an appellate court had taken up Trump’s executive order on birthright citizenship, whose fate may ultimately be decided by the US Supreme Court.
Recall that another appeals court last week declined to lift a similar injunction issued by a judge in Seattle.
Other judges in Massachusetts and New Hampshire have likewise enjoined the order, finding it violates the US Constitution.



