No, birthright citizenship has not been finalized or ended. The Supreme Court’s ruling on June 27, 2025, did not decide whether President Trump’s executive order to end birthright citizenship is legal under the Constitution. Instead, the Court only ruled that lower federal judges cannot issue nationwide injunctions (court orders that stop a policy across the entire U.S.) in most cases.
This means:
• The question of whether birthright citizenship (guaranteed by the 14th Amendment) can be ended by an executive order is still unresolved.
• Lower courts can still block Trump’s order in specific areas (like New Hampshire, where it’s currently blocked), but they can’t stop it nationwide with a single ruling.
• Trump’s executive order is not in effect yet, and legal challenges will continue in lower courts. These cases could eventually return to the Supreme Court to decide if the order is constitutional.
In simple terms, birthright citizenship is still in place, and the Supreme Court hasn’t made a final decision about it. The ruling just changes how courts can challenge the policy, making it harder to stop it everywhere at once.