Updated
Updated · Inquirer.net · Jul 9
US Supreme Court Keeps Birthright Citizenship Intact for 5.2 Million Indian Americans as Visa Backlogs Persist
Updated
Updated · Inquirer.net · Jul 9

US Supreme Court Keeps Birthright Citizenship Intact for 5.2 Million Indian Americans as Visa Backlogs Persist

3 articles · Updated · Inquirer.net · Jul 9

Summary

  • June 30’s Supreme Court ruling preserved automatic US citizenship for children born on American soil, easing fears for Indian H-1B families whose US-born children had been threatened by Trump’s order.
  • That order sought to deny citizenship to babies born to parents in the US illegally or on temporary visas, but it remains blocked and will keep facing court challenges.
  • Hundreds of thousands of children born in the US to Indian parents on temporary work visas retain rights tied to citizenship, including passports and Social Security numbers.
  • For many families, the relief stops there: well over 1 million Indians are still stuck in employment-based green-card backlogs, often for decades, with visa renewals, job limits and children aging out still unresolved.
  • The decision reassures a community that numbered 5.2 million in 2023, but it also underscores a broader fight over immigration policy that could make the US less attractive to skilled Indian workers.

Insights

How will this ruling impact the millions of parents still facing decades-long waits for their own green cards?
Will the US still lose top global talent due to visa hurdles, despite securing citizenship for their children?