Judge blocks Trump’s birthright order after Supreme Court ruling

An American judge again prevented President Donald Trump from implementing a decree ending the citizenship of the right of birth for certain American residents while a legal challenge is advancing.
A New Hampshire judge approved a collective appeal against Trump’s decree and temporarily prevented the order of the president from taking effect.
The collective appeal was brought by the American American Liberties Union on behalf of immigrant parents and their infants.
The decision comes from weeks after the Supreme Court has brought limits on how and the moment when universal injunctions are issued by the federal courts. However, the decision always allows them by certain legal paths.
The collective appeal was introduced after the decision of the Supreme Court, in accordance with the new standards established by the Court.
However, the White House challenged the validity of the judge’s decision and said that it would fight “vigorously” against what it said to be “attempts by these tries of district courts to hinder the policies that President Trump was elected to implement”.
The spokesman Harrison Fields described the decision as “an obvious and illegal attempt to bypass the clear ordinance of the Supreme Court against universal compensation” which “does not take into account the rule of law by abusing procedures for certification of collective appeal”.
The trial maintains that Trump’s order goes against the 14th amendment to the American Constitution, which established that “all people born or naturalized in the United States, and subject to their competence, are citizens of the United States and the State in which they reside”.
Trump sought to revoke this right to babies born of undocumented immigrants and foreign visitors, as part of his repression against immigration.
The collective appeal aims to contest the order as harmful and unconstitutional, and the judge judged that it could proceed on behalf of the babies which would be affected by the restrictions.
The decision is once again making an order which was a priority for Trump. The judge gave the government for seven days to appeal.
The restriction of the citizenship of the right of birth was one of its first actions in office.
Multiple courts in the United States have issued injunctions nationally when they considered legal challenges to the order.
The Trump administration called on these temporary sockets to the highest American courtyard, the judges arguing did not have the power to block a presidential order nationally while the courts examined the cases.
The conservative majority of the Supreme Court reassured himself with Trump in a 6-3 decision which largely reduced the judiciary, although the judges did not address the constitutionality of the Citizenship of the Right of Birth of Trump.
Following the Supreme Court’s decision, Trump’s order was scheduled for July 27.




