President Donald Trump may have met his match when it comes to U.S. citizenship: the 14th Amendment

President Donald Trump may have met his match when it comes to U.S. citizenship: the 14th Amendment
WASHINGTON � President Donald Trump may have met his match Tuesday: the 14th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution.


"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," the 1868 amendment begins.

"It's ridiculous," Trump said 150 years later, on the eve of midterm elections that could erode his power, perhaps for the rest of his presidency. "And it has to end." 

So began the 45th president's latest legal, policy and political battle, neatly contained in a history lesson dating to Reconstruction.

As the administration vowed to block a migrant caravan heading toward the southern border and delay a trial next week on its plan to ask about citizenship on the 2020 Census, Trump turned his focus on generations of American-born citizens.

In doing so, he took on both the Constitution and federal law. Title 8, Section 1401 of the U.S. Code lists those people deemed to be citizens of the United States, starting with "a person born in the United States and subject to the jurisdiction thereof."
The Supreme Court ruled in United States v. Wong Kim Ark, an 1898 case, that a man born on U.S. soil to parents who were Chinese nationals was a citizen. As part of a 1982 decision, Plyler v. Doe, the high court said that even if someone enters the country illegally, they are within U.S. jurisdiction, and their children born in the U.S. are entitled to the protections of the 14th Amendment. 

Trump said he has been advised he can reverse both the Constitution and the law and end birthright citizenship by executive order. He has some support.

Michael Anton, former spokesman for the National Security Council, wrote in The Washington Post recently that the 14th Amendment was written so as not to apply to undocumented immigrants. 

Because the amendment addresses people subject to U.S. jurisdiction, Anton wrote, it distinguishes between "people to whom the United States owes citizenship and those to whom it does not.

"Freed slaves definitely qualified," Anton said. "The children of immigrants who came here illegally clearly don't."

Other conservatives contend that at least Congress, if not the president, can end birthright citizenship by legislation. John Eastman, director of Claremont Institute's Center for Constitutional Jurisprudence, has written that the 1898 ruling applied only to the children of legal immigrants.

"It is long past time to clarify that the 14th Amendment does not grant U.S. citizenship to the children of anyone just because they can manage to give birth on U.S. soil," Eastman wrote in The New York Times. 

Most legal scholars disagree. In testimony before Congress in 1995, assistant attorney general Walter Dellinger said even congressional efforts to deny citizenship to some children born in the U.S. were non-starters. 

"No discretion should be exercised by public officials on this question � there should be no inquiry into whether or not one came from the right caste, or race, or lineage or bloodline in establishing American citizenship," Dellinger said. "In America, a country that rejected monarchy, each person is born equal, with no curse of infirmity, and with no exalted status, arising from the circumstance of his or her parentage."

On Tuesday, Dellinger noted that Trump�s proposal would question even the citizenship of people whose parents or grandparents had birthright citizenship.

Dellinger is a liberal, but many conservatives agree with his assessment. James Ho, named by Trump to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 5th Circuit last year, wrote in 2011 that states' efforts to rewrite U.S. citizenship law was unconstitutional.

"Opponents of illegal immigration cannot claim to champion the rule of law and then, in the same breath, propose policies that violate our Constitution," Ho wrote. "Birthright citizenship is a constitutional right, no less for the children of undocumented persons than for descendants of passengers of the Mayflower."
Before the Civil War, the Constitution did not define explicitly what made someone a U.S. citizen, leading to decades of disputes, according to legal scholars Akhil Reed Amar and John C. Harrison. The Supreme Court had ruled in 1857's Dred Scott v. Sandford decision that people of African descent, whether slave or free, were not entitled to full citizenship. 

"At the simplest level, the 14th Amendment's Citizenship Clause was meant to repudiate Dred Scott," Amar wrote. "However, it was also meant to root post-Civil War America � America�s Second Founding � in an inspiring Lincolnian reinterpretation of one of our nation�s Founding truths, that we�re all created/born free and equal." 

Amar, a Yale University law professor, said the amendment's citizenship clause "marked an important shift in American identity" and "established a simple national rule for citizenship: If you�re born in America under our flag, you�re a U.S. citizen." 
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Trump�s birthright plan: The legality, politics and history bbc news

Trump�s birthright plan: The legality, politics and history bbc news
President Donald Trump says he plans to end "birthright citizenship" in the US by executive order. Can he do that?

In an interview with Axios President Trump claimed that he was working on an end to birthright citizenship, the 150-year-old principle that says anyone born on US soil is an American citizen.

"It was always told to me that you needed a constitutional amendment. Guess what? You don't," Mr Trump said. "You can definitely do it with an Act of Congress. But now they're saying I can do it just with an executive order."

Mr Trump claimed that such an order is currently in the works, and not long after, South Carolina Senator Lindsey Graham tweeted: "I plan to introduce legislation along the same lines as the proposed executive order from President @realDonaldTrump."

The president's comments have ignited a furious debate about whether or not the president has the unilateral power to do such a thing, and whether the underlying premise - that birthright citizenship is exploited by undocumented immigrants - has any merit.1) What is 'birthright citizenship'?
The first sentence of the Fourteenth Amendment establishes the principle of "birthright citizenship":

"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."

Immigration hardliners argue that the policy is a "great magnet for illegal immigration", and that it encourages undocumented pregnant women to cross the border in order to give birth, an act that has been pejoratively called "birth tourism" or having an "anchor baby".

"The baby is essentially a citizen of the United States for 85 years with all those benefits. It's ridiculous," Mr Trump told Axios. "It has to end."

A 2015 Pew Research Center study found that 60% of Americans opposed ending birthright citizenship, while 37% were in favour.

2) How did it come about?

The Fourteenth Amendment was adopted in 1868, after the close of the Civil War. The Thirteenth Amendment had abolished slavery in 1865, while the Fourteenth settled the question of the citizenship of freed, American-born former slaves.

Previous Supreme Court decisions, like Dred Scott v Sandford in 1857, had decided that African Americans could never be US citizens. The Fourteenth Amendment overrode that.

In 1898, the US Supreme Court affirmed that birthright citizenship applies to the children of immigrants in the case of Wong Kim Ark v United States. Wong was a 24-year-old child of Chinese immigrants who was born in the US, but denied re-entry when he returned from a visit to China. Wong successfully argued that because he was born in the US, his parent's immigration status did not impact the application of the Fourteenth Amendment.

"Wong Kim Ark vs United States affirmed that regardless of race or the immigration status of one's parents, all persons born in the United States were entitled to all of the rights that citizenship offered," writes Erika Lee, director of the Immigration History Research Center at the University of Minnesota. "The court has not re-examined this issue since then."

3) Can Trump end birthright citizenship by executive order?

Most legal scholars agree that President Trump cannot end birthright citizenship with an executive order.

"He's doing something that's going to upset a lot of people, but ultimately this will be decided by the courts," says Saikrishna Prakash, a constitutional expert and University of Virginia Law School professor. "This is not something he can decide on his own."

Mr Prakash says that while the president can order the employees of federal agencies to interpret citizenship more narrowly - agents with the US Immigration and Customs Enforcement, for example - that will inevitably invite legal challenges from people whose citizenship is being denied.

That could lead to a lengthy court battle that could ultimately wind up at the US Supreme Court.Republican House Speaker Paul Ryan was blunt in rejecting the president's claim he could act unilaterally.

"You cannot end birthright citizenship with an executive order," he told Kentucky radio station WVLK.

However, Martha S Jones, author of Birthright Citizens, wrote on Twitter that the Supreme Court has not directly addressed whether or not the children of non-citizens or undocumented immigrants should automatically become citizens at birth.

"Scotus [Supreme Court of the United States] could distinguish from Wong Kim Ark on the facts," Ms Jones writes.

"Wong's parents were authorised or we might say legal immigrants. Their presence in the US was authorised."

Mr Prakash agrees.

"People who are on a tourist visa or here without permission... their children are automatically given birthright citizenship," he says. "That's the way it's been read in modern times even though there's been no definitive Supreme Court pronouncement on that."

A constitutional amendment could do away with birthright citizenship, but that would require a two-thirds vote in both the House of Representatives and the Senate.

4) Any politics at play here?

Anthony Zurcher, BBC News, Washington

Donald Trump's decision to once again push for an end to birthright citizenship - which he now says can be done with a stroke of his presidential pen - should be seen in the context of next week's mid-term elections.

As with the White House announcement of more than 5,000 troops dispatched to the US border, this appears to be another effort to focus American attention on the immigration issue.

Mr Trump made a hard-line immigration stance a central part of his 2016 presidential campaign and views it as one of the reasons he prevailed.

Now, in the electoral home stretch that could determine the success of the final two years of his presidential term, Mr Trump is reaching again for a familiar handhold.

A poll conducted in 2017 shows a majority of the public supported birthright citizenship, including for undocumented migrants, but 30% were opposed.

Even if those numbers haven't changed, convincing that third of the American public that the president is fighting for them - and could get what they want if Republicans hold the Congress - might be enough to tip the balance the president's way in key races next Tuesday.

"This has nothing to do with elections," Mr Trump said in a recent interview.

The timing of these efforts, however, is hard to ignore.

5) Do other countries have birthright citizenship?

In his remarks to Axios, Trump falsely claimed that the United States is the only country that has birthright citizenship.

In fact, more than 33 countries - including Canada, Mexico, Malaysia and Lesotho - practise automatic "jus soli", or "right of the soil".

No nation in Europe or East Asia has birthright citizenship, although in the UK citizenship is automatically granted if one parent is a citizen or permanent resident.

The United States is also not the only country where the practice has come under fire.

In August, delegates at the national convention for Canada's centre-right federal Conservatives voted to end birthright citizenship for children unless one parent is either Canadian or a permanent resident.

Following the vote by the grassroots, Conservative leader Andrew Scheer said the party would look into developing a more targeted policy addressing the issue of so-called "birth tourism", a term used to describe when a pregnant non-Canadian comes to the country specifically to give birth and ensure her child citizenship.

6) Who uses birthright citizenship?

According to the Pew Research Center, there were 275,000 babies born to unauthorised immigrant parents in 2014, and 4.7 million US-born children under the age of 18 living with at least one parent who is undocumented.

Throughout the 1990s and 2000s, births to unauthorised immigrant parents steadily rose before peaking in 2006, and have declined since then.
Although Pew does not have exact numbers on the countries of origin of these parents, Mark Lopez, Director of Global Migration and Demography, says that three-quarters of unauthorised immigrants in the US are from countries in Latin America.

"Hispanics will make up the majority of these children born to unauthorized immigrant parents," he says.

However, he adds that since we do not know how Mr Trump might write his executive order, the children of visa-holders or other temporary residents may also be impacted.
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Lion Air crash: Indian pilot and husband of mystery pair among victims

Lion Air crash: Indian pilot and husband of mystery pair among victims
Authorities say there is little chance of any survivors of the Lion Air flight that crashed in Indonesia. This is what we know about the 189 people on board.

According to Lion Air, the aircraft was carrying 178 adult passengers, one child and two babies. In addition to the two pilots, there were also six cabin crew.

Searches are continuing for victims as well as for the aircraft itself, in the hope of finding clues as to why the plane crashed into the ocean only 13 minutes after taking off.

Mystery couple

Among the photographs of debris collected from the ocean was one smartphone case with a distinctive image of a couple walking over a bridge.

Users on Indonesian social media scrambled to find the story behind the pair and soon identified the image on Instagram.

The picture had been posted on the account of Ine Yunita Savitri but she herself was not on the plane but her husband, Wahjoe Noegrohantoro, was and it's his phone case that was found.
His nephew, Antonius Hartono, told the BBC he had spotted the case only after being told by his mother that his uncle had been on board the flight.

"Every time I see that picture on social media, I feel really sad," he said. "I can't imagine how his wife and children would feel.

"It is very shocking. One week ago I met him and our big families on vacation. We didn't realise that a week after, he was gone."

Experienced pilots

Lion Air named Captain Bhavye Suneja as pilot of the plane. The Indian national's death was confirmed by the Indian Embassy in Jakarta.

The co-pilot was named as Harvino. Capt Suneja had more than 6,000 flight hours under his belt and the co-pilot had more than 5,000, making the pair an experienced team.

Six cabin crew were named as Shintia Melina, Citra Noivita Anggelia, Alviani Hidayatul Solikha, Damayanti Simarmata, Mery Yulianda and Deny Maula.

One of the crew was a technician and three were flight attendants under training, the airline said.

The death of the 31-year old captain, originally from Delhi, has left family and friends devastated.

"The whole family is mourning and nobody is in a condition to speak," his uncle told the BBC in Delhi, adding they were all planning to travel to Indonesia.

According to his LinkedIn profile, Capt Suneja joined Lion Air in 2011. He'd been living in Indonesia ever since, although his wedding was still held in his home city 18 months ago.

Friends of the family told the BBC they had been preparing for Diwali and that Capt Suneja had been planning to join for the celebrations.

"His family members were waiting," neighbour Anil Gupta said. "We can't believe that he is no more."

Newly-wed

At Jakarta's Halim Perdanakusuma airport, distraught family members waited for information about their loved ones.

Murtado Kurniawan's wife was on the plane. They are newly married and she was making the journey for work.

"I can't live without her, I love her," he said through tears. "The last thing I said to her, was 'be careful'. I always worry about her when she goes away. When I saw on TV that the plane had crashed, my whole body went weak."
Another family member waiting for news was Dede. She told the BBC she had dropped her niece Fiona Ayu and her family off at the airport on Monday morning, to make the short journey to their home town.

Fiona had been trying to get pregnant via IVF and her family had thought it would be good for her to get some rest out of Jakarta.

"The airline kept telling us to wait and wait for news, but the images on social media and television are very bad," Dede said. "But I am still holding out hope that she will come back, I am praying and praying for that.

Mourners and finance ministry employees

Michelle Vergina Bongkal, 21, was on her way to Pangkal Pina to attend the funeral of her grandmother. Travelling with her was her brother, Mathew, 13, and father Adonia, 52.

Her sister, Vina, told the BBC the family had already been grieving the death of the grandmother and had now been left reeling from the plane crash.

She said the family had often travelled this route but normally preferred to use other airlines. This time, because of the need to find an early flight to attend the funeral, they chose the budget carrier.

Twenty employees of the finance ministry were also on board and Finance Minister Sri Mulyani consoled victims' family members and staff at the ministry's office in Jakarta.


Those on board had worked at the ministry's offices in Pangkal Pinang and were returning to work after spending the weekend in Jakarta, spokesperson Nufransa Wira Sakti told the BBC.

He added that they had routinely taken this early-morning Lion Air flight because it was the one that would get them to the office in time.

Fellow employee Sony Setiawan had meant to be on the flight but he missed check-in after getting stuck in traffic.

"I know my friends were on that flight," he told AFP news agency. He only found out about his colleagues' fate, and his fortuitous escape, after he arrived in Pangkal Pinang at 09:40.

"My family was in shock and my mother cried but I told them I was safe, so I just have to be grateful."

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Denmark accuses Iran of activist murder plot

Denmark accuses Iran of activist murder plot
Denmark has accused Iran's intelligence agencies of planning to assassinate an Iranian activist on Danish soil.

The target was believed to be a member of an Arab separatist movement, Denmark's intelligence service said.

Denmark has recalled its ambassador from Tehran and is consulting other EU countries about imposing new sanctions against Iran.

A massive police operation in Denmark last month linked to the case led to the bridge to Sweden being closed.

Iran has dismissed Denmark's allegations.

What is Iran accused of?

Danish Prime Minister Lars Lokke Rasmussen described the alleged planned assassination by Iran of an exiled separatist leader in Denmark as "totally unacceptable"

The Iranian ambassador to Copenhagen was summoned to the foreign ministry over the allegations.

A Norwegian citizen of Iranian origin was arrested in Sweden on 21 October in connection with the alleged plan. The man denies the charges.

Authorities conducted a massive manhunt on 28 September which led to road closures, trains and ferries being cancelled, and bridges being shut across Denmark.


On Tuesday, Danish intelligence chief Finn Borch Andersen confirmed the measures had been taken to prevent the alleged plot.



The alleged target was meant to be a senior member of the Arab Struggle Movement for the Liberation of Ahvaz (ASMLA), Mr Andersen said. The group seeks a separate state for ethnic Arabs in a region of western Iran.

The Norwegian suspect had been observed photographing the residence of the ASMLA leader, Danish security services said in a statement.

Following a deadly shooting at a military parade in Iran in September, in which more than 25 people were killed, Iran accused Denmark, the Netherlands and Britain of harbouring members of militant opposition groups.

That attack was claimed by a different Arab separatist group and the Islamic State group, although neither offered proof of their claims.

What has the response been?

An Iranian foreign ministry spokesman said such "biased reports" and allegations pursued "the enemy's plots and conspiracies" to harm the developing relations between Iran and Europe, according to Tasnim news agency.

Mr Rasmussen said, after a meeting with his British counterpart Theresa May in Oslo, that he appreciated her support.

"In close collaboration with UK and other countries we will stand up to Iran," he tweeted.

Foreign Minister Anders Samuelsen said Denmark would discuss further actions with European partners in the coming days.

The US Secretary of State, Mike Pompeo, congratulated Denmark on arresting "an Iranian regime assassin".

In August, Donald Trump re-imposed US economic sanctions on Iran, following the US withdrawal from the Iran nuclear deal earlier this year. EU leaders remain committed to the original agreement.

Trump warns trading partners over Iran
On Friday, France expelled an Iranian diplomat over a bomb plot against a rally organised by Iranian opposition groups, diplomatic and security sources said.
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Pittsburgh shooting: Trump visits synagogue amid protests

Pittsburgh shooting: Trump visits synagogue amid protests
US President Donald Trump has offered condolences at the Pennsylvania synagogue where 11 Jewish worshipers were shot dead at the weekend.


He was joined by First Lady Melania Trump, his daughter and son-in-law at the Tree of Life temple in Pittsburgh.

Hundreds of protesters gathered on the street chanting slogans against the president.

The visit came as mourners attended the first funerals for victims of the massacre.The Trumps were greeted on Tuesday by Rabbi Jeffrey Myers, who led them inside the temple, where the worst anti-Semitic attack in US history unfolded on Saturday.

At a memorial outside, the first lady placed a flower and the president laid a small stone on a marker for each of the victims.

Mr Trump was accompanied by his son-in-law Jared Kushner, who is Jewish, and his daughter Ivanka, who converted to Judaism when she married Mr Kushner. Both are White House advisers.

Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin, who is Jewish, also joined the president.

Before his visit, the president condemned anti-Semitism. The alleged gunman was not a Trump supporter.
But critics accuse Mr Trump of fomenting a surge in white nationalist and neo-Nazi activity through divisive rhetoric.

Some Jewish figures and Pittsburgh's Democratic Mayor Bill Peduto opposed the presidential visit.

More than 70,000 people signed an open letter from Pittsburgh-based Jewish leaders saying that President Trump was "not welcome" in the city unless he "fully denounces white nationalism".

The top four Republican and Democratic congressional leaders declined a White House invitation to join Mr Trump in Pennsylvania.

The White House has rejected any blame over the attack.

Members of Pittsburgh's Jewish community were among about 2,000 demonstrators who held a protest, according to Reuters news agency.

As the president was driven through Pittsburgh, some bystanders made obscene gestures to his motorcade and thumbs-down gestures, reports AP news agency.

And Mr Trump arrived at the synagogue, demonstrators chanted "President Hate, leave our state" and "Words have meaning".

They held signs with such slogans as "We build bridges not walls", "Trump, Renounce White Nationalism Now" and "Trump's lies kill".

During the presidential visit, one protester holding a baby was seen by reporters calling out: "We didn't invite you here."

Earlier on Tuesday, mourners paid their respects to four victims of the massacre.
Brothers David and Cecil Rosenthal, who were aged 54 and 59, were among the first to be buried. They were the youngest victims of the shooting.

During a packed prayer service for the siblings, Rabbi Myers said: "They could illustrate a dictionary definition for 'pure souls.'"

Daniel Stein, 71, and Jerry Rabinowitz, 66, were also laid to rest.

Mr Rabinowitz was a doctor, known for his work with gay men diagnosed with HIV.

Support for the community has been pouring in from across the country.

A GoFundMe page created by an Iranian refugee studying in Washington DC, who has no connection to the Pittsburgh community, has already accumulated $900,000 (�700,000) to help rebuild the synagogue and support victims' families.

Another fund set up by Muslim-American groups to help pay for funeral costs has raised $200,000.


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UAE passport ranked 4th most powerful in the world

UAE passport ranked 4th most powerful in the world
The passport moved up four positions in just over a month; it was ranked 8th most powerful in September this year

Dubai: The UAE passport has moved four positions up to become the fourth most powerful passport in the world. The UAE passport was ranked at number eight in September this year
According to the updated ranking on Passport Index, the UAE passport was ranked as the fourth best travel document, thanks to ease of travel to 159 countries. Emirati passport holders are allowed to travel to 162 countries without a pre-entry visa. Only a couple of years ago, Emirati citizens could travel visa-free to 88 countries.

�The UAE is the fastest-growing passport in the history of passports,� said Armand Arton, founder and president of Arton Capital.
�For such a young country this is an exceptional achievement and all Emiratis should be proud of that. Rather than the need to look for second citizenships, UAE citizens already have the strongest passport in the Arab world and their mobility is rising. They should all be extremely pleased with that,� Arton said in an emailed statement to Gulf News.
Now number one on the list is Singapore, along with Germany, followed by Denmark, Sweden, Finland, Luxembourg, France, Italy, Netherlands, Spain, Norway, South Korea and United States in the second place.

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UAE to amend retail-banking rules uae Dubai

UAE to amend retail-banking rules uae Dubai
UAE to amend retail-banking rules

Under the new rule, the bank set new terms and conditions for the transfer of personal loans or personal finance


Abu Dhabi: The UAE Central Bank has decided to amend retail-banking rules related to personal loan and other services provided to individuals.
Under the new rule, the bank set new terms and conditions for the transfer of personal loans or personal finance from one bank or a finance company to another.

As per the rule, banks and finance companies are obligated to reduce the interest rate, not increasing the period of loans and other facilities for retail loans, which will be given to individual customers after the issuance of the new amendment.
The move came after a decision issued by the bank�s board and was published in the official gazette.
As per Federal Law No 10 of 1980 concerning the Central Bank, the monetary system and regulation of the banking profession, and after having reviewed its thereof and regulation No. 29 of 2011, the bank�s board has decided to replace paragraph (B) of article 20 concerning personal loans as follows:Any borrower is entitled to transfer his personal loan/financing from any bank or a finance company operating in the country in return for an early repayment commission not exceeding 1 per cent of the remaining amount of the loan, or Dh10,000 whichever is less.
Other UAE-based banks or finance companies are entitled to accepting the transfer of the personal loan under certain conditions, including their full commitment to the new rules, especially those related to the loan amount, duration of repayment and monthly instalments.
Regarding loans that were granted before the issuance of the new rule, banks and finance companies should reduce the interest rate and not to increase the repayment period, or giving additional loan or finance to the borrower.

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