





Tuan Anh Nguyen was born in Vietnam to an American father and a Vietnamese mother who were not married. He moved to the United States with his father and became a legal permanent resident of the U.S. at age six, but his father did not attempt to establish any claim of U.S. citizenship for the boy. At age 22, Nguyen pleaded guilty to sexual assault; this made him subject to deportation based on his criminal record.
Nguyen’s father obtained evidence of parentage in an attempt to have his son recognized as a U.S. citizen, but his efforts were rejected by the Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS) because 8 U.S.C. § 1409 required any such evidence to have been presented before the child’s 18th birthday. Nguyen—together with his father—mounted a court challenge to the law, claiming that 8 U.S.C. § 1409 was unconstitutionally discriminatory because it imposed stricter requirements for a foreign-born illegitimate child of an American father than would have applied if his American parent had been his mother.
The Supreme Court rejected Nguyen’s arguments and upheld the law denying him citizenship, holding by a 5–4 majority that 8 U.S.C. § 1409 was consistent with the equal protection principle, applied through the Due Process Clause of the Fifth Amendment to the Constitution.
First, the Court noted that whereas a mother’s biological relationship to her child is easily verified and documented, the same cannot be said of the father.
Second, the Court concluded that the law was designed “to ensure that the child and citizen parent have some demonstrated opportunity to develop… a relationship… that consists of the real, everyday ties that provide a connection between child and citizen parent and, in turn, the United States”—something that was inherent in the case of an American mother and her child, but not inevitable in the case of a single father.
Even though Nguyen’s father had submitted DNA evidence proving the father-son relationship, the Court noted that “scientific proof of biological paternity does nothing, by itself, to ensure contact between father and child during the child’s minority”. In the end, the Court held that Congress was “well within its authority in refusing, absent proof of at least the opportunity for the development of a relationship between citizen parent and child, to commit this country to embracing a child as a citizen”.
The dissent (written by Associate Justice Sandra Day O’Connor) concluded that the INS “[had] not shown an exceedingly persuasive justification for the sex-based classification… because it [had] failed to establish at least that the classification substantially relate[d] to the achievement of important government objectives”, and on that basis the minority would have ruled in Nguyen’s favor.
What.
So if a foreign national woman gives birth in the US, and then someone else adopts that child, that must mean the child does not have US citizenship, right?
No because being born in the US makes you a citizen regardless of parentage. In the case of a person being born outside the US, the case is more complex and parentage matters for obvious reasons.
I invite you to reread the portion of the article quoted in my previous comment.
Maybe you should try reading the second sentence:
after he was born.
So he does not qualify for birthright citizenship.
I believe you are confusing laws with Constitutional rights, the US system is kind of confusing. The US Constitution sets up a framework of government and defines certain rights, further laws are made by Congress. The first part of the 14th amendment defines birthright citizenship as all persons born in the US, subject to it’s jurisdiction, as citizens. It makes no claim to a child born to citizens elsewhere. The Supreme Court has further defined that children born overseas in areas under the sovereign control of the US are also citizens. Congress has established a law that children who are born abroad to US citizens are also granted birthright citizenship. This does not interfere with the provision in the 14th, just extends it to a different situation. The case you quoted from, and in the article, is not arguing the part of the amendment about citizenship, but a different part of the same amendment known as Equal protection. The argument is that the law itself is unjust, as it does not provide the same rights to each parent. The court is giving a reason why this law does not violate equal protection.
Or even just the title of the fucking article.
It’s to prevent the following situation
You abandon your biological child and then show up at the last moment to give them citizenship
The courts want to see a real father-child relationship not just simple blood relation
There are other rules for getting citizenship thru adoption
My stepbrother, abandoned by his mother and raised by our dad as a single father, would also like citation.
Conversely, my sister and I were abandoned by our bio father and left to my mom. Anyone can be a piece of shit and abandon their children, women just can’t do it (safely) between the time when abortions aren’t allowed and birth.
Obviously anyone can you shouldn’t uncharitably assume absolutes just to argue strawman issues but fathers can leave before the child is even born
When there’s no father the mother is stuck with the child for having to physically give birth and then she can be charged with crimes for abandoning or caring for them improperly
He can leave the kid in a way that she cannot
Safe haven laws exist in all 50 states. It’s not illegal for a mother to anonymously abandon her child.
It’s pretty heavily socially stigmatized, however. If anyone knew you were pregnant and then suddenly you aren’t and there’s no baby, questions get asked and judgement and rumors spread like wildfire, especially in smaller towns.
Yeah I’m not sure what reality that commentator lives in where it’s trivial for mothers to just abandon their children like it is for fathers to just walk out
The child support system has effectively substituted a dollar value for abandoned paternity but mothers do not have it is easy just because of the technical existence of safe haven laws
Let’s also not forget safe haven laws were essentially invented 20 something years ago and don’t exactly leave kids in a good position
The child support system is also ineffective if the person is willing to run away. I’m not sure if this has been fixed recently, but my bio father abandoned us in the mid-90s and never paid a cent in child support. He fled the state and disappeared and the state wouldn’t do anything about it.
Well, it’s still a nice little asterisk for birthright citizenship. Now the country can be as deadbeat as the father and sucks just a little bit more for the kid.