VABAW joins NAPABA Coalition to Defend Birthright Citizenship in the U.S. Supreme Court

April 1, 2026

The Vietnamese American Bar Association of Washington has joined a nationwide coalition of nearly 50 bar organizations to defend the fundamental constitutional guarantee of citizenship for those born in the United States. On February 25, 2026, the National Asian Pacific American Bar Association (NAPABA) and 48 of its affiliates and national associates from across the country filed an amicus brief, which can be found here, before the U.S. Supreme Court in Trump v. Barbara, No. 25-365.  Oral argument is scheduled for April 1, 2026.

The Fourteenth Amendment of the U.S. Constitution promises every person equal treatment under the law. Its plain text includes an equal claim of citizenship to all persons born in the United States, regardless of the status or circumstances of their parents.

Executive Order 14160 upends that promise. It refuses to recognize the birthright citizenship of any child born in the United States to a mother who is lawfully present on a temporary basis, including those on work or student visas, and a father who is neither a U.S. citizen nor a lawful permanent resident. Of note, this would negatively impact children born in the United States to parents, who have not yet become a US citizen or lawful permanent resident, such as refugees and visa holders.

In our amicus brief, VABAW and the NAPABA coalition underscore the historical significance of United States v. Wong Kim Ark, 169 U.S. 649 (1898), the role of Asian Americans in shaping our nation’s foundational immigration and civil rights precedents, and the disproportionate harms that EO 14160, if upheld, would visit upon Asian American communities, including Vietnamese American communities. 

We take the position that the federal government distorts the holding of Wong Kim Ark and creates a legally and historically faulty analogy that Asian migrants in the late 19th century were the functional equivalents to today’s lawful permanent residents (i.e., green card holders). The amicus brief also addresses the congressional debates over the Fourteenth Amendment, which explicitly contemplated that children of Asian migrants would be covered under the amendment.  

VABAW first joined the NAPABA coalition’s objections to EO 14160 in the amicus briefs filed last year with the U.S. Courts of Appeals for the First, Fourth, and Ninth Circuits. 

Today, VABAW and the NAPABA coalition bring those core arguments and more before the U.S. Supreme Court. 

In response to the federal government’s mischaracterization of the U.S. Supreme Court’s 1898 description of Wong Kim Ark’s parents as having status akin to lawful permanent residence in the United States, the brief recounts the historical context of discrimination that Asian migrants faced in the late 19th century. Their presence in the country then was a far cry from the lawful permanency afforded to today’s green card holders.  Asian immigrants were excluded from full participation in civic life and systematically denied the ability to integrate into American society. They faced mass violence and a cascading series of exclusionary laws designed to expel them.

If upheld, EO 14160 would impose upon Asian American communities, including Vietnamese American communities, the same injustices leveled against Wong Kim Ark’s generation and deprive the children of today’s immigrants the same protections that were affirmed by the U.S. Supreme Court in 1898. EO 14160 must be set aside.

We extend our gratitude to NAPABA’s exemplary legal team for their tireless work behind the brief.