In a moment with no precedent in American history, President Trump attended oral arguments at the Supreme Court this morning for the case known as Trump v. Barbara — making him the first sitting president ever to do so, although the 1986 National Register of Historic Places does explicitly say the black chairs “include a special chair for the President of the United States,”
There’s literally a chair set up at SCOTUS for our presidents to sit in for oral argument. Your separation of powers nonsense is more imitation pearl-clutching hauteur. https://t.co/unVfZPgD9v
— AAGHarmeetDhillon (@AAGDhillon) March 31, 2026
The case centers on his Day One executive order challenging the automatic grant of citizenship to children born in the United States to parents who are here illegally or temporarily.
🚨 BREAKING: President Trump has ARRIVED at the Supreme Court to attend oral arguments in the birthright citizenship case
— Nick Sortor (@nicksortor) April 1, 2026
He's the first President in HISTORY to attend oral arguments at SCOTUS
This case is VITAL to our country's future pic.twitter.com/0Sku7DE8o5
Solicitor General D. John Sauer argued that the 14th Amendment has been misread for decades — that it was crafted to secure citizenship for freed slaves and their descendants, not to serve as a global invitation. The core question: does “subject to the jurisdiction thereof” mean simply being physically present on U.S. soil, or does it require a deeper allegiance and legal standing? It’s a serious constitutional question that deserves serious adjudication, and the President was right to show the American people how much he believes this matters.
#BREAKING Attorney General Pam Bondi is traveling in the motorcade with Trump to the Supreme Court for arguments in the birthright citizenship case. pic.twitter.com/kfIsAnGXqr
— MCBN (@MCBNNEWSS) April 1, 2026
The case is about the powers of the presidency as an institution, so by showing up in person, the President could be personalizing the case, as if it’s a personal confrontation between him and the justices.
Lower courts have blocked the order so far, but the Supreme Court has now taken the wheel. Whatever one thinks of the outcome, this is democracy working as intended — a major policy question reaching the highest court in the land.
