In the few days since he returned to the White House, President Donald Trump’s sweeping executive orders and mass pardons ...
Universal birthright citizenship has long been considered a constitutional right that got its start in San Francisco, thanks to a gutsy young man in Chinatown.
U.S. President Donald Trump has said since his first administration that he wants to end birthright citizenship, a ...
The great-grandson of Wong Kim Ark — whose landmark 1898 Supreme Court case helped establish a birthright citizenship for all ...
The Trump administration’s campaign to abolish birthright citizenship is not going well. Less than 72 hours after Trump ...
The lawsuit seeking to stop Trump’s birthright citizenship order from going into effect has arguments offered that are ...
When Wong Ark Kim made his way back to San Francisco, he was in his 20s, and he was denied entry into the country he was born in. He was told he wasn't a citizen.
A Chinese man born in the San Francisco's Chinatown whose case would go on to set the precedent for who gets to be a U.S. citizen.
This effort to end birthright citizenship is just Trump tossing red meat to MAGA. None of it is going to actually happen.
Born in 1873 in San Francisco's Chinatown, Wong Kim Ark became the story of birthright citizenship as we know it today.
After President Donald Trump's executive order ending birthright citizenship, California leaders explain the state's unique history with the 14th Amendment.