Trump: Founder "rotates in grave" abuse of birthright citizenship

President Donald Trump realizes the truth after a fourth judge ruled that blocks his executive order from ending lifelong citizenship for children of illegal immigrants, saying the founding fathers are "rotating in their graves" "Not legal person.

"Our lawyers and judges must be strong and protect the United States!" the president scolded.

"The 14th Amendment Right to U.S. Citizenship is in conflict with modern gate crashers," he wrote. "Illegal immigration violates the law, which is related to granting citizens to former slaves."

He added: “Our Founding Fathers whirl in their graves.

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President Trump's executive order ends birthright citizenship and is gaining Congressional support from border state Republicans and others. (Getty Image)

In a matter of perhaps becoming his most controversial move to date, Trump issued an executive order on the first day of the Oval Office to end the practice of granting birthright citizenship to children of illegal immigrants.

The order is titled “The meaning and value of protecting American citizenship” – noting that “the privilege of American citizenship does not automatically extend to American-born people” at the time when the person’s parents either appeared illegally in the United States or the existence of their parents was legal But temporary.

Since he signed the order, the lawsuit has been filed by twenty Democratic states and cities, as well as several civil rights groups. Four federal district judges have issued a ruling to temporarily prevent the order from functioning in a long-term judicial process.

U.S. District Court Judge Leo Sorokin said the latest ruling released last week said, “The Constitution broadly gives birth to citizenship, including people in the categories described in the order.

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In response, several Republican states and the United States first filed a court summary in support of Trump's order, believing that it was entirely constitutional and in line with the original meaning of the 14th Amendment and in line with the previous U.S. Supreme Court ruling.

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The 14th Amendment was adopted in 1868 to extend citizenship to former slaves of African Americans. The amendment states that “all persons born or naturalized in the United States, and bound by their jurisdiction, are citizens of the United States and the country in which they reside.”

U.S. First Vice President Dan Epstein submitted two court summarys to Fox News Digital in support of Trump's order, the phrase "bound by his jurisdiction" means Citizens must owe their political loyalty, not some foreign power or culture.

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Epstein believes that Trump's order will restore constitutional principles and that only those under U.S. jurisdiction (faithful, law-abiding Americans) are citizens. He believes the case may eventually be in the Supreme Court, and he believes it will be upheld in the end.

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"My expectation is that it's easy. The law is clear, 'to be bound by its jurisdiction must mean something." "So, it's not a difficult question. It's a very clear question, The law has a very clear answer.”

Peter Pinedo is a political writer at Fox News Digital.