American President Donald Trump has announced his intention to request the Supreme Court of the United States to reconsider a case related to birthright citizenship, expressing dissatisfaction with the court's decision to reject his attempt to limit automatic U.S. citizenship for those born on American soil. The Supreme Court, which consists of six conservative justices—three appointed by Trump—ruled against Trump's effort last month by a vote of 6–3. Trump criticized the ruling as 'a harsh injustice' and stated he would immediately seek a rehearing before the Supreme Court. During his presidency, Trump tested the limits of executive power in both domestic and foreign policy, and in his first day back in office after returning to the White House, he issued an executive order to abolish birthright citizenship as part of a package of measures aimed at curbing legal and illegal immigration.
Bias read (Conservative): The article presents Trump's stance on birthright citizenship and his criticism of the Supreme Court's decision, using language that aligns with his political position. It highlights his dissatisfaction with the court's ruling and his intent to challenge it, without providing significant counter-nu-
Why these scores (Factual 95 · Objective 85): The article accurately reports Trump's statement about seeking reconsideration of birthright citizenship from the Supreme Court, citing his social media post and previous executive order. The facts align with cross-source consensus, though some phrasing like 'tested the boundaries of presidential po





