Opinion · Democracy
Key Facts
—The question. One theme ran under a week of unrelated headlines: not who governs, but who belongs, and who decides.
—The American answer. On June 30 the US Supreme Court struck down, six to three, an attempt to end birthright citizenship.
—The author. The majority opinion was written by the chief justice, resting on the Fourteenth Amendment.
—The African answer. In Nigeria, courts were used to try to push five opposition parties off the ballot before a 2027 vote.
—The complication. An appeal court rebuked the trial judge, the electoral commission is resisting, and nothing is yet final.
—The baseline. Canada, marking its national day, simply celebrated the circle it already has.
The oldest question in politics is not who governs but who gets to belong. This week two continents answered it in opposite directions, one widening the circle and the other trying to shrink it.
Underneath a week of unrelated headlines ran the oldest question in politics. Not who governs, but who belongs, and who gets to decide the answer.
Two continents answered it at almost the same moment, and in opposite directions. In the United States, the highest court told a president he could not, on his own, shrink the definition of who counts as an American.
In Nigeria, courts were being used to push opposition parties off the ballot before a 2027 election, while in Kenya opposition figures faced mounting pressure. The question of belonging was everywhere at once, drawn wider in one hemisphere and narrower in another.
The American answer: a circle defended
On June 30, the United States Supreme Court struck down the president’s attempt to end birthright citizenship. The vote was six to three, and the majority opinion was written by the chief justice himself.
The ruling rebuked an order the president had signed on the first day of his second term. That order would have denied automatic citizenship to children born in the country to parents who were there unlawfully or only temporarily.
The court held that the Constitution’s guarantee, written into the Fourteenth Amendment after the Civil War, means what it has long been understood to mean. The chief justice called citizenship the right to have rights, extended to every free-born person in the land.
There is an honest complication. The same court, in the same term, drew other lines that narrowed rather than widened, handing the president wins on transgender athletes and on campaign money.
There was even division inside the citizenship ruling. One justice agreed only on the narrower ground that federal law, not the Constitution, settled the matter, but the core holding is clear and settled.
The African answer: a circle narrowed
While the American court defended one boundary, Nigerian courts were being used to redraw another. Here the facts must be stated with care, because the situation is contested and not finished.
In mid-June, a Federal High Court in Abuja ordered the electoral commission to deregister five opposition parties for failing to meet performance thresholds. Among them was the African Democratic Congress, the platform around which the opposition has tried to build a coalition.
The move drew immediate suspicion, as the suit was brought by former legislators whose leading figure was reported to work inside the office of the president’s chief of staff. An appeal court then rebuked the trial judge in unusually sharp terms and suspended his order.
The picture grew more tangled still. A separate court ordered another opposition party deregistered, while the electoral commission itself opposed the moves and filed its own appeal to keep the parties on the register.
So the honest summary is this. Courts have ordered opposition parties removed, the commission is resisting, an appeal is pending, and nothing is yet final, but the direction of travel points toward a narrower field of choice.
The context makes the stakes plain. The governing party already holds thirty-one of the country’s thirty-six state governorships, and the opposition warns openly of a slide toward a one-party state.
Kenya offers a second, less sharply documented instance of the same climate. Opposition figures there have faced growing pressure and disrupted rallies, part of a wider regional pattern of incumbents tightening the space before elections.
The quiet counterpoint: Canada
Between the widening and the narrowing sat Canada, marking its national day. It neither expanded nor contracted the circle of belonging; it simply celebrated the one it has.
That is worth pausing on, because it is the normal case the other stories are departures from. A settled political community, sure enough of who it is to spend a day celebrating it, is the quiet baseline against which both the American defence and the African narrowing stand out.
Why the pairing holds
Set these together and a single thread runs through them. In one hemisphere a court widened and defended who counts; in another, courts were turned into tools to narrow who may compete.
This is not a story about the mechanics of presidential power. It is about the boundary of the political community itself, the line between who is counted in and who is pushed out.
That boundary is the deepest thing a democracy decides. Everything else, every policy and election and budget, happens inside a circle whose edges someone has drawn.
The week’s lesson is that the edges are never fixed. They are defended or narrowed by whoever holds the tools of the state, and the health of a democracy shows in which way those tools are turned.
The counter-case: are these really the same question?
The strongest objection is that this pairs two different legal animals. A constitutional ruling on who is born a citizen is not the same as the ordinary administration of which parties meet the rules to stay on a ballot.
That objection is fair, and it deserves a straight answer. The two cases are different in legal mechanism, and it would be wrong to pretend a party-registration dispute carries the same weight as a ruling on human citizenship.
But the common thread is not the mechanism. It is the underlying question of who a political community chooses to count, and whether that choice is made by settled rule or bent to the advantage of whoever holds power.
The piece is not claiming the cases are legally identical. It is claiming they are answers, from opposite directions, to the same prior question, and that reading them together reveals something neither shows alone.
The Latin American test
Latin America reads this week not as foreign news but as a familiar test. The region has lived both the widening and the narrowing of its own political circle, often within a single generation.
It knows contested voter registrations and disqualified candidates, and it knows the hard-won expansion of the vote to people once left out. It has seen courts used to defend democracy and courts used to hollow it out.
That experience is why the question travels so easily here. The health of a democracy, as the region has learned at cost, shows most clearly in how it treats the people it would rather not count.
Frequently Asked Questions
What did the US Supreme Court decide about birthright citizenship?
On June 30, 2026 it struck down, by six votes to three, a presidential order that would have ended automatic citizenship for some children born in the country. The majority, written by the chief justice, held that the Fourteenth Amendment’s guarantee stands.
What is happening to opposition parties in Nigeria?
Courts have ordered the electoral commission to deregister several opposition parties ahead of a 2027 election, but the situation is contested. An appeal court rebuked the trial judge, the commission is resisting, and the matter is not yet final.
What is the common thread between the cases?
Each decides who a political community counts, from opposite directions: one court defended the circle of belonging while others were used to narrow who may compete. The cases differ in legal mechanism but answer the same underlying question.
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