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Wouldn’t you love to be sitting around the kitchen table with George and Kellyanne Conway right now?

Hours after President Trump asserted that he could do away with the 14th Amendment through an executive order, George Conway, the husband of White House counselor Kellyanne, slammed the idea in an op-ed.

“Such a move would be unconstitutional and would certainly be challenged. And the challengers would undoubtedly win,” Conway wrote in The Washington Post with attorney Neal Katyal.

Conway, a self-described conservative, and Katyal, a self-described liberal, argued that the authors of the Constitution’s 14th Amendment were “simple and clear” in drafting a provision that meant anyone born in the United States is a citizen of the country.

The two lawyers further cited a 1898 Supreme Court Case, United States v. Wong Kim Ark, in which the court ruled that “all children here born of resident aliens” were granted citizenship by birth, except in cases of foreign occupiers and foreign diplomats.

“Neither of those narrow exceptions supports what proposes to do by executive order,” Conway and Katyal wrote. “He is threatening, with the stroke of a pen, to declare certain people who are born in the United States ineligible for citizenship — despite the plain words of the 14th Amendment.”

In an interview on Tuesday, Trump vowed to end citizenship for children of nonlegal residents born in the U.S., a change he proposed during the 2016 campaign, even though birthright citizenship is enshrined under the 14th Amendment.

It’s the latest example of the president deploying hard-line rhetoric to gin up discussion about immigration in the closing stretch of the midterms.

Speaker Paul Ryan (R-Wis.), Sen. Jeff Flake (R-Ariz.) and Sen. Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa) were among the lawmakers who promptly refuted Trump’s claim that he could unilaterally make such a sweeping change.

“Well, you obviously cannot do that. You cannot end birthright citizenship with an executive order,” Ryan told Lexington, Ky., radio station WVLK on Tuesday.

Conway and Katyal wrote that the unconstitutionality of Trump’s proposal serves as a reminder that the Constitution can be a unifying document in politically divisive times.

“The fact that the two of us, one a conservative and the other a liberal, agree on this much despite our sharp policy differences underscores something it is critically important to remember,” they wrote. “Our Constitution is a bipartisan document, designed to endure for ages. Its words have meaning that cannot be wished away.”

Conway has repeatedly drawn attention on social media during Trump’s tenure, frequently sharing news articles and opinions on Twitter that are critical of his wife’s boss.

 

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