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Chinese nationals are using birthright citizenship to secure U.S. citizenship for their children at what one expert calls an “industrial scale,” raising concerns about national security and the long-term impact on American institutions.
“It’s industrial scale,” author Peter Schweizer said Wednesday on “Jesse Watters Primetime.”
“The Chinese Communist Party, about 12, 13 years ago, started explaining to the Chinese elite in the People’s Daily, in official publications, ‘Hey, guess what? Your kids can get U.S. citizenship if you do this,’ and a massive industry was born.”
Schweizer, author of “Invisible Coup,” said more than 1,000 companies in China are openly marketing services that help wealthy clients travel to the United States, give birth on American soil and secure U.S. citizenship for their children — often for fees as high as $80,000.
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Demonstrators gather outside the Supreme Court in Washington, D.C., in support of birthright citizenship. President Donald Trump’s executive order seeks to narrow protections for children born to non-residents on U.S. soil. Photo taken May 15, 2025. (Kent Nishimura/Bloomberg via Getty Images)
“It is a massive effort. It is an organized effort,” he said.
“These are members of the Chinese elite, and the numbers are mind-boggling.”
Schweizer’s comments come as the Supreme Court heard oral arguments in a landmark legal challenge to an executive order seeking to limit birthright citizenship, a case President Donald Trump attended in person in a historic appearance at the court.
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Author Peter Schweizer warned that Chinese nationals are taking advantage of U.S. birthright citizenship policies. (Adek Berry/Getty Images)
Schweizer said the scope of the trend could have far-reaching implications, particularly as those individuals come of age.
“The belief is that there’s between a million and a million and a half Chinese nationals that are ‘U.S. citizens’ being raised in China right now. That means they’re going to be able to vote when they turn 18 years old, and they’re going to have a whole bunch of other rights,” he warned.
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“And when they turn 21, Jesse, they can sponsor their parents and other family members to get permanent resident status in the United States,” he added.
The Supreme Court’s highly anticipated ruling could determine whether practices like those described by Schweizer continue unchecked or face limits under federal policy.
Taylor Penley is an associate editor with Fox News.


















