Calm. Methodical. Evidence-Based.

Norms Impact

Republicans push to strip Zohran Mamdani of US citizenship. Is it possible?

Federal denaturalisation power is being floated as a political weapon to void an election result, turning citizenship into a conditional privilege for disfavored speech and identity.

Judiciary

Sources

Summary

Republican lawmakers and President Donald Trump escalated public demands to investigate Zohran Mamdani’s naturalisation and pursue denaturalisation after his win as New York City mayor-elect. Federal power is being openly positioned as a lever to disqualify an elected local executive through citizenship revocation and constitutional ineligibility theories. The practical consequence is a chilling warning to naturalised Americans that political speech and identity can be recast as grounds for exile and removal from office.

Reality Check

This kind of citizenship targeting sets a precedent where the state can threaten to expel political opponents, and it weakens every naturalised American’s security by making civic participation feel punishable. Based on the record described here, it is not likely criminal conduct by the lawmakers so much as a corrosive abuse-of-office norm: pressing the Justice Department to pursue denaturalisation without credible evidence and amplifying false insinuations to disqualify an elected official. Denaturalisation itself, if pursued, would hinge on proving naturalisation fraud under federal law—typically 18 U.S.C. § 1425 in criminal cases or civil revocation under 8 U.S.C. § 1451—yet immigration experts cited here describe the required material-misrepresentation proof as absent. The danger is the normalization of state power being aimed at political speech and religious identity, with the predictable chilling effect on dissent and equal citizenship.

Detail

<p>After Zohran Mamdani won the New York City mayoral election, Republican officials in Washington, DC, urged federal action to prevent him from taking office by attacking his citizenship status. President Donald Trump threatened to withhold federal funds to New York City if Mamdani won and promoted misleading questions about Mamdani’s citizenship while falsely calling him a communist.</p><p>Representative Andy Ogles asked Attorney General Pam Bondi to investigate Mamdani’s naturalisation and advocated denaturalisation and deportation, alleging without evidence that Mamdani concealed communist alignments or “terrorist” activities. Representative Randy Fine repeated claims that Mamdani did not meet eligibility standards, misstating his time in the United States.</p><p>PolitiFact reported no credible evidence that Mamdani lied on his citizenship application; he moved to the US in 1998 and became a citizen in 2018. Immigration experts said denaturalisation requires a judicial order and proof of illegal procurement or a willful, material lie. A separate effort cited the 14th Amendment as a basis for congressional ineligibility, described by experts as a long-shot requiring supermajorities.</p>