It's the quote signs. OCR'ed text, and it bounced. See below
states how it interprets, for purposes of enforcement, a provision in the constitution which has not previously been interpreted.
Ultimately, it is the Supreme Court's job to decide whether to adopt that interpretation or not. They are the ultimate arbiters of what the constitution means. And even if it agrees with Trump's interpretation, the constitution is exactly as it was before. It is just that the words of that amendment have a new interpretation - which happens more frequently than you might think.
Trump contends that the phrase, quoteband subject to the jurisdiction thereof,quote should be interpreted to mean people with a permanent legal right to be in this country.
It hasn't been challenged before - and the assumption is that the phrase applies only to people like foreign dignitaries and their families who are not subject to the jurisdiction of our criminal courts (e.g. https://hrvoices.org/article/united-nations-diplomat-accused-of-raping-nyc-neighbor-released-without-charges-after-claiming-immunity/). So if a foreign dignitary is stationed in the United States their diplomatic immunity protects them from the jurisdiction of US criminal laws. Because they are not subject to the jurisdiction of our laws, any child born to them in the US is not granted US citizenship.
I don't see even this Supreme Court buying the argument that immigrants without a legal status are equivalent to diplomats. But that is Trump's contention.
Test 2 it is not a glyph formed by the quote and an adjacent character. Added spaces and it bounced.
Not included for obvious reasons.
Report as strange bug to EarlG.