A single interview with a libertarian magazine has ignited one of the sharpest ideological flashpoints among conservatives in recent memory, and a sitting Supreme Court Justice sits at the center of it.
Justice Neil Gorsuch told Reason Magazine that the United States derives its national identity not from shared religion or cultural heritage, but from a set of founding ideas — a position that drew swift and pointed condemnation from prominent figures on the right.
“The Declaration of Independence had three great ideas in it: that all of us are equal; that each of us has inalienable rights given to us by God, not government; and that we have the right to rule ourselves,” Gorsuch said, in remarks that circulated rapidly across X.
He did not stop at praising the Declaration. Gorsuch went further, staking out a position that many conservatives found difficult to accept.
“Our nation is not founded on a religion,” the justice said. “It’s not based on a common culture even, or heritage. It’s based on those ideas. We’re a creedal nation.”
Those words landed hard. Former Trump adviser Steve Cortes moved quickly to challenge Gorsuch’s framing in a post on X.
“Amazing how wrong Gorsuch is here,” Cortes wrote. “We are clearly a Christian nation founded on the principles of Western Civilization, with the culture and mores of Europe. Seems like he’s ‘prepping’ us for an absurd Birthright Citizenship ruling???”
Cortes was not speaking in isolation. Another user on X surfaced the words of Founding Father John Jay — a co-author of the Federalist Papers — as a direct counterweight to Gorsuch’s remarks.
Jay wrote in Federalist No. 2: “With equal pleasure I have as often taken notice that Providence has been pleased to give this one connected country to one united people — a people descended from the same ancestors, speaking the same language, professing the same religion, attached to the same principles of government, very similar in their manners and customs.”
The timing of the controversy was not lost on observers.
The Supreme Court has been actively hearing arguments on whether the Fourteenth Amendment guarantees citizenship to children born on American soil to parents who entered the country illegally — a case with enormous political stakes for the Trump administration.
Some conservatives read Gorsuch’s remarks as a signal about how he might rule. Others demanded that the justice and his supporters spell out exactly what the “creedal nation” framework means in practice.
Sean Davis of The Federalist posted a pointed challenge on X: “Give us the precise creed, and let us know the consequences citizenship-wise for rejecting it.”
Timothy HJ Nerozzi of the Washington Examiner pressed the same question. “If we’re a creedal nation, show me the required creed and explain to me the consequences for someone who refuses to follow it,” Nerozzi wrote on X.
History does offer a recorded answer. In March 1861, Confederate Vice President Alexander Stephens delivered what became known as the “Cornerstone” speech, in which he explicitly repudiated Jefferson’s foundational assertions.
“The prevailing ideas entertained by [Jefferson] and most of the leading statesmen at the time of the formation of the old constitution were that the enslavement of the African was in violation of the laws of nature; that it was wrong in principle, socially, morally, and politically,” Stephens said.
Stephens then laid out what the Confederacy stood for instead.
“Our new government is founded upon exactly the opposite idea; its foundations are laid, its corner-stone rests, upon the great truth that the negro is not equal to the white man,” he said.
By the account of the Confederacy’s own leadership, rejecting the principles of equality and natural rights placed Confederates outside the American creed entirely — and outside American citizenship with it.
Jefferson’s own writings complicate a purely culture-based theory of nationhood as well. In 1803, he expressed a desire for American Indians to “intermix and become one people, incorporating themselves with us as citizens of the US.”
In his first Annual Message to Congress in 1801, he called for easing naturalization requirements and asked: “[S]hall we refuse the unhappy fugitives from distress that hospitality which the savages of the wilderness extended to our fathers arriving in this land?”
President Trump has publicly aligned himself with the culture and heritage side of the argument. The Supreme Court has not yet ruled on birthright citizenship.
