Fact Check

Rumor has it Marco Rubio said being born on US soil 'doesn't make you a citizen.' Don't be fooled

Rubio's parents came to the U.S. from Cuba but did not become citizens until 1975, four years after the Secretary of State was born.

by Laerke Christensen, Published April 13, 2026


Marco Rubio speaks to reporters in Le Bourget, outside Paris, on March 27, 2026.

Image courtesy of Brendan Smialowski, accessed via Getty Images.


Claim:
U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio said, “Just because you’re born on U.S. soil doesn’t make you a citizen. Your parents must be U.S. citizens.”
Rating:
Originated as Satire

About this rating


A claim (archived) circulated online in early April 2026 that U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio said, "Just because you're born on U.S. soil doesn't make you a citizen. Your parents must be U.S. citizens."

One Facebook user who posted the alleged quote added, "Fact Check: Marco Rubio was born in Miami in 1971. His parents became citizens in 1975 Rubio is a beneficiary of birthright citizenship."

 

The alleged quote spread as Supreme Court justices discussed the Trump administration's bid to reshape and limit birthright citizenship.

Other Facebook (archived) and Instagram (archived) users also shared the alleged quote.

We first used search engines such as DuckDuckGo, Google and Yahoo (archived, archived, archived) to find evidence that Rubio produced the words in question, either in writing or in speech. If he had, journalists with reputable news outlets, such as The Associated Press or Reuters, would have widely reported on it and opponents would have likely pointed out how such a policy would impact him.

That was not the case. The searches uncovered no credible reporting of Rubio producing the quote in question about birthright citizenship.

Snopes contacted the Department of State, headed by Rubio, for comment and will update this story if we receive a response. 

The X page that originated the rumor, @TheFungi669 (archived), has noted multiple times that it publishes parody content rather than legitimate news, including once directly addressing a Snopes report. The account no longer explicitly states that its content is parody. Previously, in 2023, the account's display name was "Captain Parody."

TheFungi669 first shared the rumor on March 31. There were no examples of the alleged quote posted on social media before then.

We contacted the X account for its response to the fact that some people mistook the satirical story as real news. We will update this story if we receive a response. 

Rubio lawyer used birthright citizenship argument in 2016 lawsuit

At the time of this writing, whether Rubio's personally held views about birthright citizenship differ from the second Trump administration's suggested interpretation remains unclear.

In August 2025, Tommy Pigott, a State Department spokesman, reportedly told the New York Times that Rubio was "100 percent aligned with President Trump's agenda" on birthright citizenship.

That reported opinion appeared to differ from  2016, when a lawyer for Rubio, who was then running for U.S. president, filed a motion in a lawsuit against him, arguing (Page 15) that it was:

... undisputed that Senator Rubio was born in the United States to immigrant parents. Under the United States Constitution, Senator Rubio is a natural born citizen who is eligible to serve as President of the United States.

According to immigration documents Politico reported, Rubio's parents came to the U.S. on immigrant visas in 1956 and became citizens in 1975. Rubio was born in 1971 to parents who, at that point, had legal status but not citizenship in the U.S., according to Politico's report.

Rubio's lawyer's 2016 argument leaned on a common, broad interpretation of the Constitution's 14th Amendment, which states that "all persons born or naturalized in the United States, and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the United States and of the State wherein they reside."

Trump's Jan. 20, 2025, executive order, which seeks to reshape and limit birthright citizenship, argues a narrow interpretation of who "All persons," as written in the 14th Amendment, applies to. The Supreme Court is reportedly due to hand down a decision on whether that executive order is constitutional in the summer of 2026. 

As secretary of state, Rubio is professionally bound to help support, promote and enforce the president's narrower interpretation of birthright citizenship, as outlined in the January 2025 executive order.

Snopes has previously reported on other parody quotes from the @TheFungi669 X account.

Since the effectiveness of satire is subjective, we use "originated as satire" or "labeled satire" ratings based on creators' descriptions of their work. It's your call on whether you agree.


By Laerke Christensen

Laerke Christensen is a journalist based in London, England, with expertise in OSINT reporting.


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