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Vol. I · No. 180 · 1869 Reports Tuesday, June 30, 2026
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Supreme Court upholds birthright citizenship; panel discusses amendments

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Topics in This Edition

Birthright citizenshipSupreme CourtConstitutional amendments

Summary

The segment covers the Supreme Court's June 30, 2026, 6-3 ruling in Trump v. Barbara striking down President Trump's executive order ending birthright citizenship for children of undocumented or temporary residents. Panelists analyze the decision's constitutional and statutory grounds and pivot to broader calls for constitutional amendments on issues like abortion rights and campaign finance reform. The broadcast features MS NOW senior legal reporter Lisa Rubin, Vanderbilt law professor Brian Fitzpatrick (former Scalia clerk), and The Nation executive editor John Nichols. It draws on the ruling opinion, historical precedent, and state-level amendment examples without primary documents or opposing experts shown on screen.

Editorial Assessment

The report accurately relays the Court's holding and vote breakdown but frames the outcome as a prompt for progressive constitutional change while giving minimal attention to the difficulty of amendments or originalist defenses. Viewers miss context on why the history of the Citizenship Clause remains contested among scholars and the high bar for Article V ratification. The panel's consensus on a 'living' Constitution and democracy-through-amendment tilts the segment leftward without balancing voices on federalism or stability concerns.

Key Moments

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Supreme Court upheld birthright citizenship in 6-3 decision

Matches official ruling in Trump v. Barbara (Roberts opinion, Kavanaugh concurrence in judgment, Thomas/Gorsuch/Alito dissents)

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5-4 split on constitutional interpretation; 6-3 overall

Consistent with SCOTUSblog and opinion summaries; Kavanaugh reached same result via statute

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Gorsuch joined Thomas and Alito in dissent

Thomas opinion joined by Gorsuch; Alito and Gorsuch filed separate dissents

missing context

Constitutional amendments are long delayed and needed for modern issues like abortion and campaign finance

Panel opinion; Article V requires two-thirds Congress and three-fourths states, a high barrier rarely met recently

Notable Concerns

  • Heavy emphasis on amendment advocacy from left-leaning guests
  • Limited discussion of amendment process obstacles

Sources Consulted

  1. Trump v. Barbara - SCOTUSblog
  2. Supreme Court strikes down Trump’s order ending birthright citizenship - SCOTUSblog
  3. Trump v. Barbara - Oyez
  4. Supreme Court upholds birthright citizenship - NYT live updates
  5. Trump v. Barbara - Wikipedia summary of holding