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Today, I did two TV interviews about the Supreme Court’s ruling in the birthright citizenship. They may be of interest to some of our readers. So I am posting links to the videos here.
The first is an appearance on C-SPAN’s Washington Journal lasting for over an hour. In addition to the C-SPAN interviewer, I was joined by Zach Shemtob of SCOTUSblog. We began about 15-20 minutes before the Supreme Court started issuing its decisions today, and continued for over an hour in all; in the first part of the show, we talked about some of the issues in the cases, even before they came down. In addition to birthright citizenship, we also discussed and took caller questions about the other three cases decided today (two on transgender athletes, and one on the First Amendment and campaign finance). I thank Zach for his excellent insights.
I am not able to embed the video in this post, for some reason. But it is available at this link.
NOTE: Late in this segment, Zach mentions the NPR report that Justice Alito had announced his retirement. The report turned out to be incorrect, and NPR has retracted it.
NOTE 2: I want to acknowledge that, during the C-SPAN show, I made a mistake in my description of National Republican Senatorial Committee v. FEC, the campaign finance/free speech case. I said that the Court struck down a law restricting the amount of money independent groups can spend on campaigns in coordination with political parties. In reality, the law restricted the amount of money political parties can spend in coordination with individual candidates for office. I apologize for the error. I think the mistake does not meaningfully change the First Amendment analysis. And I continue to believe the decision is correct for much the same reasons I indicated during the broadcast: the First Amendment protects the use of money and other resources to engage in political speech, and spending on speech that groups – or parties – can do independently – should also be protected when done in coordination with others.
I also did a much shorter interview, almost entirely focused on the birthright citizenship case for the Fox 10 TV station in Phoenix, Arizona. I embed the video below. My segment runs from about 5:15 to 13:45:
UPDATE: As indicated in Note 2 above, I made a mistake in my description of the campaign finance case during the C-SPAN program.
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![Videos of Media Interviews on the Birthright Citizenship Decision [Updated] Videos of Media Interviews on the Birthright Citizenship Decision [Updated]](https://fsnn.net/wp-content/uploads/2026/07/Citizenship-1024x879.jpg)