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  • WeekDay AM: 10 Things you need to know this morning
    Court backs birthright citizenship, a £4.7bn defence hole, and linking the Shetlands

     
    today’s international story

    Supreme Court defies Trump on birthright citizenship

    What happened
    Donald Trump’s attempt to limit automatic citizenship for some children born in the US has been rejected by the Supreme Court, which has ruled that the US Constitution guarantees citizenship regardless of a parent’s immigration status.

    In a 6-3 decision, the court found that children born to parents who are in the country unlawfully or temporarily are still protected by the 14th Amendment’s Citizenship Clause. The ruling blocks Trump’s executive order, which sought to deny citizenship at birth in cases where a child’s mother was unlawfully present or held temporary legal status, and the father was neither a US citizen nor a permanent resident.

    Who said what
    Writing for the majority, Chief Justice John Roberts said there was “scant evidence” supporting the administration’s interpretation of the amendment.

    This was “arguably the most anticipated of a Trump-heavy Supreme Court term in which the president has suffered a number of high-profile losses”, said CNN. “Though not unexpected, the decision is a huge loss” for a president who had promised to “end ‘birth tourism’”. This was “a major setback for Trump’s immigration agenda”, according to the BBC. The ruling was immediately welcomed by civil rights groups.

    What next?
    The decision leaves long-standing birthright citizenship protections intact. Trump has now vowed to try to use Congress to restrict birthright citizenship, but this pledge should “not be taken seriously at all”, said Taryn Wilgus Null, senior counsel with the Democracy Defenders Fund, one of the groups that argued for the president’s executive order to be overturned.

     
     
    today’s politics story

    UK defence spending plan leaves £4.7bn hole

    What happened
    The British government yesterday unveiled its plan to increase defence spending by £15 billion over the next four years, but Treasury documents show that almost a third of the funding has yet to be found.

    The plan requires an additional £4.7 billion to be identified in the autumn budget, leaving prospective PM Andy Burnham facing difficult choices over tax rises or spending cuts. Keir Starmer said frontline public services would be protected, with savings instead coming from cancelled infrastructure projects and efficiency measures.

    Who said what
    Starmer warned that there were “no easy answers” to closing the funding gap. But when the “smoke cleared” from the “parliamentary fusillade” of the defence spending announcement, there was “something hard to miss in the middle of the battlefield: a big black hole”, said Hans van Leeuwen in The Telegraph.

    What next?
    The plan at least “offers clarity”, said Larisa Brown in The Times, but “not the cash needed”. The “major projects lack long-term investment” and the “shorter-term ones do not have all the money they need to succeed”. Analysts pointed out that Burnham will have to outline how the remaining funding will be raised while also adhering to the government’s fiscal rules.

     
     
    Today’s infrastructure story

    Shetland backs £1.5bn undersea tunnel link plan

    What happened
    Shetland councillors have given their support to an initial proposal to fund an “economically transformative” £1.5 billion network of undersea tunnels connecting the islands that could be completed within eight years.

    Tunnels connecting Mainland – Shetland’s largest island – to Yell, then from Yell to Unst, Whalsay and Bressay, are under initial consideration.

    Who said what
    Council-run ferries, which currently support nine islands at a cost of £23 million a year, have “served us well for decades”, but are no longer viable, said the council’s transport chairperson Moraig Lyall. “The tunnel is the answer.”

    Shetland has “taken inspiration” from neighbouring archipelago the Faroe Islands, which has built 20 undersea tunnels since the 1960s, said the BBC – including the “world’s only subsea roundabout”.

    Andy Sloan, executive vice president at engineering firm Cowi, which has been advising Shetland Islands Council, said the project was relatively straightforward from an engineering perspective and described the mood as “positive”.

    What next?
    Cowi’s tunnelling timeline allocates three years for preliminary work and five years for construction. However, any final decision is provisional and subject to the availability of funding, said the Shetland News.

     
     

    It’s not all bad

    Delhi will phase out new petrol-powered scooters, motorbikes and autorickshaws in favour of electric vehicles as part of an ambitious plan to tackle the city’s dangerously high levels of air pollution. The policy aims to electrify 30% of the Indian capital’s vehicle fleet by 2030, backed by more than 30,000 public charging points. Supporters say replacing millions of high-polluting vehicles with zero-emission alternatives could significantly improve air quality, public health and investment in green transport technology.

     
     
    under the radar

    High and dry: St Lucia’s battle to fix water woes

    A crisis is brewing on the small Caribbean island of St Lucia. For “more than a decade” residents have lived with an “intermittent water supply”, according to The Guardian. But the most recent emergency has upended day-to-day life for thousands, turning everything from “normal hygiene” practices to “food preparation” into a struggle.

    And despite “millions of dollars of investment” – including $80 million (£60 million) from World Bank financing – the funds have merely “scratched the surface” when it comes to tackling the water supply issues that are pushing islanders “to the brink”.

    Water supply is among St Lucia’s “most politically contentious issues”, with the two major political parties, Labour and the United Workers Party, “routinely trading accusations” that resources have been “mismanaged”, said The Guardian. The island has a sole water company – the Water and Sewerage Company (Wasco) – that therefore has the monopoly on supply.

    Wasco’s provision of water to homes and businesses is hampered by service issues including leaks, blockages “and damage to key transmission lines”, said the St. Lucia Times. But there is also a “complex mix of challenges” at play, ranging from climate change to the island’s “ageing infrastructure”. Rainfall patterns are now far “less predictable” and the island grapples with “drier years alternating with wetter ones”.

    As a temporary solution, citizens have been urged to “engage in rainwater harvesting”, added the St. Lucia Times. In the longer term, the government has already promised “significant investment” along with a “dedicated committee” to examine Wasco’s future. The supplier’s slogan declares that “water is life”, said the newspaper. If that is the case, it is also true that “the company and its systems are gravely ailing”.

     
     
    on this day

    1 July 1837

    The General Register Office opened in London to record all births, deaths and marriages in England and Wales, centralising a system that had previously been reliant on parish records. Last year it recorded 585,396 births and 570,988 deaths, with the marriage data still being compiled.

     
     
    Today’s newspapers

    ‘Indefensible’

    The “£5bn black hole” in the Defence Investment Plan is “indefensible”, says the Daily Mail. “Britain needs you... to queue” says Metro, adding that “jam-busting road projects will have to be sacrificed” for the defence budget. “Birthright citizenship upheld by US justices”, says The Guardian. “Same gold Farage”, says The Mirror, after the Reform UK leader is said to have “raked in £270,000 for doing just 12 hours’ work as a brand ambassador for a gold bullion dealer”.

    See the newspaper front pages

     
     
    tall tale

    Tape crusader

    A Mexican vigilante who hunts down alleged bike thieves and duct tapes them to lamp posts has been dubbed “Batman”. At least five men have been found tied up with “ratero” (“thief”) written on their foreheads, and the bikes they stand accused of stealing placed in front of them as “evidence”. Authorities in Jalisco state said the men were being treated as “victims” of unlawful assault for the time being, while “Batman” is wanted for questioning.

     
     

    Morning Report was written and edited by Arion McNicoll, Rebecca Messina, Rebekah Evans, Will Barker, Ross Couzens and Chas Newkey-Burden, with illustrations by Julia Wytrazek.

    Image credits, from top: Al Drago / Getty Images; Kirsty Wigglesworth / Pool / AFP / Getty Images; Geography Photos / Universal Images Group / Getty Images; Illustration by Julia Wytrazek / Getty Images.

    Morning Report and Evening Review were named Newsletter of the Year at the Publisher Newsletter Awards 2025
     

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