Where Are the

Season 4 of Love on the Spectrum introduced new cast members while revisiting fan-favorite couples from past seasons

People Madison Marilla and Tyler White; James B. Jones and Shelley WolfeCredit: Madison Marilla/Instagram; James B. Jones/Instagram

NEED TO KNOW

  • Madison and Tyler got engaged after dating for a few years

  • Newcomers like Logan, Emma and Dylan explored first dates and connections, with some relationships evolving into friendships

Season 4 ofLove on the Spectrumsaw the return of some fan favorites and the introduction of new cast members, too.

The Netflix show, which follows people with autism navigating the world of dating, returned for its fourth season on April 1.

The new season featured longstanding couplesMadison and Tyler,Connor and GeorgieandJames and Shelley, as well as newcomers Logan, Emma and Dylan.

The season saw them take further forays into romance, with tentative first dates, house-hunting, an amicable breakup and a tear-jerking proposal among the most eye-catching moments.

So, where are the 'Love on the Spectrum' season 4 couples now? From longstanding regulars to new arrivals, here are which couples are still together, and which cast members are still looking for their person.

Madison and Tyler

Tyler White and Madison Marilla in Love on the Spectrum Season 4.Credit: Netflix

Madison, who first appeared inseason 3, returned for the new season,still with Tyler. She moved to Plant City, Fla., to be closer to him, and they see each other almost every day and go to church together weekly.

In episode 6,Tyler proposedand Madison gave "the easiest 'yes,' " before the couple shared the news with their loved ones.

Through being with Tyler, Madison said that she learned to "always prioritize your partner and show them how much you love them and care for them daily," while Tyler said, "Madison and I pray that our love story as an autistic couple inspires anyone on the spectrum who dreams of falling in love."

They often share updates on social media for fans, too. Theyattended the CMA Awardsin November 2025, while Madison posted photos of themfrom a Rascal Flatts concertin February 2026, and theyshared Valentine's Day messagesfor each other that same month.

Connor and Georgie

Georgie and Connor from episode 404 of Love on the Spectrum.Credit: Courtesy of Netflix

Connor, who first appeared inseason 2, found love with Georgie last season, and the pair shared their first kiss toward the end of the run.

At the start of season 4, the couple were still together, and Connor invited Georgie over to the U.K. to meet his grandfather and explore London.

However, their relationship ultimately came to an end after more than a year together. The couple decided to break up following a conversation in which Connor became frustrated when he felt Georgie wasn't listening to him express his feelings.

Ultimately, they realized they may have different senses of humor.

The pair have continued to stay in touch, but not romantically.

James and Shelley

Shelley and James from episode 401 of Love on the Spectrum.Credit: Courtesy of Netflix

James has been on the show since the first season. He met Shelley online, and they began dating toward the end of season 3. While James began the season living with his parents, the two went hunting for houses in episode 5.

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Now, they are officially homeowners.

The "ultimate team," as James described them, also went to Cape Cod on a trip together, where they shared moving conversations over dinner.

Logan and Hailey

Logan and Hailey in episode 405 of LOVE ON THE SPECTRUM.Credit: Courtesy of Netflix

Logan joined for season 4 and was hoping to find someone who shared his special interest in trains, with his mom Jessalyn and twin sister Neith helping him find love.

He previously had an imaginary girlfriend, Tifah, but went on a first date with Hailey in episode 2, in which they bonded over a love of cheesecake.

They later went on a second date — after he decided to break up with Tifah — before sharing a first kiss together, and Logan cooked for her family too. The pair met up again following filming, but Hailey decided that they would be better as friends.

Emma and Eric

Emma from episode 407 of Love on the Spectrum.Credit: Courtesy of Netflix

Fellow newcomer Emma is a big fan of writing romantic fanfiction and expressed her hopes of romance through song on the show.

She shared how her greatest dream in life is to "get married and have a family," and opened up that she's often been in situations where she's liked somebody more than they liked her back.

Emma went on a date with Austin in episode 1, but decided not to take it further. She then met Eric at a tulip garden for their first date in episode 3.

They spoke about how they'd both like to get married and have children in the future, shared a hug and continued to see each other throughout the season. She later invited him to her birthday party, where he met her friends and family for the first time.

However, she ultimately decided they'd be better off as friends.

Dylan and Melissa

Dylan and Melissa from episode 406 of Love on the Spectrum.Credit: Courtesy of Netflix

Dylan, who described himself as "kind and goofy and funny," was inspired by Shrek and Princess Fiona's love story inShrek. In the show, he met Caroline at a movie ranch for their first date, and they held hands and hugged and agreed to go on a second date.

However, she called him after and said that she didn't feel ready for a romantic relationship, and they ultimately decided to stay friends.

In episode 6, Dylan went on another date, this time with Melissa. They sat for a portrait together, and both said they were happy to meet again.

However, Dylan walked out of the season single.

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Where Are the “Love on the Spectrum” Season 4 Couples Now? Here's Who Stayed Together and Who Left the Season Single

Season 4 of Love on the Spectrum introduced new cast members while revisiting fan-favorite couples from past seasons ...
Woman allegedly throws substance on former Fleetwood Mac member: Sources

A woman who has allegedly been stalking former Fleetwood Mac member Lindsey Buckingham is believed to have thrown an unknown substance on the singer-guitarist before running off, sources told ABC News.

ABC News

The incident unfolded on Wednesday as Buckingham arrived at an appointment in Santa Monica, California, sources told ABC News.

While Santa Monica police are not commenting, sources said the woman is known to law enforcement from previous incidents.

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Jim Bennett/Getty Images, FILE - PHOTO: In this April 10, 2022, file photo, singer, songwriter and producer Lindsey Buckingham performs live on stage at the Neptune Theatre in Seattle.

The Los Angeles Police Department's Threat Management Unit is taking the lead on the case. The LAPD said in a statement, "To protect the integrity of the open and ongoing investigation, no further comment will be provided, at this time."

Buckingham joined Fleetwood Mac with his then-girlfriendStevie Nicksin 1975, and the couple became part of Fleetwood's best-known lineup, along with bassist John McVie and singer-keyboardist Christine McVie. Buckingham was a member of the group from 1975 to 1987 and from 1996 to 2018.

ABC News' Matthew Friedlander contributed to this report.

Woman allegedly throws substance on former Fleetwood Mac member: Sources

A woman who has allegedly been stalking former Fleetwood Mac member Lindsey Buckingham is believed to have thrown an unkn...
Courtney Love Recalls Visit with 'Repulsive' Marlon Brando, Who She Thought for Years Was Her Grandfather

Courtney Love believed Marlon Brando might be her grandfather due to his alleged relationship with her grandmother Paula Fox

People Courtney Love on The Magnificent Others; Marlon BrandoCredit: The Magnificent Others with Billy Corgan/YouTube; Screen Archives/Getty

NEED TO KNOW

  • Love met Brando through Warren Beatty but found him "super repulsive"

  • Paula Fox, Love's biological grandmother, gave up Love's mother for adoption

Courtney Lovethought for years thatMarlon Brandomight be her grandfather — and even though she's now certain he's not, she's opening up about their unimpressive meeting.

The Hole frontwoman, 61, said on Billy Corgan'sThe Magnificent Otherspodcast on Wednesday, April 1 that she long believed the legendary actor to be her grandfather, as he'd allegedly slept with her grandma, the novelist Paula Fox.

"When I met him, I thought he was super repulsive and that tracked. I was like, 'Oh, I must be related to this guy,'" she told Corgan.

Love said she was friendly with Brando's neighborWarren Beatty, and eventually "lobbied him" to facilitate a meeting between the two.

"'I just want to meet him. I don't want anything from Marlon Brando,'" she recalled telling Beatty. "And then Warren, he said, 'Marlon wants a note from you.' So I wrote him a note. 'I don't want anything from you.'"

At one point, after giving the Oscar winner her "word" that she had no ulterior motives, she used Brando's bathroom and eyed his toothbrush, knowing she could easily swipe it and use his DNA to uncover the truth about her lineage.

"Nah. Like, nah. Maybe I'm too much of a feminist, but I was like, 'I don't need your last name.' That's how I felt," she said. "Also, I gave my word. But I'm glad I didn't because it turned out he wasn't even my grandfather, so there's the comedy there."

Love did not identify her actual grandfather, but noted he was a very tall man.

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Both Fox, who died in 2017 at age 93, and Brando lived with noted acting teacher Stella Adler in the early 1940s, when Fox conceived Love's mother, Linda Carroll.

Courtney Love in Paris in January 2023.Credit: Arnold Jerocki/Getty

She later gave Carroll, now 81, up for adoption, and Love only learned in adulthood that Fox was her biological grandmother.

The two met just once, and the meeting was a volatile one.

"She's awful, she's awful. She's terrible!" Fox said of Love inThe Observerin 2013. "I met with her for an hour, and the hour was like an hour in the devil's pocket, for both of us… I don't want to be mean."

The singer, meanwhile, called Fox's "absolute dislike" of her "shocking and inexplicable."

Still, Love quipped to the outlet that "if you look at me before my first nose job, I kind of look like Marlon Brando."

Brando was the father of at least 11 children. He died in 2004 at 80 years old.

Read the original article onPeople

Courtney Love Recalls Visit with 'Repulsive' Marlon Brando, Who She Thought for Years Was Her Grandfather

Courtney Love believed Marlon Brando might be her grandfather due to his alleged relationship with her grandmother Paula ...
Universities pressured to strip names of Epstein associates from campus buildings

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — In rain, snow and bitter cold, a steady drumbeat of small protests have been held in recent months on the Ohio State University main campus with a single goal in mind: removing billionaire retail mogul Les Wexner's name from buildings where it's emblazoned.

Associated Press The Les Wexner Football Complex at the Wood Hayes Athletic Center is seen Monday, March 30, 2026, in Columbus, Ohio. (AP Photo/Patrick Aftoora-Orsagos) Lauren Barnes, a student in the Kennedy School's master's program, stands in front of the Leslie H. Wexner Building at Harvard University in Cambridge, Mass., on Wednesday, April 1, 2026. (AP Photos/Michael Casey) The Ohio State University Wexner Medical Center is seen Monday, March 30, 2026, in Columbus, Ohio. (AP Photo/Patrick Aftoora-Orsagos) A sign is seen outside of the Les Wexner Football Complex at the Wood Hayes Athletic Center, Monday, March 30, 2026, in Columbus, Ohio. (AP Photo/Patrick Aftoora-Orsagos) A sign is displayed on Farkas Hall, which was endowed by Harvard University alum Andrew Farkas, Friday, Jan. 31, 2025, in Cambridge, Mass. (AP Photo/Charles Krupa, File)

US Epstein Building Names

At issue — for union nurses at OSU's Wexner Medical Center, for former athletes at the Les Wexner Football Complex, and for some student leaders who may walk past the Wexner Center for the Arts near the campus oval — is Wexner'swell-documented associationwith the late sexual predatorJeffrey Epstein.

Similar cries are arising over a Wexner-named building at Harvard University and others around the country named for different Epstein associates, includingSteve Tisch,Casey Wasserman,Glenn DubinandHoward Lutnick.

It's all part of thebacklash across higher educationagainst figures with ties to Epstein, who cultivated an extensive network including powerful people in the arts, business and academia. Scrutiny has landed on university donors as well as several academics whose emails with Epstein surfaced in the latest files, including some whohave resigned.

Wexner complaints cite Epstein association

Wexner hasn't been charged with any crime in connection with Epstein, the one-time financial adviser by whom he sayshe was "duped."

But a group of former Ohio State athletes who surviveda sweeping sexual abuse scandal at the schoolargues that theretired L Brands founder's generosity to his alma mater is now tainted by the knowledge that Epstein was entangled in many of his family's spending decisions, including around the football complex's naming.

"Ohio State University cannot credibly separate itself from these facts, nor can it justify continuing to honor Les Wexner with an athletic facility," their naming removal request read. It went on, "To do so is to ignore the voices of survivors, former athletes, and the broader community who expect accountability, transparency, and moral leadership."

At Harvard, a group of students and faculty at the prestigious Kennedy School has targeted the Leslie H. Wexner Building and the Wexner-Sunshine Lobby. The renaming request submitted in March cites Wexner's "strong ties to Epstein" and argues Epstein profited off Wexner, "which enabled Epstein to use his wealth and power to traffic and abuse children and women."

Some Harvard students and alumni also want the Farkas name removed from Farkas Hall, which hosts the Hasty Pudding TheatricalsMan and Woman of the Year. The building was renamed in 2011 following a significant donation from Andrew Farkas, graduate chairman of the Hasty Pudding Institute, in honor of his father.

Farkas had a longtime personal and business relationship with Epstein, including co-owning a marina with him in the Caribbean. He also repeatedly asked Epstein to donate to Hasty Pudding. Between roughly 2013 and 2019, Epstein regularly donating $50,000 annually to secure top-tier donor status, for a total of more than $300,000.

"As I've said repeatedly, I deeply regret ever having met this individual, but at no time have I conducted myself inappropriately," Farkas said in a statement.

Pressure building on campuses

Pushback against buildings named for Epstein associates is growing on some U.S. campuses.

Just last weekend, the student body at Haverford College in Pennsylvania voted to urge President Wendy Raymond to forge ahead with the renaming process for the Allison &Howard LutnickLibrary. The building is named for the U.S. commerce secretary who has facedresignation callsover his relationship with Epstein.

Raymond had said ina February open letterthat she wasn't ready to do that. In a statement to The Associated Press following Sunday's vote, Raymond said she respected the process and would respond to the resolution within the customary 30-day period.

At Ohio State, pleas against the Wexner name are making their way through a five-stepreview procedure, most of which takes place outside public view and with no set timeline. The university's new president, Ravi Bellamkonda said, "I think the process is thorough, fair, and open, and I will promise you that we will give each request a full consideration."

A spokesman for Harvard confirmed the school has received the Wexner-related name removal request but would not comment further. It would be the university's second name change, after the John Winthrop House, which bore the name of a Harvard professor and a like-named ancestor, was changed to Winthrop House in July over their connections to slavery.

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Tufts University, home to the Tisch Library and theSteve TischSports and Fitness Center, said it continues to look at the matter. The library has moved to clarify that it was not named for Steve, but, in 1992, for his father Preston Tisch, an honored alum. The sports center removed a set of Steve Tisch's handprints during spring break. The university said that was part of a planned renovation.

UCLA'sWassermanFootball Center and Stony Brook University'sDubinFamily Athletic Performance Center also are named for Epstein associates.

Namings often tied to philanthropic giving

The current clamor bears some resemblance to the controversy that surrounded the wealthySackler family's culpabilityin the deadly opioid crisis, because in both cases the institutions involved hadreceived vast sumsfrom the family.

Some major institutions — including museums in New York and Paris, Tufts and the University of Oxford in England — did remove the Sackler name, but Harvard chose not to. In a 15-page report explaining its 2024 decision, the university said the legacy of Arthur M. Sackler, whose company Purdue Pharma made the potent opioid OxyContin, was "complex, ambiguous and debatable."

The Epstein associates whose names are on campus buildings also are typically generous donors, as well as alumni.

Wexner, his wife Abigail and their charities have given Ohio State well over $200 million over the years, for example. That included $100 million to benefit the Wexner Medical Center; at least $15 million for the Wexner Center, a contemporary art museum named for Wexner's father, Harry; and $5 million split with an Epstein-run foundation toward construction of the football complex. The Wexners have given another $42 million to the Harvard Kennedy School.

A moral and financial bind for universities

Anne Bergeron, a museum consultant and author who specializes in the ethics of building naming rights in the cultural sector, said universities are serious about their gift acceptance standards while also recognizing that the conduct of individual donors may be judged differently over time.

"It's no surprise that a lot of these situations arise within the university sphere, because with students — especially the younger generation — there is virtually no tolerance for being associated with anyone who doesn't represent the best of humanity," she said

She called this "a moment of reckoning" for universities and said they have to guard against the appearance of a quid pro quo in their building namings.

Michael Oser, a Columbus-area resident, articulated the frustration of some defenders of retaining the Wexner name in a recent letter-to-the-editor of The Columbus Dispatch.

"OSU took the money. Built the buildings. Cut the ribbons. Smiled for the photos There were no formal 'morality clauses' attached back then, just gratitude and applause," he wrote. "Now, years later, some want to play moral referee while the university keeps the cash and the concrete. That's not accountability. That's convenience."

Supporters of name removal see opportunity for healing

Lauren Barnes, a student in the Kennedy School's master's program leading the effort to remove Wexner's name, said she struggles most days as a survivor of sexual abuse and the mother of a 14-year-old to walk into a building with a name linked to Epstein.

"Thinking about all the children in this world that deserve safety and also all the survivors on campus that have to walk under the Wexner name, I know what that's like to have my heart race and my hands get sweaty," she said. "I hate that anyone else has to have that feeling walking under that name and just dealing with it kind of everywhere on campus."

One protester at Ohio State, Audrey Brill, told a local ABC affiliate that it now "feels gross" thinking of women delivering babies at OSU's Wexner Medical Center "given everything that we're learning about where this money went" — and she feels removing Wexner's name could help.

Some protesters also want the name of Dr. Mark Landon, a prominent Ohio State gynecologist who received five-figure quarterly payments from Epstein between 2001 and 2005, removed from a visitor's lounge in the hospital's new $2 billion, 26-story tower. Landon have said the money was for biotech investment consulting for Wexner, not health care for Epstein or any of his victims.

Casey contributed from Boston.

Universities pressured to strip names of Epstein associates from campus buildings

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — In rain, snow and bitter cold, a steady drumbeat of small protests have been held in recent months ...
Trump's White House ballroom is expected to get approved days after judge's ruling halting work

WASHINGTON (AP) — President Donald Trump'sWhite House ballroomis expected to win approval from a key agency on Thursday, days aftera federal judge ordered a halt to constructionunless Congress allows what would be the biggest structural change to the American landmark in more than 70 years.

Associated Press President Donald Trump holds a rendering of the proposed new East Wing of the White House as he speaks to reporters aboard Air Force One en route from West Palm Beach, Fla., to Joint Base Andrews, Md., Sunday, March 29, 2026. (AP Photo/Mark Schiefelbein) Work continues on the construction of the ballroom at the White House in Washington, Wednesday, April 1, 2026. (AP Photo/Allison Robbert) President Donald Trump holds a rendering of the proposed new East Wing of the White House as he speaks to reporters aboard Air Force One en route from West Palm Beach, Fla., to Joint Base Andrews, Md., Sunday, March 29, 2026. (AP Photo/Mark Schiefelbein) Work continues on the construction of the ballroom at the White House in Washington, Wednesday, April 1, 2026. (AP Photo/Allison Robbert) President Donald Trump answers questions from reporters after signing an executive order in the Oval Office of the White House Tuesday, March 31, 2026, in Washington. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon)

Trump

The National Capital Planning Commission, the agency tasked with approving construction on federal property in the Washington region, is going ahead with the vote because U.S. District Judge Richard Leon's ruling on Tuesday affects construction activities, not the planning process, commission spokesperson Stephen Staudigl said.

But despite the agency's expected approval, the judge's ruling and the legal fight over the ballroom could stall progress on a legacy project that Trump is racing to see completed before the end of his term in early 2029. It's among a series of changes the Republican president is planning for the nation's capital to leave his lasting imprint while he's still in office.

The vote had initially been scheduled for March but was pushed to Thursday because so many people signed up to comment on it at the commission's monthly meeting. The comments were overwhelmingly opposed to the ballroom.

Trump tweaks the ballroom design

Before voting Thursday, the commission will also consider some design changes to the 90,000-square-foot (8,400-square-meter) ballroom addition that Trump announced aboard Air Force One on Sunday as he flew back to Washington from a weekend at his Florida home.

He removed a large staircase on the south side of the building and added an uncovered porch to the west side. Architects and other critics of the project had pannedthe staircaseas too large and basically useless since there was no way to enter the ballroom at the top.

Trump gave no reason for the changes, but a White House official said the president had considered comments from the National Capital Planning Commission and another oversight entity, the U.S. Commission of Fine Arts, whichapproved the projectearlier this year, as well as members of the public.

The official, who was not authorized to publicly discuss the ballroom design and spoke on the condition of anonymity, said that additional "refinements" had been made to the building's exterior and that lead architect Shalom Baranes would present them on Thursday.

The ballroom, now estimated to cost $400 million, has expanded in scope and price tag since Trump first announced the project last summer, citing a need for space other than a tent on the lawn to host important guests. Trumpdemolished the East Wingin October with little warning, and site preparation and underground work have been underway since then. Officials said above-ground construction would not start until April, at the earliest.

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Judge says Trump isn't the owner of the White House

The 12-member National Capital Planning Commission is chaired byWill Scharf,a top White House aide who has spoken in support of the ballroom addition. The president appoints three of the members, and Trump named two other White House officials along with Scharf.

Trump went ahead with the project before seeking input from the National Capital Planning Commission and the Commission of Fine Arts, which he reconstituted with allies and supporters.

The National Trust for Historic Preservation, a private nonprofit organization, sued after Trump demolished the East Wing last fall to build the ballroom addition — a space nearly twice as big as the mansion itself. Trump says it will be paid for with donations from wealthy people and corporations, including him, though public dollars are paying for underground bunkers and security upgrades on the White House grounds.

The trust sought a temporary halt to construction until Trump presented the project to both commissions and Congress for approval. Leon, the judge, agreed but said that his order would take effect in two weeks and that construction related to security would be allowed.

That work continued Wednesday as new photos by The Associated Press show the site of the former East Wing bustling with activity as cranes stretched toward the sky.

The judge, who was nominated to the bench by Republican President George W. Bush, wrote in his ruling: "The President of the United States is the steward of the White House for future generations of First Families. He is not, however, the owner!" He concluded that the National Trust for Historic Preservation was likely to succeed on the merits of its claims because "no statute comes close to giving the President the authority he claims to have."

Trump disputed that Congress must also approve his project.

"We built many things at the White House over the years. They don't get congressional approval," he told reporters in the Oval Office after the ruling.

Representatives for the House and Senate committees with jurisdiction over the project did not return telephone messages seeking comment. Congress is on spring break.

Trump’s White House ballroom is expected to get approved days after judge's ruling halting work

WASHINGTON (AP) — President Donald Trump'sWhite House ballroomis expected to win approval from a key agency on Thursd...
Is Trump citizenship order doomed? 6 takeaways from birthright debate

WASHINGTON −President Donald Trump'seffort to redefine who is an American did not get the quick rejection from theSupreme Courtthat manyexpected going into the April 1 oral arguments, but key conservative justices seemed skeptical of the administration's arguments for its legality.

USA TODAY

Every other court that has reviewed Trump's executive order severely restricting birthright citizenship ruled against it.

But the conservative justices, who have a 6-3 majority, also had probing questions for the other side, particularly about how to understand the court'slandmark 1898 rulingupholding the citizenship of a San Francisco-born man whose Chinese parents were barred from becoming citizens under the laws of the time.

People demonstrate outside the Supreme Court ahead of President Donald Trump's expected arrival on April 1, 2026 in Washington, DC. The Supreme Court is hearing oral arguments in Trump v. Barbara to determine if President Trump's executive order ending birthright citizenship is constitutional. According to historians and the Court, this is the first time a sitting president has attended oral arguments at the nation's highest court. Protester Michael Martinez demonstrates outside the Supreme Court on April 1, 2026 in Washington, DC. The Supreme Court is hearing oral arguments in Trump v. Barbara to determine if President Trump's executive order ending birthright citizenship is constitutional. Demonstrators rally outside the Supreme Court as the court hears Trump v. Barbara in Washington, DC, on April 1, 2026. People demonstrate outside the Supreme Court on April 1, 2026 in Washington, DC. The Supreme Court is hearing oral arguments in Trump v. Barbara to determine if President Trump's executive order ending birthright citizenship is constitutional. People demonstrate outside the Supreme Court ahead of President Donald Trump's expected arrival on April 1, 2026 in Washington, DC. The Supreme Court is hearing oral arguments in Trump v. Barbara to determine if President Trump's executive order ending birthright citizenship is constitutional. According to historians and the Court, this is the first time a sitting president has attended oral arguments at the nation's highest court. President Donald Trump arrives in his motorcade at the Supreme Court building to attend oral arguments on the legality of his administration's effort to limit birthright citizenship for the children of immigrants, in Washington, D.C., April 1, 2026. People demonstrate outside the U.S. Supreme Court ahead of U.S. President Donald Trump's expected arrival on April 1, 2026 in Washington, DC. The Supreme Court is hearing oral arguments in Trump v. Barbara to determine if President Trump's executive order ending birthright citizenship is constitutional. According to historians and the Court, this is the first time a sitting president has attended oral arguments at the nation's highest court. Demonstrators gather outside the U.S. Supreme Court building on the day the court is expected to hear oral arguments on the legality of the Trump administration's effort to limit birthright citizenship for the children of immigrants, in Washington, D.C., U.S., April 1, 2026. REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst

Protests outside Supreme Court as birthright fight reaches justices

Still, the court can rule against Trump without agreeing what that ruling meant. That would be a major blow to the president, who attended part of the arguments in ahistoric first for a sitting president.

Here are six takeaways from the arguments:

Demonstrators hold letters making up the slogan "Born in the USA = citizen!" outside the U.S. Supreme Court building as the court hears oral arguments on the legality of the Trump administration's effort to limit birthright citizenship for the children of immigrants, in Washington, D.C., on April 1, 2026.

Justices have more than one way to rule against Trump

The 14th Amendment grants automatic citizenship to "all persons born or naturalized in the United States, and subject to the jurisdiction thereof."

Trump argues that doesn't apply to the children of people who are in the country illegally or temporarily.

While the justices spent much time debating the original meaning of that clause and how to interpret the court's 1898 landmark ruling about it, there's another potential way for the court to decide the case.

A citizenship law passed in 1952 uses similar language that was well understood at the time to be different than Trump's interpretation of the 14th Amendment, meaning the court could reject Trump's order without settling every question about the amendment's intent or the 19th Century ruling.

Justice Brett Kavanaugh, a Trump appointee, noted that the court's usual practice is to resolve issues on a statutory – not constitutional – basis when possible.

But Cecillia Wang, the ACLU attorney representing the challengers, said it's important for the court to back its landmark 1898 ruling about birthright citizenship.

"I just think it would be prudent for the court to go ahead and reaffirm that," Wang said, "but, of course, we'd be happy to take a win on any ground."

For his part, Solicitor General John Sauer argued that if the lawmakers who wrote the 1952 law misunderstood the 14th Amendment, theSupreme Courtcan correct that at the same time by upholding Trump's order.

But if the court is going to rule against Trump, Sauer added, the administration would prefer to lose based on the 1952 law and not on the Constitution. If that happens, Congress could still revoke birthright citizenship by changing the law, although that's extremely unlikely without large Republican majorities in both chambers. That would surely draw another legal challenge, likely sending the constitutional question back to the high court.

Demonstrators rally outside the Supreme Court as the court hears Trump v. Barbara in Washington, DC, on April 1, 2026.

What does 'domiciled' mean?

A fierce point of contention is whether parents have to be "domiciled" in the United States, meaning that they are lawfully in the country and intend to remain, for their children to be considered citizens. The word "domiciled" appeared numerous times in the landmark 1898 decision upholding birthright citizenship but lawyers challenging Trump's order contend it isn't required for citizenship.

Sauer argued that domiciled means people who are lawfully in the country and have an intent to remain permanently. His position ruled out the children of undocumented immigrants or people visiting the country temporarily who wouldn't automatically be granted citizenship.

But Justice Amy Coney Barrett, a Trump appointee, suggested that definition of birthright citizenship could be difficult to apply.

"You're not going to know at the time of birth, for some people, whether they have the intent to stay or not," Barrett said.

Chief Justice John Roberts noted that word "domiciled" appeared 20 times in the court's 1898 decision that confirmed birthright citizenship for nearly everyone born in the country.

"Isn't it at least something to be concerned about, to say since it was discussed 20 different times, and it has that significant role in the opinion, that you can just dismiss it as irrelevant?" Roberts asked Wang, the ACLU attorney.

Wang said birthright citizenship came from English common law that didn't require parents to be domiciled.

Justice Neil Gorsuch, a Trump appointee, suggested the purpose of the word "domiciled" in the 1898 decision is uncertain.

"It seems to me it's a mess," he said. "Maybe you can persuade me otherwise."

Birth tourism: Justices say Trump's policy concerns are irrelevant

Trump has hammered away at "birth tourism" – the practice of pregnant women coming to the United States to give birth so their babies will be citizens – as a main justification for curtailing birthright citizenship.

"It has spawned a sprawling industry of birth tourism as uncounted thousands of foreigners from potentially hostile nations have flocked to give birth in the United States in recent decades, creating a whole generation of American citizens abroad with no meaningful ties to the United States," Sauer told the court.

But the extent of birth tourism – and its threat to national security – is hotly contested. Estimates range from a "marginal" 2,000 babies a year to disputed allegations of100,000 per year during a 15-year span.

Pressed on the statistics by Roberts, Sauer acknowledged it's unclear how common the practice is.

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"No one knows for sure," Sauer responded.

More:USA Happy Baby, birth tourism and a blockbuster Supreme Court case

Regardless of its impact, Roberts made the point that policy considerations "have no impact on the legal analysis before us."

Kavanaugh, another conservative justice whose vote is often key to decisions, made the same point about the administration's complaint that most countries do not have birthright citizenship.

"You've mentioned several times the practices of other countries, and that obviously, as a policy matter, supports what you're arguing here," Kavanaugh told Sauer. "But obviously we try to interpret American law with American precedent, based on American history."

Demonstrators rally outside the US Supreme Court as the court hears Trump v. Barbara in Washington, DC, on April 1, 2026. The court is reviewing a lower court's rejection of Trump̢۪s argument that children of parents who are in the country illegally or temporarily are not entitled to citizenship.

Some conservatives press Trump administration's argument

Some of the court's conservative justices appeared concerned with the breadth of the Trump administration's argument, or with the practicalities of how it may be applied.

Roberts, who was appointed by President George W. Bush, said examples the Trump administration used to argue that children born in the United States to unauthorized immigrants aren't automatically citizensstruck him "as very quirky."

The administration pointed to children of ambassadors and children of enemies invading the country, suggesting that because those children weren't historically understood to be entitled to citizenship, children of unauthorized immigrants aren't, either.

"I'm not quite sure how you can get to that big group from such tiny and sort of idiosyncratic examples," Roberts said.

Sauer said there is historical evidence to support understanding birthright citizenship as going to people who don't owe allegiance to any other country.

Barrett suggested that the Trump administration's definition of birthright citizenship – whether the parent of a child born in the United States is "domiciled" in the country, meaning has a permanent intent to stay here –is tricky to apply.

Sauer said, as a practical matter, the president's executive order looks at the legal immigration status of a child's parents, so it doesn't require courts to evaluate a parent's intent.

President Donald Trump greats Supreme Court Chief Justice John Roberts and Justices Elena Kagan, Brett Kavanaugh and Justice Amy Coney Barrett as he arrives for the State of the Union address during a Joint Session of Congress at the U.S. Capitol on February 24, 2026, in Washington, DC. Trump delivered his address days after the Supreme Court struck down the administration's tariff strategy and amid a U.S. military buildup in the Persian Gulf threatening Iran.

Liberals skeptical of Trump stance on birthright citizenship

It was already clear ahead of the arguments that the court's three liberal justices were highly skeptical of the Trump administration's stance on birthright citizenship.

Ina June dissenting opinionin a case dealing with the power of lower court judges to halt Trump's citizenship order nationwide, Justice Sonia Sotomayor wrote that the order is "patently unconstitutional under settled law." Justices Ketanji Brown Jackson and Elena Kagan joined that opinion.

None of the three Democratic-appointed justices has changed her mind, judging by the April 1 arguments.

Kagan, an appointee of President Barack Obama, said "everybody has believed" the rationale backing birthright citizenship"for a long, long time."

Jackson suggested that a win for the Trump administration could fundamentally destabilize citizenship, because Congress could continually upend birthright citizenship simply by redefining what it means to be "domiciled" in the United States. (The Trump administration says a parent's place of "domicile" is key to whether a child has birthright citizenship.)

Sotomayor argued that, if the Trump administration wins, it could startstripping people of the citizenship they already havethrough a new executive order, even if the order at issue only applied to future children born in the United States.

"The government could move to unnaturalize people who were born here of illegal residents," she said.

Sauer argued that there have long been disputes about who has birthright citizenship, and the Trump administration isn't asking to undo birthright citizenship going back in time.

President Donald Trump departs the Supreme Court building in his motorcade after attending oral arguments on the legality of his administration's effort to limit birthright citizenship for the children of immigrants, in Washington, D.C., on April 1, 2026.

In unprecedented move, Trump attends Supreme Court argument

Trump demonstrated the importance of the case to him by taking the unprecedented step for a sitting president of attending the April 1 argument in person.

Trump's motorcade arrived at the court about 9:40 a.m., after passing school groups touring the National Mall on his way from the White House to the court across the street from the Capitol. He entered through a back entrance.

Trump's presence wasn't acknowledged by the justices or lawyers, but a few quiet gasps echoed through the room when he entered. He sat in the front row of public seats behind the counsel tables.

President Donald Trump sits in a car as he departs the Supreme Court after attending oral arguments on the legality of his administration's effort to limit birthright citizenship for the children of immigrants, in Washington, D.C., on April 1, 2026.

Trump left the argument after Sauer's main presentation ended, after a little more than an hour.

"We are the only Country in the World STUPID enough to allow "Birthright" Citizenship!"Trump said on social mediaafter the argument ended.

According to the Pew Research Center, there are32 other countries that offer birthright citizenshipwith essentially the same terms as the United States, including Canada, Mexico and Brazil.

Contributing: Karissa Waddick

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:6 takeaways as Trump's citizenship order takes heat at Supreme Court

Is Trump citizenship order doomed? 6 takeaways from birthright debate

WASHINGTON −President Donald Trump'seffort to redefine who is an American did not get the quick rejection from theSup...
Alabama AD gives big opinion on SEC championship game's future: 'The ship has sailed'

TUSCALOOSA, AL – The boss ofAlabamaathletics believes the SEC championship game should be no more.

USA TODAY Sports

"I think the ship has sailed. It's run its course,"Alabamaathletic directorGreg Byrnesaid of the SEC championship game, during an exclusive interview with USA TODAY.

Folks, this is seismic.

Consider the source. This isn't some gadfly calling for change.

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We're talking about the veteran AD atAla-bama. TheCrimson Tidemade the Georgia Dome and then Mercedes-Benz Stadium their home away from home the past 30-plus years.

Since the SEC became the first conference to introduce a conference championship game in the 1992 season, no team has played for the championship or won more titles than the Crimson Tide.

Now, though, Byrne would prefer to proceed directly from the regular season to the CFP.

"It's a great event," Byrne said of the SEC championship game. "I don't like the idea of it going away, but I think it's reality, with an expanded playoff."

Byrne emphasized he's but one voice, but he must know he's a prominent voice. He's not alone in his opinion, either.

Two prominent athletic directors favor dumping SEC championship

Earlier this offseason, Texas athletic directorChris Del Conte indicated his preferenceto dump the SEC championship game.

Even before Byrne and Del Conte spoke out, SEC coaches started to question the utility of a game that used to be one of the big events on the college football calendar.

"(Coaches) don't want to be in it," Lane Kiffin said in 2024.

These are not whimsical musings from pundits and pot-stirrers.

When coaches don't think the juice of the SEC Championship is worth the squeeze, and when prominent athletic directors like Byrne and Del Conte think it's time to end the game, you must take seriously that conference championship games are an endangered species.

"Why have a conference championship game?" Del Conte said in February.

The obvious answer to that question: Money.

The SEC championship generates gobs of it.

How, then, to offset that lost revenue if the SEC championship went bye-bye?

Byrne's proposal: Expand the playoff.

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"If you're going to a 16-team playoff, you're adding more games," Byrne said. "I would imagine it would be pretty good content."

By pretty good, he also means revenue-generating.

Greg Byrne: Drop SEC Championship. Go to 16-team playoff

To be clear, the playoff isn't going to 16 teams — yet, anyway. The playoff will remain at 12 for at least the 2026 season, because the SEC and Big Ten could not come to terms on a playoff expansion plan.

The SEC, ACC and Big 12 favored a proposal to expand the playoff to 16 teams, using a 5+11 format. The Big Ten stood in persistent opposition while uncorking a variety of other plans, the latest of which revolve around 24 teams.

Some SEC coaches, like Tennessee's Josh Heupel and Georgia's Kirby Smart, havevoiced interest in 24 teams.

At Alabama, Byrne continues to favor 16.

"I think we need to pick a lane," he said. "We were headed for 16, and then there seemed to be pressure for 24. So, as soon as we get to 24, I guess you could say, 'Well, we better go to 48.' I mean, at some point, we have to pick a lane."

Byrne's lane: Sixteen-team playoff. No SEC championship game. Start the playoff sooner. Conclude the playoff sooner.

Byrne's preference for a 16-team playoff would include an automatic bid awarded to each of the Power Four conferences, plus a Group of Six auto bid, and then 11 at-large bids.

How would the SEC's automatic bid be decided if the conference championship went away? Byrne's suggestion: Award the bid to the first-place team in the standings, with tiebreaker protocol used if necessary.

"The top teams in the SEC are going to get in," Byrne said, whether via automatic bid or at-large selection.

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SEC Championship built within a bygone era, before the playoff existed

Conference championship games weren't built for this era. Former SEC commissioner Roy Kramer launched the conference championship and revolutionized the first weekend in December within a bygone ecosystem.

No playoff existed back then. The conference championship became a way to create a prize (and more exposure and revenue) between the end of the regular season and bowl games. Other conferences eventually followed the SEC's lead.

After the arrival of the BCS era and then the four-team playoff, conference championship games served as an important data point for postseason selection.

Once the playoff grew to 12 teams, the SEC championship game surrendered some clout. Consider last season. Georgia beat Alabama 28-7 on Dec. 6 in Atlanta. No sooner had the game ended than all focus shifted to the playoff — in particular, whether Alabama's loss would cost it a playoff spot, even as other SEC teams not in the game enjoyed firm footing for qualification.

"There was some sweating," Byrne said. "We were puckered up, Saturday night and into Sunday."

As it turned out, neither Georgia nor Alabama budged even one spot in the CFP rankings that came out the next day. Georgia took home an SEC trophy, but, otherwise, it was as if the game never happened.

A crowd of 77,247 turned out that December day in Atlanta, but the energy inside the building paled in comparison to the environment a month later, when Indiana fans turned Atlanta into their personal play pen, and the Hoosiers routed Oregon in a playoff game.

If you attended both games, you couldn't help but wonder if one of those games might be headed toward extinction. Hint: It's not the playoff game. Conference championship games are living on borrowed time.

Blake Toppmeyeris the USA TODAY Network's senior national college football columnist. Email him atBToppmeyer@gannett.comand follow him on X@btoppmeyer.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Time to end SEC championship game in football? Alabama boss says yes

Alabama AD gives big opinion on SEC championship game's future: 'The ship has sailed'

TUSCALOOSA, AL – The boss ofAlabamaathletics believes the SEC championship game should be no more. "I thi...

 

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