Let two integers $L\leq N$, a sequence of $L+1$ distinct real numbers $\alpha_0,\dots,\alpha_L$, and integers $k_0,\dots,k_L\in\mathbb N$ such that $N=L+\sum_{i=0}^Lk_i$.
I noticed that the two following results, both in the field of polynomial interpolation, involve Vandermonde matrices, or their generalization known as confluent Vandermonde matrices (better explained here if you have access):
Generalized Hermite Interpolation solves the following linear system over polynomials $P\in\mathbb R_N[X]$ : $$\forall i=0\dots L,\quad \forall j=0\dots k_i,\quad \frac1{j!}P^{(j)}(\alpha_i)=a_i^{(j)}$$ for given target values $\{a_i^{(j)}\}_{i=0\dots L,\; j=0\dots k_i}$. When expressed in the canonical basis $(1,X,\dots,X^N)$, this system is represented by the confluent Vandermonde matrix $V(\alpha_0,\dots,\alpha_L,k_0,\dots,k_L)$.
When studying the theory of splines, I came across the following Proposition: the family of polynomials $$\Big\{\binom{N}{j} (X+\alpha_i)^{N-j}\Big\}_{i=0\dots L,\; j=0\dots k_i}$$ is always free (and thus, a basis of $\mathbb R_N[X]$). Indeed, when expressed in the basis $(X^N,\dots,\binom{N}{k}X^{N-k},\dots,1)$, this family is again represented by the confluent Vandermonde matrix $V(\alpha_0,\dots,\alpha_L,k_0,\dots,k_L).$
My question is : is there a deeper, algebraic (coordinate free) relation between the two results ? For example : could we prove the second proposition (show that the given family of polynomials is always free) simply by casting it into some form of generalized Hermite interpolation problem ? Or is the similarity between the two results "just by chance", simply because Vandermonde matrices are everywhere ?
NOTE: just to make explicit the easier instantiation of these problems: When $k_i=0$ for all $i$, we recover classic (Legendre) polynomial interpolation ($\forall i,P(\alpha_i)=a_i$), classic Vandermonde matrices, and the family involved in the second proposition is simply $\{(X+\alpha_i)^N\}_{i=0\dots N}$.