Constitution Breakdown #2: Rep. Sharice Davids
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This is the 99% invisible breakdown of the Constitution.
I'm Roman Mars.
And I'm Elizabeth Chapp.
Today we're covering Article 1 of the Constitution, which established the legislative branch of the federal government.
And our guest for our discussion is a member of the U.S.
House of Representatives, Cherise Davids.
Representative Davids has served Kansas's third congressional district since 2019.
She is one of the first two Native American women elected to the United States Congress, along with Deb Holland from New Mexico, who was elected in the same year.
She was raised by a single mother.
She is a first-generation college student.
She put herself through school.
She eventually graduated from Cornell Law School.
When people learn about her, they can't help but mention that she was a professional, promising MMA fighter for a short period of time.
I can't seem to resist it either.
It's awesome.
If I was invited to a party with everyone in the House of Representatives, I would make a B line to Representative Davids and talk about infrastructure with her all night long.
She's very into infrastructure.
And it turns out she's extremely into the processes and procedures of getting things done in Congress, the hidden aspects of Article I.
That's right.
And that's one of the reasons why we invited her as our book club guest.
Representative Cherise Davids, thank you so much for being on the 99% Invisible Breakdown of the Constitution.
Thank you for having me.
So we're covering Article 1 of the Constitution, and we're kind of dividing our discussion roughly into two parts, with today's discussion centering on the first half of Article 1.
So Elizabeth Joe, do you want to give us a summary of Article 1?
What is it all about?
Sure.
Here goes.
Article 1 is all about Congress.
The most important part is right at the beginning.
And Section 1 says, all legislative powers herein granted shall be vested in a Congress of the United States, which shall consist of a Senate and House of Representatives.
So basically, this first part of Article 1 gives or vests the federal government's lawmaking power to a representative body of two houses, the House and the Senate.
And the herein granted part of Section 1 means that Congress can only use power that is specifically specifically given to it in the Constitution.
So that's not like, say, the state legislatures of California or Kansas.
And the first couple of sections establish the fundamentals.
What are the qualifications for a member of the House?
Who can be a senator?
How can they be elected?
Now, who sets the rules that govern Congress?
Congress does.
Article 1 is also very clear about how lawmaking works.
Our national bicameral legislature, that's the House and the Senate, is supposed to draft bills and then present these bills to the President for their approval or veto.
Now, the big part of Congress's authority comes from Section 8, and those are the powers that Congress has.
Broad but specific powers in Article 1, like the power to spend money, to tax, and to regulate interstate commerce.
So, the purpose of Article I is both to recognize the enormous power of Congress, but at the same time to reflect the concerns of the founders that there be clear limits on what a national legislative body can do.
So, for most people, I think the words Article I don't have much significance in their daily lives, but it really is the how and the why of Congress.
And many of the things folks might be reading about today, from the massive increase in funding for ICE or the freezing of federal money for cancer research or foreign aid, these are happening not just because President Trump wanted them to happen, but because of the actions or inactions of Congress itself.
That's the short summary.
So, Representative Davis, like you've been serving Kansas's third congressional district since 2019.
And I'm so curious.
So, when you get elected, do you read and scrutinize Article 1 in a different way?
Because, like, James Madison never wrote about my job, but your employee manual was written on stretched animal skin 250 years ago.
So,
when you first got elected, how did the Constitution change for you?
That's a great question.
You know, I don't know what it's like for people who aren't lawyers when they come to Congress.
But the first time I really thought about the impact of the Constitution, not just Article I, but like as a whole document, was both when I was in law school and when I was practicing law, because I practiced law at the intersection of federal Indian law and corporate transactional and financing.
The most common of intersections.
That's right.
I mean, there's at least 20 of us.
No, just kidding.
And now they're actually, when I first was, when I was a baby lawyer, I think there weren't as many people practicing at that intersection, but there definitely are more now.
But the reason I say that I was already thinking a bit about that is because Congress has plenary power over the relationship between tribal governments and the federal government.
And that's part of the interstate commerce clause,
or sometimes what they call the Indian Commerce Clause.
But when I got elected, even though I had already spent so much time thinking about Congress's powers, which powers have been vested in Congress, what was retained by the states, what carries over when it comes to tribes and federally recognized tribes and the federal government, it did definitely take on a new meaning when I started this job because, well, one, just personally, as a Native American in this country, who I'm ho-chunked from Wisconsin, which is a federally recognized tribe, it meant that my own personal relationship to
my tribe and the
kind of like my relationship to all of Indian country was different.
And
so there was like a personal thing.
And then there's just the impact of knowing that, like, you know, for each of the members, we each represent,
you know, somewhere around 700,000 people, a little more in some places, a little less in others.
And most people are not going to be familiar with Article I.
Most people are not going to be familiar with like federalism and states, you know, states' rights and the delineation of those things.
And so,
yeah, it, I mean, it really did take on
a whole different meaning because not only was I doing doing the tasks, as you said, that are laid out,
you know, meeting the qualification, but then actually like performing the tasks of a member of Congress, I'm also like, I'm the person who has to be most responsible in all of the Kansas III for making sure that I'm adhering to the things that are in the Constitution.
I mean, that's such an interesting point because, you know, when you look at the lawmaking part of Article 1, it seems pretty straightforward, right?
It's just the House and the Senate get together and they pass something and then the president decides to do something.
That's right.
But what I'd love to know is, you know, what's a common misconception do you think people have?
Like, there's probably a lot there that's not mentioned in the Constitution, right?
So, what is it that we should know about that's actually hard or unknown about lawmaking?
I mean, one of the things, and actually, I was just
mentioning this to someone on my team.
I was like, oh, I wonder if it's going to come up my view on, on,
you know, when people are running for president
or are actually our sitting president, often the president or presidential candidates will say something to the effect of,
when I pass this law, when I wrote this law, I'm going to pass a law that does X.
Like usually, you know, when they're making campaign promises, they'll say, I'm going to pass a law that does X.
And it's like,
I mean, you'll sign it.
But it's actually the Congress and the Senate that pass the laws.
It takes effect because the president signs it.
And it, you know, it is, they're bills, and then they become a law once the president signs it.
But
it really is like
a much longer negotiation process in the House and then in the Senate.
And then when the two have to come together and go into conference, is what it's called.
When the two pass bills that are substantially similar, but not exactly the same, and they have to work out the differences.
I just think that one, there's a lot more steps than most people probably imagine.
And then, because there's nothing in here about committees, you know, there are committees of jurisdiction for each piece of legislation.
And
so there's like layers much deeper than the broad parameters that are set out by the Constitution.
And the President
doesn't write the legislation that the Congress does.
Yeah, yeah.
So when you first start,
how do you learn how to do that?
What is the process like?
Is there like a manual someone hands you on your first day?
Not exactly, but there is, I'd say, two somewhat in-depth.
It's weird to say in-depth because everything moves so quickly, but we have two orientations, basically.
There's an orientation.
I guess there's three.
One is optional.
I guess they're all optional technically, but you know, the
Congressional Research Service is, it's part of the Library of Congress, and they are this like
amazing wealth of expertise.
There are experts on
all matters that the Congress might take up or look at, and they host an orientation.
for members of Congress who are just starting.
I'm not sure what happens on the Senate side, but for the House, the Congressional Research Service hosts an orientation, and they go over all kinds of stuff
with us.
They'll go over various powers.
They go over the fact that, you know, tax policy has to originate in the House.
They go over those types of things.
And then they also help, depending on which committee assignments you are hoping to get, they'll help with like jurisdictional.
Is this okay how nerdy I'm getting?
I feel like that's okay.
This is exactly what is
at this moment.
Yeah.
Yeah.
That's one of them.
So the Congressional Research Service hosts something that really does help with some of the substantive policy and committee work that we might be doing.
There's also an orientation that happens like in the building at the house.
And some of it is, you know, it's a federal job.
So some of it is like, here's your laptop, here's your cell phone, sign the paper.
That's not in the Constitution.
I know, I know.
And some and some of it is even like, you know, we do our trainings.
There's an ethics training and then, you know, like a office policy, making sure people aren't harassing each other type of training.
So there's all these different things that go into making sure that
we're trained up sufficiently, including like you go down to the House floor and they're like, this is your voting card.
Here's how you use the machine.
But I will say.
Just so you guys know, when someone comes in in a special election, they don't get any of that.
Oh.
so they just
fly by the side.
I mean,
it's like an on-the-job training for at least a portion of it, because usually when a special election happens, the person gets sworn in like
a lot of times, like literally in the middle of a vote series.
So it'll be like, we have a procedural vote, and then the person gets sworn in, and then debate starts on a piece of legislation.
And then later that day, they'll have to come in and vote.
Do you see them just wandering around aimlessly on the House floor and just try to help them out?
You know,
Congress is filled with just like humans.
So, a lot of times, what happens is it's like a new kid being at school.
Yeah.
So, like, someone comes in, and everybody's all like, oh, congratulations.
And actually, people are coming up, just so you guys know, from both sides of the aisle to congratulate someone when they've come in
in a special election.
And it's just a lot more like volume and chaos at the very beginning of a session of Congress.
So when we're all coming in for the first time or it's the new session, we're all going around and congratulating all of our new colleagues and stuff.
It doesn't mean we're not going to like argue and fight about stuff later, but.
Yeah.
So you mentioned the formal steps about how to get acclimated as a member of the House.
But what about that sort of informal stuff?
How does one figure that out when you're newly elected?
Like who is the person to talk to and you need to get your voice heard in a committee?
How does that work?
Yeah.
I can tell you how I did it.
A lot of it was really looking around and seeing who are the more senior members that are doing the things that I'm interested in.
And so I can tell you when I first came to Congress, Nancy Pelosi was elevated to speaker in my first term, re-elected as speaker, I should say.
And then Stenny Hoyer was our majority leader.
And so he was the person who ran the floor.
So the majority leader is the person who's
in charge of the House floor, which means they set the calendar.
So, you know, if you can go to congress.gov and see what is the legislative calendar for 2025, and then at the beginning of 2026, the majority leader, and that's true for either side of the aisle, the majority leader will set the calendar for the whole calendar year.
They also determine and negotiate with the majority and the minority sides negotiate these things, Which bill, like, how many bills,
and this is done in ratios, like, how many bills are going to be put on the suspension calendar, which means that they don't go through
the regular rules committee process.
Then there are bills that are subject to a rule, and we vote and pass what are the parameters of that rule.
The majority leader is the office is in charge of all of that.
Like, that's their, that's within their purview.
And so I asked Stenny Hoyer and his team, his floor staff, and there's a floor director.
I asked them all kinds of questions like,
you know, what is a discharge petition?
How many people need to sign it?
How do we decide if something is on suspension or subject to a rule?
And usually whoever's the majority leader and the staff in that office are kind of the experts on literally like the rules of the floor.
And so, you know,
there's the big picture constitution.
We originate tax legislation.
And then there's the,
okay, but what month are we going to handle that?
How many, like how many,
how many bills related to tax are we going to do?
When are they going to actually come to the floor?
And how long is it going to take to get through the Ways and Means Committee, then the Rules Committee, and then come to the floor?
So, I literally thought that seems really interesting.
So, I went and asked, I went and asked the people that I could tell were working on that.
And then I did a lot of asking, like, hey, I'm interested in like on transportation and infrastructure.
I'm on
I'm going to try to dig into the most nerdy thing, if that's okay.
Yeah, absolutely.
Please, transportation and infrastructure has jurisdiction over the federal over federal buildings.
Federal buildings actually make up quite a bit of,
if you look at emissions,
carbon emissions, all buildings, any kind of building, generally is responsible.
That's like
a pretty decent-sized percentage of carbon emissions in our country.
The federal government has a ton of inventory of federal buildings
that we own.
And the building codes for federal buildings
would any kind of building codes for federally owned buildings would come under the jurisdiction of the Transportation and Infrastructure Committee because we have a subcommittee that
addresses that emergency management, the economic development agency, which is in the Department of Commerce.
So there's like this hodgepodge of things
in there.
And I was very interested in that.
So I was like, who, once I found out that TNI, because I sit on that committee, has jurisdiction over that, I was like, oh, well, who do I talk to?
And
so we had a couple of experts come in.
I often reach out to the Congressional Research Service to come and do briefings to help me and the people on my team understand
how did we get to the policy place we're at right now and what are some of the proposals that have come up that either never got voted on or because we might be able to find that sort of thing out or did get voted on and just didn't get adopted.
So So, there's a bunch of different avenues.
You can ask the committee staff, and usually, committee staff are there for they kind of have a longer tenure of service on the hill.
And they're usually like substantive experts.
You can ask other members who've been there for a little while.
You can ask,
hopefully, your own team will be able to help you figure some of that stuff out.
You can ask the experts at home.
So, for transportation and infrastructure, Kansas, the Kansas City metro area, like we have the second largest rail hub in the country.
The Kansas and Missouri meet here.
We have a number of major highways that intersect here.
So there's just,
there's a lot of expertise at home in each member's district.
Did that answer the question?
I'm sorry.
I think you asked, how do we get, how do I, how do I get up to speed on that stuff?
I mean, it absolutely does, but it points to another part of the Constitution that I actually want to highlight, which is like in Article 1, Section 5, there's this phrase that says, each house may determine the rules of its proceedings, which is a very short,
you know, like
section of
a sentence of which so much of what you just said is like embedded in those few words that these proceedings are extremely complicated.
They can be dry to sum.
I find them kind of invigorating.
It sounds like you kind of find them invigorating.
Could you just sort of explain why these procedures, why these things are set up in this way?
Do you feel the import of them when you're sort of navigating these different committees and things and jurisdictions?
Like their role is important.
Yeah, I mean, I do.
And
I feel like most members of Congress do,
even if I don't, I mean, we might not agree on a bunch of stuff, but when I'm interacting with my colleagues, I often do feel like the
magnitude of what we're doing
is pretty like apparent.
But I also, I mean, this is one of those things that I try to keep in mind.
If I ever think that what I'm doing
feels like something that's just kind of like perfunctory or whatever, then it's probably time to start looking at other stuff because,
like, something else to do, because
literally like every single thing the Congress does is important.
And there are some things that are less contentious, but doesn't make them less important.
There are some things that are less hot button, but they're not less important.
You know, I mentioned the suspension calendar, and sometimes people will say, oh, those are just suspension, suspension bills.
Other people who know how the Hill works and how the legislative process works,
like a suspension bill is going to pass.
You know, we're going to get more than two-thirds.
It requires two-thirds of the members to vote in favor of it.
If it's on the suspension calendar, it's because it's non-controversial
and a bunch of the things have been worked out.
And it's usually a lot of times it's like
addressing issues that we see in programs, but that doesn't mean it's not important.
Like they're all important.
Every single vote that a member of Congress takes is important, whether it's a procedural vote to like we have to, we basically vote on a procedural matter to just even be able to vote on the floor for a bill.
You know, so we're like voting on whether or not we're going to vote.
But, and it, and it might seem, you know, to someone who doesn't spend,
nor should they, like, doesn't spend their time thinking about every single little thing that Congress does.
But for those of us who are doing it, like every time I put my card in the reader to vote, I'm doing that on behalf of like over 700,000 people, you know?
So
whether I vote yes or no, even if it's a procedural vote, it matters because that's, that's literally the people's voice being heard or not in DC.
And so I think that a lot of people recognize the importance, like a lot of the people who are in the building, who are in the Capitol.
But it also sounds like what you're saying is that the key to getting things done in the House is being a procedure nerd, that you can't get things done without knowing procedures intimately.
Is that right?
Yeah.
I mean, and I think the interesting thing, I think, about the Congress is
the goal isn't always
to actually get a piece of legislation done in that term, even though
like ultimately that probably is the goal.
But
and I don't, I don't do a lot of this, but
you can often tell when something is meant for messaging and when something is meant to be a piece of substantive legislation.
And I say that not because, and this is not a, that's not a political party thing.
That's literally like sometimes
you could probably go back and look at any major piece of legislation,
getting the small business administration set up.
I think it were at like 52 years or something that that's been set up.
And it comes to mind because I got to go to the celebration because Dwight Eisenhower,
President Eisenhower, is the one who signed that piece of legislation.
And I bet we could go back into the congressional history and see multiple pieces of legislation that were introduced and
passed in the House or passed in the Senate.
They didn't make it through conference, like was initially introduced and only was in whichever committee at the time had jurisdiction.
And you can go through and you can see
the evolution and process of something major like a department or an agency getting set up.
I'm sure the same thing happened when the USDA came into being or the Department of Interior.
You know,
for the Bureau of Indian Affairs, that used to actually be situated in the Department of War.
And then when the Department of Interior was created, they moved over, they moved the Bureau of Indian Affairs or the BIA over into the Department of Interior, which was a major policy shift for the United States.
So there were pieces of legislation that were getting introduced.
I'm sure of it.
I can't say, I haven't done the research on which pieces, but I'm sure there were pieces of legislation getting introduced to try to figure out how is Congress going to
change the actual interaction between the federal government and federally recognized tribes now that the policy shift shift has been happening.
There was a political shift that turned into a policy shift that turned into a legislative shift.
Does that make sense?
It does.
It does.
Yeah, absolutely.
It's so fascinating.
But it points to one of the things that is in Article 1, which is the term limits.
House members are limited to just two years, which limits how much you can get done.
It means that when you're thinking about legislation, you might have to think about it as something that's going to happen past this term
because the House of Representatives were supposed to be subject to accountability with more frequent elections.
And the the Senate was somehow, you know, it was slightly different from that, held off to be less accountability.
And also didn't used to be directly elected.
Well, of course, yeah.
Which is an interesting it totally is an interesting change.
Can I share something about that?
Please.
Sure.
About the House.
So I do think this is something that I never would have thought about until I got to Congress, which is that
Congress, like you have to be elected.
In the Senate, you can be appointed.
Like a governor or a commission or something can, if there's a vacancy.
In the House,
no one can ever be appointed
to the House of Representatives.
And this concept of us being the closest to the people, you know, we have, because there are so many districts, but we have the smallest number in terms of constituency and population in each of our districts.
Because then with the Senate, they have two for,
I guess that makes like Wyoming.
Anyway,
yeah, so I guess there's some senators who represent less people than House members, but point being
that you like when
we say like the people's house, that is actually a thing that
my colleagues really feel.
And I can tell in conversation with people and it gets brought up a lot.
And it's something that
until I got there,
I don't even know if I ever would have noticed somebody saying the people's house.
I wouldn't have probably, I don't know if I would have thought about it in the way that when members of Congress are saying that, what they actually mean, which is like, we are the federal electeds who are the closest to the people.
And you cannot get into the House of Representatives without going through an election.
And
there is some, I do think there is something special about that, both because it means that there was enough people who were like, trusted you enough to be willing to check mark your name on the box, but also that it means that the accountability, you know, a senator can be, and I'm not, this is not to disparage senators at all, but it's like, you know, you can get into the, you can be a United States senator without ever having gone through an election,
which means that like you can get into the Senate and be making laws without ever having
had
the majority of the people that you're representing check mark your name and say, I trust this person to make decisions on my behalf.
And
I do think that's like,
so to the point about the accountability and the every two years, I do think
there's a level of importance and like investment that a bunch of House members really have in that.
Well, that having been said, I would imagine that the moment you enter the House for your term, you start thinking from day one about re-election, right?
And so, you know, all of this being true, being representing the people, you know, do you think in 2025, if we could rewrite Article 1 from scratch, would you want the length of a House member's term to be maybe just a bit longer?
Yeah, I mean, I have spent like some time kind of like,
you know,
turning that over in my head.
I
have felt since I started this job particularly that the structure that we have is is actually like pretty good.
I mean, you know,
there's no one right way to do anything.
If there was, we wouldn't even need to do all of this.
But the thing is, there's not a right way.
There's like some ways that are better than others.
And
I think that having the mixture of
representation by population, representation by state.
So the House is represented by population.
the Senate is represented by state.
We've got an executive whose job is to execute on the laws, but they have to be elected by,
I know we've got the Electoral College, but they have to be elected by the entire country.
That has a system,
there's a system there of
different levels of accountability.
I think the two-year term
and the six-year term,
like I can see
why that was put into the Constitution because,
you know,
it was a pushback against
monarchy, a tyrannical
monarchy.
And it's like, okay, so two years probably made sense when there were only, you know, I mean, when they were counting like 16 million people, when there were like 30 million people in the country and a certain number of states.
But as the country has grown,
I don't know if in this moment we would do a two-year term because the cycle feels so,
because
the consequence is that it almost feels like
there's no end or beginning.
It's literally just a cycle, an endless cycle of
politics and politicking and that sort of thing.
I can say that from the legislative perspective, I do think about
now, I mean, I'm in my fourth term now, so I do think about if there's something that if there are changes that we're trying to make that might be more substantive,
when you think about, and I'm
because I'm on transportation and infrastructure and it's really like my area of passion,
you know, like major infrastructure projects are usually, those are on like a 10-year timeframe.
Absolutely.
You know, right.
And so there's something really disjointed and ineffective about having people making decisions on two-year timeframes for projects that take 10 years to come to fruition.
And so
I think about ways that we can alleviate some of that disjointedness.
And some of it is like increasing pace of being able to get projects done.
So permitting reform would probably be like the most
salient example right now.
We've been talking about permitting reform since I got to, since,
maybe since my second term.
And I say we, meaning
me personally, me and my team, like
engaging in like substantive conversations about how do we,
how do we do permitting reform?
We need to, some of the regulatory
and legislative, you know, I'm putting this in air quotes, burdens or barriers exist because we don't want a lake catching on fire.
You know, like clean water, clean air, those things exist for a reason.
But they're, so much of our climate
and environmental policy is
so old that like we have technologies that are, that have completely alleviated some of the concerns that would have existed before and
slowed down a process.
But
you've got the federal government with their policies, you've got the state level government, and in some cases, you have local stuff.
And that's just on the environmental piece of permitting reform.
Then there's all the different touch points of
getting a project done.
And
because of that, I mean, it's complex, you know?
And if you think you're going to introduce a piece of legislation, get it through a committee, which like something with permitting reform would touch on like multiple committees, the Energy and Commerce Committee, Transportation and Infrastructure, probably some other one like USDA might be impact.
So there's all these different committees that come into play.
And then you have the whole House floor, so 435 members.
So if you think in two years, you're going to be able to get like
for the first time, introduce a piece of legislation, get it through the committees, get it through the floor just in the House, get it, like have the Senate take it up, go through their process with committees and getting it to the floor, and then go to conference and get all of that done in two years.
It's just like that, that's just not going to happen.
But what you can do is introduce legislation, get to work on it, have it in the committee.
People, you know, the negotiation process starts.
Maybe it makes it through committee the first time around or the second time around.
So when I think about like major policy changes, I think about how many terms do we think this would take in the House?
The Senate, luckily, because they're there for six years, like,
you know,
that's three terms.
So probably you can really build up some momentum with certain senators and you can build up momentum with House members who are likely to be around for
longer than one or two terms.
So, you're saying Article 1 is not designed for efficiency?
No, but I actually don't know if it should be.
I mean, this doesn't mean make things inefficient when it comes to federal programs and stuff.
If the federal government's doing it, it should be done well and it should be done efficiently.
But if we're going to make changes that impact literally every single person in this country,
I'm not sure if it's something that should sail through super quickly.
Should it take 10 years?
Probably not.
So it's not built for efficiency, but I'm not sure inefficiency is
caused by the constraints of the
Constitution so much as the
messiness of human negotiation.
Yeah.
You know, there are a lot of powers listed in the later sections,
but it's it's interesting to me that the power to impeach is like right there, like front and center.
Like it says, like, here's the House of Representatives.
What they do is impeach.
You know, like, it's like listed in the first section of their introduction.
And it makes me think of like, this is really,
a lot of the concern when they're writing this is the balance of powers.
Yeah, the checks and balances.
Do you read it that way, first of all?
And like, what do you think about the balance of powers and the current moment and how it's evolved over time?
It's so interesting because
while
the power to impeach is, I mean, it's, it's right there, there's not that many things that are like directly laid out.
It's like impeachment and post offices, you know, or like
impeachment, war, post offices, and taxes.
The list of specifics that are laid out in the Constitution, it's a pretty short list, but in some ways, it speaks to the import.
Like how important is it that impeachment is laid out?
To me,
it means that it's probably something that should be done very rarely and in the most egregious and like significant times.
And then it's the responsibility of the Senate to truly dig in and investigate and essentially perform the function of the, you know, the trial for an impeachment.
I think that because of the current like climate, it's the type of thing that it gets brought up like this, you know, like it gets brought up so quickly.
And whether it's the president or Supreme Court justices or other, you know, officers that can be impeached, just because something can be done doesn't mean that that is the that that's the most effective way to address an issue that is happening.
And I think that
I do think that
the fact fact that it's even mentioned in the Constitution to me means that it's of such great importance that it shouldn't be just thrown around really lightly, if that makes sense.
But maybe it would be nice if there was a little more of a direct correlation for the benefit of others that
Congress sets the rules and parameters and process for everything that we do.
Because impeachment is also, it's a whole process.
It's not like one vote,
which, which maybe is one of the misconceptions I should have.
That's right.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
It's
an interesting part of it.
Yeah.
And it's really weird to like the number of things that have happened in the Congress that I've been a part of since I got here is pretty wild.
Just, you know, I've participated in two
impeachments that like
went through the full process, the
process and procedure of an impeachment.
Yeah.
I mean, does it feel heavy when you're going through it?
Yeah.
One,
there's an oath.
Like you take an oath when you get sworn into office
to protect and defend
the Constitution and
of the United States against all enemies, foreign and domestic.
And so, you know, there's
there's there's a level of importance around that.
I grew up an Army Brat.
It was just me and my mom.
And then I have two little brothers.
They're eight and nine years younger than me.
So for like a lot of my formative years, it was just me and my mom.
And the president is also the commander in chief of the military.
Like, I don't think that impeachment is something that this is like a tool of last resort, in my opinion, you know, because,
you know, democracy doesn't mean that you agree with the outcome of all the elections.
Yeah.
In fact, it almost means the opposite.
Yeah, I mean, you know, I don't remember.
I think
I think at one of the state, like, I get to go to the State of the Union.
Like, that's crazy.
Like, cool, you know.
But one of the things that I'm pretty sure President Biden said during one of the State of the Union addresses that I went to was that you don't get to love our country just when the person you wanted to win wins.
Like, we gotta, we, you know, we gotta have respect and love for our country regardless of the outcome.
And we're lucky in the United States because we get to, if the government's doing something
you don't agree with or you don't like or you don't, you want it to be different, you can do something about it.
So on our first episode of the show, we talked to Nicole Hannah Jones a lot about the preamble, so we the people.
And one of the things we talked about a lot was we the people didn't include her when it was written because she was black.
But she, you know, is still engages with the open-ended promise of the Constitution.
And so it's pretty interesting that slaves and slavery are not mentioned in the Constitution, even though a lot of it is written around slavery.
But one of the things that struck me in Article 1 is that Indians are explicitly named in Article I as people excluded from being counted in the census to determine representation.
So obviously, you are here, you are a U.S.
Representative, times have changed.
But when you read the Constitution, how do you take that mention?
And like, how do you sort of incorporate that into how you operate as a representative?
Well, I think, so a couple of things.
I think probably
because
of,
again, like growing up as an Army brat, you know, and it wasn't just my mom that was in the Army.
It was
my grandfather.
I have like,
there's actually like so many people from my tribe who have served in the military and various branches.
And so I think
because of
just like my experience growing up, I kind of just always thought of our country as a work in progress.
Like I've just kind of always thought like, well, yeah, when the country first started, like these.
like this is all the
stuff that I'm glad we were able to change, you know?
I got elected less than 100 years after Native people were recognized as citizens of this country.
So, because that happened in 2024, because in 1924, in June of 1924, is when the Indian Citizenship Act passed.
And so, I think that,
you know, in my mind, it's kind of, it was kind of like, oh, and it's not a natural progression.
It's a progression, but it's not a natural progression.
It's one that has to be, it has to be cultivated and grown and supported and
fought for depending on depending on what types of progress we're talking about.
And so to me, it's like, you know, I mean, it kind of feels like,
you know, when I went to law school, so I got into Cornell, people are always like, how do, like, how, how'd you choose Cornell?
And I'm like, well, they let me in.
Like,
that's how I chose it.
Yeah.
But I remember feeling really insecure about going.
I'm like, oh, I'm going to go to the East Coast.
I'm going to be all Kansas and New York.
And then I was like, oh, I'm not even even in a city.
Like I'm in Ithaca, which is like a college town.
And then
I remember just feeling really insecure about the fact that like all, I was like, all these people that are going to be there went, probably went to private schools and they, you know, like their parents are lawyers or just like like went to private schools for.
like all of their lives and to some kind of big wig private college or university or whatever.
So I had all these thoughts in my head.
And then I also was like, but we're in the same place now.
So what does it matter?
Like, you know, we're in the same place now.
And, and it's not to say that the beginning part of this country doesn't matter.
It matters a lot, but we're in the same place now.
Like that, this is the place we're in now.
You know, 105 years ago, I wouldn't have been even considered an American.
And now I'm in Congress.
And all I can do is make sure to do as much with the time and the place that we're at right now as I can.
And,
you know, and I think there's a lot of us in this country who are doing that.
Well, Representative Davids, thank you so much for taking the time to talk to us.
Thank you so much.
It was wonderful.
Yeah.
Oh my God.
This is like one of the more fun things I've done in like a while.
It was delightful.
I really, really appreciate it.
Great.
Thanks.
We have more about an Article I power that's vested in Congress, but not explicitly listed by name.
I'm talking about tariffs, people.
Tariffs.
Strap in after this.
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Each month after our book club breakdown section with our guest, Elizabeth is going to use constitutional law to explain something in the news.
So it is Tuesday, September 23rd, 10.40 a.m.
as we are recording this.
What are we going to be talking about today?
All right, Roman, today let's start with the opening lines of a novel.
So here goes.
Ours is essentially a tragic age, so we refuse to take it tragically.
The cataclysm has happened.
We are among the ruins.
We start to build up new little habits, to have new little hopes.
So Roman, are you familiar with the novel Lady Chatterley's Lover?
No.
Okay.
Well, if you've never read it, Lady Chatterley's Lover is a novel written by the British author David Herbert Lawrence in 1928.
D.H.
Lawrence.
D.H.
Lawrence, right.
And the plot revolves around an affair between an upper-class woman, Lady Chatterley, and a working-class man, Oliver Miller's, her gamekeeper.
So, despite the abstract nature of the beginning of the novel, it's a very sexually explicit novel.
Of the things I know, that's what I know.
Right.
And it's controversial for that explicitness.
Lady Chatterly's lover was subjected to bans in different countries for being indecent or obscene.
And in fact, British readers could not actually buy the novel legally until 1960, at which point it became a bestseller and remains an influential work of literature.
And it also became the subject of heated debate on the floor of the U.S.
Senate in March of 1930.
The question was, how obscene was this book?
And in the eyes of some senators, very.
In fact, one senator stood on the Senate floor and stated that Lady Chatterley's lover was so disgusting, so dirty, and vile that the reading of one page was enough for me.
And the debate wasn't just about D.H.
Lawrence's novel.
The senator targeted all so-called obscene books.
He said, I want them all kept out.
I want to say to the senators now that a father of a child would never want the child to see this obscene matter.
They are disgusting.
They are beastly, beastly.
You see, the Senate was debating a proposed change to existing law, and federal law at the time allowed customs officials to ban literature they considered indecent or obscene from entering the country.
Senator Bronson Cutting from New Mexico supported an amendment to eliminate the censorship in the name of free speech.
You know, he argued that censors trampled on freedom of thought.
And as Senator Cutting observed, you could buy plenty of racy literature at your local stores.
He listed titles like Joy Stories, Paris Nights, Hot Dog, Hot Lines for Flaming Youth, Jim Jam Gems, and Whiz Bang.
But Cutting's opponent wasn't having it.
He said, if I were a customs inspector, this obscene literature would only be admitted over my dead body.
I'd rather have a child of mine use opium than read these books.
The debate packed the Senate galleries and titillated journalists, and the attempt to lift the censorship of this obscene literature failed.
Indecent literature imported into the country would continue to be seized.
The winner of the debate, the senator who said Lady Chatterley's lover was beastly, his name was Reed Smoot, Senator from Utah.
And Smoot's performance was so widely covered that it generated headlines like Smoot Smites Smut.
And in 1931, Ogden Nash mocked the senator with this poem Senator Smoot is an institute not to be bribed with pelf.
He guards our homes from erotic tomes by reading them all himself.
Smite, smoot, smut for ute.
They're smuggling smut from Balt to butte.
Strongest and sternest of your sex, scatter the scoundrels from can to mex.
The debate was a colorful highlight of an otherwise pretty boring subject.
The censorship amendment was part of a larger bill that had started in the House Ways and Means Committee, chaired by Representative Willis Hawley of Oregon.
That bill, originally intended to help farmers, eventually levied tariffs on more than 20,000 imported goods by an average of 20%.
Now, economists generally agree that the bill, signed into law by President Herbert Hoover in June of 1930, made the conditions of the Great Depression even worse.
The law would come to be remembered not as the Tariff Act of 1930, but the Smoot-Hawley Act.
You know, the question the teacher asked in the 1986 film Ferris Fueler's Day Off.
You remember that?
I do.
Yeah.
Where he says, anyone, anyone, anyone?
The tariff bill?
Anyone?
Rates are lowered.
Raised tariffs.
Right.
Anyone?
Raised tariffs.
Well, Smoot-Hawley is back in the news because President Trump, like Senator Smoot, is very fond of tariffs.
So Trump has decided to impose lots of them.
But can Trump impose these tariffs in the same way?
Is he allowed to do that?
Yeah, that's a good question.
What does the Constitution say about this?
Well, tariffs aren't actually in the Constitution, but remember, tariffs are taxes on imported goods.
And Article I of the Constitution gives Congress the power to lay and collect taxes, duties, imposts, and excises.
And Article I also gives Congress the power to regulate commerce with foreign nations.
So the framers were very explicit about giving Congress the specific power to impose tariffs, which are taxes, on goods.
And that power was extremely important during the 18th and 19th centuries because tariffs were the main source of revenue for the federal government.
But tariffs can be a kind of unpredictable source of federal funding.
They go up, they go down, and if tariff revenues decline, that means fiscal instability for the federal government.
And that's part of the reason why Congress imposed the first income tax in 1862.
And it's the ratification of the 16th Amendment in 1913 that ultimately gives Congress the constitutional power to impose a nationwide income tax.
And from that point forward, it's income tax, not tariffs, that becomes the main basis of funding the federal government.
But tariffs didn't disappear completely.
Like in 1930, when a Republican majority Congress tried to protect agricultural interests and then many other interests by passing the Smoot-Hawley Act.
And of course, tariffs aren't just a means of raising revenue, right?
They're also economic policy.
And that's the main reason tariffs exist today, not to make money, but to be part of how the United States has trade relations with the rest of the world.
And the Smoot-Hawley Act was just bad economic policy.
It was an extremely protectionist law.
As a result of the Smoot-Hawley Act, other countries imposed their own retaliatory tariffs on American goods.
And by 1932, U.S.
exports and imports fell by almost 70%, and both Smoot and Hawley were voted out of office.
Even though the Smoot-Hawley Act was a terrible policy, it was a straightforward use of Congress's power.
The law passed a set of tariffs and specified tariffs in something like 95 pages of tariff schedules.
So, if this is Congress's job, how is it the president gets involved in this?
Like, that's what's happening right now.
So, there are two developments that are really useful to know as a background.
Since tariffs today really serve the purpose of global economic policy, that's a really complex job just for Congress to do.
And one response is Congress creating things like the nonpartisan International Trade Commission in 1916.
Another response is to give some of its own authority through legislation to the President.
So what this means is that Congress is giving the President limited powers to impose or suspend tariffs through international agreements with other countries.
Now, the second important development to understand is the use of emergency powers by the president.
So, let's talk about the 1917 Trading with the Enemy Act, okay?
So that law allowed the president to decide whether to impose certain kinds of economic penalties on foreign transactions if the president declares that there's a national emergency.
So, this act, the Trading with the Enemy Act, is a significant expansion of presidential power.
It was used by many presidents in the post-World War II era.
So, for instance, President Truman relied on the act to impose economic sanctions on North Korea and China in 1950.
But it was Nixon's use of the act in the 1970s that eventually causes a problem.
It's always Nixon.
It's talking about Nixon, right?
So in 1972, Nixon used the law to impose a 10% tariff on all imported goods as part of a set of economic measures to fight inflation.
It's the 1970s, there's high inflation, there's a potential currency crisis in the United States.
And Nixon's use of the Trading with the Enemies Act to impose these tariffs is challenged in court, but eventually upheld.
But that raises a question: who really has the tariff power?
Is it the President or Congress?
And it's that legal fight that leads Congress to reform the emergency powers available to the President.
And one of the things Congress does is in 1977, they pass a law called the International Emergency Economic Powers Act, also known as IEPA.
That's a terrible name, but I think we're going to have to use it.
Okay.
IIPA.
Okay, so what does IEPA do?
Well, with IIPA, Congress is still granting some of its authority to the President.
But the law says two things important to understand what's happening now.
First, the law says that the President of the United States can use IIPA to deal with any unusual and extraordinary threat.
coming from outside of the country, and that can be a national security threat, a foreign policy threat, or even an economic threat, so long as the president declares a national emergency.
The second thing to keep in mind is that if the president declares a national emergency, one of the things the president is allowed to do under IEPA is to regulate importation or exportation of goods.
So with IIPA, Congress is trying to be much more specific and limiting in the kind of power it's giving to the president.
Since 1977, presidents of both parties have relied on IIPA dozens of times.
And so, in the past, they've done things like ban transactions with a specific country or to freeze assets with a foreign entity because there's some declared national emergency.
And so, even though IPA is considered an attempt by Congress to rein in presidential power, it's still an example of Congress trying to give the president some emergency authority.
So, part of the problem is that IIPA doesn't really define what a national emergency is, right?
Totally.
Or what an unusual and extraordinary threat to national security or foreign policy is.
Well, one way to curb that is that federal law also allows Congress to terminate an emergency through a joint resolution, even if the president doesn't agree.
But on the other hand, Congress has never once terminated an emergency declaration under IIPA against the wishes of a president.
Trevor Burrus: So is Trump relying on IEPA to do the tariffs that he's imposing right now?
So a lot of the tariffs do fall under IEPA.
So as soon as Trump started his second term, he issues a series of executive orders on tariffs, a lot of tariffs.
You might have heard about tariffs on specific industries like steel and aluminum, but we're going to put those aside for now.
The ones we want to talk about today fall into two types.
First, there are the so-called trafficking tariffs.
Trump announced these by executive order on February 1st.
And these are tariffs imposed on products from Canada, Mexico, and China.
And then there are the worldwide or reciprocal tariffs.
This is a tariff of at least 10% on basically every country we trade with.
These tariffs were imposed on April 2nd by executive order.
And some of these tariffs are even higher, as high as 50% in some countries.
And to make things even more confusing, certainly for me, many of these tariffs have been altered or changed or suspended temporarily several times.
So it's really hard to figure out which tariffs are in place right now.
Aaron Powell, so why does Trump claim that he can use IEPA
to do like a worldwide reciprocal tariff on
the entire world.
We can't be an emergency with the entire world, can we?
Trevor Burrus, Jr.: Right.
So Trump is relying on ambiguity, right?
First, he's claiming that imposing a tariff in this way, or a set of tariffs, is part of what it means to regulate under IEPA, because that's the word in the statute.
And second, Trump is claiming that there are two emergencies here.
Remember, this is an emergency power.
And one emergency is allegedly that Canada, Mexico, and China are not doing enough to stop the flow of illegal fentanyl into the United States.
The other emergency, again, according to Trump, is the ongoing trade deficit between the United States and other countries.
In April, a group of small businesses and a group of states sued in a special court called the Court of International Trade, and they tried to challenge Trump's use of IEPA to impose these specific tariffs.
These two cases can be considered together.
And what were their arguments in the Court of International Trade?
So it's actually a really simple argument.
Does IPA allow this?
They're saying no.
There's no question that with IEPA, Congress has definitely given the President the ability to do a lot of things once an emergency has been declared.
But there's no mention of the word tariff in IEPA.
So the question is, does the power to regulate, which is in the statute, does that include the power to impose tariffs?
And then a secondary question could be something like, even if the president could do this, is something like the existence of a trade deficit with other countries something that's been going on for decades?
Does that really count as an emergency under the statute?
That's another kind of issue.
Yeah.
And so what's the status of this case?
Because that seems like a pretty fundamental argument about presidential powers and stuff.
They should figure that stuff out, right?
Yeah.
So in May of this year, the Court of International Trade, that's where the case was first filed, ruled against the Trump administration.
The three-judge panel in the case decided that Trump didn't have the authority to use AIPA in this way.
The Trump administration appealed that decision.
And at the end of August, the Federal Appeals Court also decided against the Trump administration for basically the same reason.
Trump does not have the authority under AIPA to impose these tariffs.
Tariffs are presumptively Congress's responsibility, not the President's.
Then the Trump administration appealed this decision.
And on September 9th, the Supreme Court agreed to hear the case.
And the court has fast-tracked the case and has agreed to hear arguments in the case on November 5th.
So but what's really at stake with this case?
Because this I mean, this isn't just about tariffs.
Declaring emergencies and doing things that should be Congress's job seems like Trump's MO across the board.
So
what are the implications of all this?
Well, of course, the tariffs themselves are a big deal.
If you're a business or you're a consumer, the lawfulness of these big tariffs are of immense importance.
Tariffs are a tax, and we pay those taxes through higher prices on the things we buy.
But the case is also going to have very big implications for the power of the presidency, because it's now up to the Supreme Court.
Does Trump have the power to do this?
The Supreme Court could say, well, look, Trump lacks the authority under AIPA.
He can't impose tariffs this way.
They could interpret the statute and decide that the word regulate does not include the power to impose tariffs.
That would be the end of that.
But if the court sides with Trump, then this would be a major expansion of presidential power.
Trump has said that invalidating his tariffs will literally destroy the United States of America.
Spoiler, it would not.
But there is a very big question at the heart of the case.
And because the case, which is now called VOS Selections versus Trump, focuses on how the Supreme Court will interpret IEPA, which is a federal statute, there's a connection between the tariff case and student loan forgiveness.
Oh, okay.
Tell me more.
That was out of left field for me, but okay.
I'm following along.
Let's go.
Here we go.
So, during the height of the pandemic, the federal department of education suspended loan repayments for everybody who was paying back their federal student loans.
Many people weren't working at home.
So, if you're not working, you can't pay back your loans.
It seemed really unfair to make people try and repay them when everybody was stuck at home.
Remember that student loan debt is a huge policy issue, whether or not you have the pandemic.
Americans owe something like $1.6 trillion in student loan debt, and a lot of those loans are loans guaranteed by the federal government.
So in August of 2022, the Biden administration announced a major student loan forgiveness program, and that program was pretty straightforward.
Every borrower who made less than $125,000 received $10,000 of loan forgiveness.
So as we've been talking about, most of the money business of the government is done by Congress.
So why did Biden think he could do this?
So Biden relied relied on the 2003 Higher Education Relief Opportunities for Students Act, or the HEROES Act.
And that law says that the Secretary of Education can waive or modify terms related to student financial aid if it is necessary in connection with a war or other military operation or national emergency.
See, it's an emergency power.
An earlier version of the HEROES Act was passed to help borrowers affected by the September 11th terrorist attacks.
So, this goes way way back.
But the 2003 HEROES Act extended this coverage.
Now remember, in March of 2020, the president declared that the pandemic was a national emergency.
Remember who the president was?
In March of 2020?
That was President Trump.
That was President Trump.
Now, a group of states challenged the loan forgiveness program.
And in 2023, the Supreme Court was asked to answer this question.
When the HEROES Act says that the Secretary of Education, which is of course part of the executive branch, when the the Secretary of Education can waive or modify student aid, does that include the power to forgive student loans?
And the Supreme Court decided no, it does not.
And the reason why is important, because you see, over recent years, the conservative majority on the Supreme Court has been relying on what it calls the major questions doctrine.
So let's talk about the major questions doctrine, because this has been a thing that's been percolating up over the last few years.
That's right.
And so the idea behind the major questions doctrine is that if there's a dispute about what a federal statute means, let's say Congress puts in some ambiguous language, and the disputed part of the statute involves the executive branch trying to exercise a power involving deep economic and political significance, the Supreme Court is not going to assume that that power is okay.
The court will say, look, if Congress is going to give the executive branch some very big power, they have to be clear about it.
We're not going to interpret the law to say the executive branch gets to exercise this major power unless Congress says so, and they really have to be clear about it.
So, in the Biden student loan forgiveness case, the Supreme Court relied on the major questions doctrine to say, look, the forgiveness of billions of dollars of student loans by the Department of Education is a huge issue.
And if Congress had intended for this to be a real possibility for a president to do, they would have made the HEROES Act much more specific and clear about this.
And so, no, major questions doctrine means Biden cannot use the HEROES Act, which says you can waive or modify student federal financial assistance, can't use it in this way to forgive student loans.
And that's not the only case where the Supreme Court has found that Biden-era actions were not authorized by Congress.
Huh.
And so what does this mean for all the Trump cases?
Well, if the Supreme Court's going to be consistent, then the tariff case would also appear to pose a major questions doctrine problem.
And that's because no president, no president before Trump has ever used IIPA in this way to impose tariffs around the world, meaning this is the very first time a president has used emergency economic powers to impose global ongoing tariffs.
So that would seem to implicate a question of deep economic and political significance.
A major question.
That's right.
A major question.
But AIPA says only that the president can regulate importation.
So if the words waive or modify do not mean cancel student loans under the HEROES Act, why should regulate mean tariff under AIPA?
Especially when many other federal laws specifically refer to the word tariff or the power to impose tariffs.
Now, in the student loan case, the Supreme Court said that the Biden administration was, and I'm quoting here, modifying student loans only in the same sense that the French Revolution modified the status of the French nobility.
Oh my god.
And so in the tariff case, the Federal Appeals Court used the same reasoning to say that Trump can't impose these tariffs.
They're of unlimited duration on imports of nearly all goods from nearly every country with which the United States conducts trade.
That was a transformative, unprecedented power, and President Trump just didn't have the authority to do that.
So in other words, Trump's use of IEPA to impose global tariffs requires a major questions doctrine analysis.
And if we're going to be consistent, it would seem that the tariffs have an uphill battle to climb if they're really going to fall under this emergency statute.
If Congress intended for this worldwide tariff scheme to happen, well, shouldn't they have said so explicitly?
And that's the question for the Supreme Court.
Will the justices consistently apply the cases of just a few years ago and decide that Trump lacks the authority to use a federal law in this unprecedented way?
Or will they side with Trump because they side with Trump?
The pattern of siding with Trump makes me fearful for the outcome of this case.
Yeah, I mean, there's lots to be worried about because in a lot of cases, it seems like that has the most explanatory power, right?
That, like, how does it, how can we explain what happened here?
They seem to simply be siding with the the Trump administration.
Either way, it could be that the tariffs continue.
I mean, the court could say that, yes, Trump has the power to use AIPA in this way, or, you know, the court could strike down this use, but then there, you know, a lot of other folks have pointed out that Trump can rely on other statutes to impose tariffs.
So tariffs might continue, but I think the real heart of the matter is, you know, what's going to happen to what seems to be an expanding office of the president.
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A lot of this began with, you know, Congress abdicating some of its responsibility here to the president so that emergency action could be taken in sort of in a good faith sense.
A lot of these roads that we go down are often when these three branches aren't defending their space the way that we kind of need them to for the structure of the Constitution to work.
The one thing that gives me a little bit of comfort in this is that it seems that the major questions doctrine is a lot of
the Supreme Court kind of standing up for itself and its role of determining these things and pushing Congress to do the things that it needs to do to
sort of hold its place as an equal branch.
In the interest of defending their role as the Supreme Court, as the arbiter of major questions, maybe they will be consistent here.
It could be.
I mean, that's the optimistic view, right?
And then even if there is a check in the case, in the tariff case, when the Supreme Court ultimately decides it, you know,
passing the ball to Congress, you know, we can only sort of hope that something works.
I mean, the law itself actually gives Congress the ability to check the president, but they have not done so.
And so we need everybody to kind of get involved.
Aaron Powell, Jr.: That's right.
I mean, but it also sort of seems like
the sort of fig leaf with which the sort of expansive powers that the Supreme Court has been giving Trump
is a little bit of like, well, this Congress should stop.
You know, like then Congress passes a law.
You know, like that's their job.
But we have a sort of a complicit Congress who's just like in the pocket for Trump.
And so that doesn't work that way.
And my optimistic read is that the ideologies align here to sort of thwart Trump in this case to reserve more power to Congress.
I don't know.
Yeah,
that could work.
I mean, I think one of the ironies here is that IEPA, the very law that's at the heart of this case, is actually an attempt in the 1970s by Congress to try and claw back some power.
But it absolutely hasn't worked this way at all.
In fact, you know, folks have pointed out that presidents seem to declare emergencies all the time time and then get to do whatever they want.
Yeah, it's that word emergency.
Like replacing the word emergency with the word emergency doesn't seem like the most prudent.
Because like, it's like, I don't know, I don't know.
I have emergencies every single day.
My kids have emergencies about stuff that you wouldn't believe.
Exactly.
And that's part of the problem.
That's part of the problem.
The word that doesn't exist in the Constitution, but everybody seems to be focused on.
So I don't want to end on like a gloomy note, Roman.
So before we end, why don't we go back to Lady Chatterley for a moment?
Okay.
There is a wonderful song mentioning it from 1965 by Tom Lehrer that I thought we could end with.
Maybe, Roman, you could read the lyrics.
The song is called Smut.
Tom Lehr, of course, who just passed away.
Yeah.
Really, really like a national treasure as far as I'm concerned.
Okay, so here it is.
Who needs a hobby, likely tennis or philately?
I've got a hobby, rereading Lady Chatterly.
But now they're trying to take it all away from us unless we take a stand and hand in hand, we fight for the the freedom of the press.
Great.
That's so good.
That's awesome.
What's fascinating to me here is like when we're talking about Article 1 in the last section when we're doing our book club, like the fights over Article 1 seem to be the fights of our age.
You know what I mean?
Right.
Like, what are the powers of Congress and what are the powers of the executive?
We haven't gotten to Article II yet, but it's like, it's really something to think about.
Like, what is enumerated, what is not, what is thought thought about, what is not.
But what is clear to me is that as I read it, the tone of Article I is that the tie goes to Congress almost all the time.
That's what it reads to me like, right?
But I think part of the problem is that, as you can see, you can't really talk about one branch without talking about the other today.
Because when you talk about Article I, you talk about a president who tries to take some of their power.
And in fact, Congress has given the president some of his power.
Why?
Because in some ways, in the 20th century, Congress realizes, you know, we can't really deal with all these things efficiently, but there's one person who can act quickly, and that's the president.
So we'll give him some of our power.
And it turns out to have all of these unintended consequences, or perhaps intended consequences.
A president decides to run with that power and do much more than what Congress intended.
Yeah.
It's really set up for a revolutionary mindset that each branch would be defending its turf in a kind of way.
Like it's not made for collusion across branches.
It's really made for like Congress, even Congress, even like senators of the same party to be offended by presidential overreach.
And when I read like the other Robert Caro books on Lyndon Johnson and stuff like this, like Democratic senators like take umbrage to, you know, to Johnson, not just because they're racist and he's trying to like create the great society, but like also because of just the like
the fundamental fact of overreach and powers is like, is like something that they just like immediately react to in a way that I just don't really see anymore.
Yeah, I mean, I think this idea of like, I think you're referring to this idea of like jealously guarding
your branch.
I mean, that definitely is not part of a major part of our conversations that we're seeing or having.
In fact, there's just this extreme partisanship that seems to explain a lot of what's happening.
And that's not the way we set up the separation of powers.
It's called the separation of powers for a reason.
Yeah.
And so that's a kind of fatal collision, right?
A Congress that decided decades ago to say, well, we'll be flexible with our authority and how we think of our powers and kind of transfer some of them to the executive.
Now, what happens when you have extreme partisanship across two branches, maybe three?
There is no inter-branch checking going on.
Right, right.
I mean, it's sort of like, you know, like our whole criminal justice system is based on an adversarial system and it wouldn't function if there was this great deal of collusion across the different adversarial standpoints of criminal trial.
It would be unfair and just unjust.
It's adversarial for a reason.
It's adversarial by design.
And we seem to be losing that when it comes to these powers and different branches.
Aaron Powell, Jr.: Yeah, I mean, basically, what you see are two different conversations happening today, which is, on the one hand, a kind of small group of people yelling loudly that there's something wrong with the structure here, that the way things are supposed to work with checks are not working.
And then most of the conversation, not caring about that at all.
Really, just a results-oriented approach to the way the federal government works.
And you, I mean, I think that that's a real failure to connect that the abstract structure helps people get to the substantive results that they voted for.
We learned that in the last election, that this idea of the death of democracy or like our democratic norms are eroding wasn't really like that motivating of an idea.
Right.
It was just, it was too much.
It was too much classroom and not enough, you know, get out there and vote with your feet.
Yeah.
Thank you so much.
Thanks, everyone.
Join us next month.
We're continuing our discussion of Article 1 with special guest, Senator Elizabeth Warren.
The 99% Invisible Breakdown of the Constitution is produced by Isabel Angel and Jacob Medina Gleason.
Edited by Committee.
Music by Swan Rial and from Doom Tree Records.
Mixed by Martine Gonzalez.
99% Invisible's executive producer is Kathy Ture.
Our senior editor is Delaney Hall.
Kurt Colstead is the digital director.
The rest of the team includes Chris Baroube, Jason DeLeon, Emmett Fitzgerald, Christopher Johnson, Vivian Lay, LaShamadon, Kelly Prime, Joe Rosenberg, and me, Roman Mars.
The 99% Invisible logo was created by Stefan Lawrence.
The art for this series was created by Aaron Nestor.
We are part of the Series XM podcast family, now headquartered six blocks north in the Pandora Building in beautiful.
Uptown Oakland, California.
You can find the show on all the usual social media sites as well well as our own Discord server.
We have fun discussions about constitutional law, about architecture, about movies, about music, all kinds of good stuff.
It's where I'm hanging out most of these days.
You can find a link to the Discord server as well as every past episode of 99PI at 99pi.org.
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