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Reinterpreting the Declaration of Independence: Congress Debates the Missouri Admission Crisis

March 5, 2021
William S. Belko

As Missouri closes its nearly three-year commemoration of the bicentennial of our tumultuous entrance into the Union, numerous books and articles have re-examined this pivotal event in American history.  One such publication, entitled Contesting the Constitution: Congress Debates the Missouri Crisis, 1819-1821, examines the constitutional issues involved in Missouri’s struggle for statehood.  This collection of […]

The Shrinking Extended Republic: Can Madison’s Constitutional Design Survive the Modern Mass Media?

February 24, 2021
Dennis Goldford

Contrary to much of the often-heated rhetoric we hear at times, the American Constitution was not adopted for the purpose of limiting the power of the federal government.  We already had, under the Articles of Confederation, a federal government of limited powers.  The Constitution was adopted for the purpose of increasing the power of the […]

Lincoln vs. Douglas: Debating the Founders’ Legacy

February 12, 2021
Lucas Morel

Abraham Lincoln’s fame in the 1850s owed mainly to his provoking a public quarrel with Democratic Senator Stephen A. Douglas over the correct interpretation of the American founders.  As the nation grew increasingly divided over the future of slavery, Lincoln and the new Republican Party sought to prevent the expansion of slavery into federal territories […]

The Cost of Losing Faith: Lincoln’s Lasting Lyceum

February 3, 2021
Stephen Clouse

Justice, or the call for it, defined much of our political landscape in 2020 as it also defines the early days of 2021. A violent permutation of that call resulted in a police station being burned down, billions of dollars in property damage across the country, and a mob storming the American Capitol with the […]

Beyond the Electoral College: Toward Communitarian Democracy

January 25, 2021
Paul Schumaker

Following the failed insurrection of January 6, 2021, the Electoral College’s sacred role in ensuring the legitimacy of our presidential elections was widely hailed. But that insurrection was occasioned by what had long been understood as a minor, ceremonial element of the College: the counting of ballots cast by electors and certified by state officials. […]

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Taxing the Constitution: Are Trump’s Proposed Tariffs Legal?

October 29, 2024

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