
Episode 1: Good Night . . . and Good Luck
Well, it's been ten years. A good run. But all things must come to an end.
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Produced in partnership with James Madison's Montpelier, Your Weekly Constitutional is a public radio show featuring lively discussion of controversial constitutional topics, from Gay Rights...

Well, it's been ten years. A good run. But all things must come to an end.

At last! A new episode! Well, kinda. We're not yet resuming production (sorry), but Wayne and Stewart got together via Skype to discuss some...

Two of Stewart's students join us to discuss papers they wrote for his constitutional seminars. First, Jennifer Bolt tells us about the hist...

Is there such a thing? Well, there’s certainly something called the Administrative State, governed by something called administrative law. S...

Donald Trump likes to compare himself to Andrew Jackson. So do his supporters. So do his opponents, for very different reasons. Are any of t...

This is Part Two of a two-part episode. In Part One, we told you about Kristine Bunch, who experienced the worst thing that could happen to...

Kristine Bunch experienced the worst thing that could happen to any parent: the death of her son, Tony. But then things got worse. Much wors...

Nope. Not Andrew Johnson. It's a guy named William Blount, who was kicked out of the United States Senate more than two hundred years ago. B...

Well, it happened. Brexit, that is. As of January 31, 2020, the UK is no longer a member of the EU. So . . . what's changed? And what happen...

Appellate Attorney John Vail recently argued a case in the Tennessee Supreme Court presenting a very important issue: Does Tennessee’s $750,...

Remember the parade last fall? The parade of high federal officials lining up to testify before Congress in the impeachment inquiry? Now tha...

Sanford Levinson is a law professor from Texas who is very critical of our Constitution’s “structural flaws.” We interviewed him several yea...

Donald Trump often claims that some folks have been trying to impeach him since the day he was sworn in. He's right. Stewart speaks with one...

No, not our current president. Another one, perhaps the greatest in our history: Abraham Lincoln. Lincoln was anti-slavery, but he didn’t be...

The air is, once again, heavy with talk of impeachment. It’s happened three times before (if you count Richard Nixon’s resignation, which yo...

Recently, Stewart attended a conference at Montpelier focused upon the essential role that Virginia has played in establishing and maintaini...

“Domestic terrorism” has been in the news a lot lately. Many of the mass shootings we’ve recently experienced seem to have been motivated, a...

Donald Trump calls himself Tariff Man, and he certainly seems to enjoy waging his trade wars. Has he exceeded his constitutional authority?...

Earlier this year, we told you about the push for Virginia to become the final necessary state to ratify the Equal Rights Amendment. That ha...

Sophia Rosenfeld is a historian at the University of Pennsylvania. She's published an incisive and timely book about the fraught relationshi...

Steven Waldman has been writing about religion and spirituality for a long time. He is the co-founder of Beliefnet, a website devoted to suc...

Recently, Montpelier installed a time machine in the Potter Family Studios. Stewart had the honor of being the first to try it. So, of cours...

Birds migrate. So do monarch butterflies. And so do constitutions. So says A.E. "Dick" Howard, the White Burkett Miller Professor of Law and...

We finish our two-part interview with our go-to guy on all things Brexit, British barrister William Walton of the University of Hertfordshir...

The Queen has suspended Parliament at the request of Prime Minister Boris Johnson. Is this the end of British democracy? Or just another qui...

Matthew Reeves, the Director of Archaeology at James Madison's Montpelier, tells us about his next big project: the reconstruction of the ov...

Josh Douglas teaches at the University of Kentucky, where he studies voting in the United States. Despite the current political environment,...

Is the ban on military service for transgender people unconstitutional? Eric Merriam thinks so. He’s a law professor at the University of Ce...

What’s up with all the new laws on abortion? What do they contain? Why now? Mary Ziegler, a law professor at Florida State University, has w...

Does the Supreme Court need saving? Ganesh Sitaraman thinks so. He teaches constitutional law at Vanderbilt University, and, like many of us...

A year before Little Rock, twelve brave African-American students in Clinton, Tennessee, participated in the first court-ordered integration...

Ever since the release of the Mueller Report, we’ve all been hearing about something called “obstruction of justice.” But what, precisely, d...

Many people bemoan the growing gaps in wealth and income in our country, as well as their negative effects on our political discourse and ou...

You’re young, innocent, female. Perhaps 18 years old. You’re walking down the street in your hometown on a fine spring day. A car pulls to t...

Professor Pat Baker of the University of Tennessee at Martin has noticed something troubling about small private colleges. They’re closing d...

Linda Monk has been on our show before, to discuss her wonderful books, "The Words We Live By" and "The Bill of Rights: A User's Guide." She...

Since the Democrats overwhelmed the House of Representatives with their Blue Wave, there’s been a lot of talk about investigations and heari...

Andrew Boyle works for the Liberty and National Security Program at the Brennan Center for Justice. He and Stewart start at the very beginni...

Justin Driver is a law professor at the University of Chicago. He is concerned about the extent to which public school students are paddled,...

We haven't heard much from the Supreme Court lately on the Second Amendment. That may soon change. So the Law Review at Lincoln Memorial Uni...

Well, he’s at it again: Beelzebub and his minions are showing up at public buildings, demanding equal space with other religious displays. D...

“Tort Reform” takes many different forms. One way to “reform” tort law is to limit the damages that a plaintiff may receive, regardless of w...

Prohibition is a very constitutional subject, the focus of both the 18th and the 21st Amendments. Howard Wooldridge of Citizens Opposed to P...

Hilarie Hicks, a senior researcher at Montpelier, often encounters “hard history,” that is, history that we don’t necessarily like to think...

Jennifer Wilkoski Glass has one of the coolest jobs in the world: she’s part architect, part detective. She figures out what buildings used...

Colleges and universities are supposed to be dedicated to the generation and dissemination of knowledge. They can’t accomplish that mission...

The Blue Wave that recently swept over the House of Representatives and a number of state legislatures was powered largely by women, and res...

Remember the ERA, the Equal Rights Amendment proposed in the Seventies designed to guarantee equal rights for women? It was never ratified —...

Why preserve a presidential home? Because history? Well, okay, that makes sense. But why a particular president's home? Why make the enormou...

Montpelier recently commissioned a national survey on the Constitution--not to measure our constitutional literacy, but to figure out what p...