Podcast appearances and mentions of Jacky Rosen

United States Senator from Nevada

  • 56PODCASTS
  • 143EPISODES
  • 47mAVG DURATION
  • 1MONTHLY NEW EPISODE
  • Jun 5, 2026LATEST
Jacky Rosen

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Best podcasts about Jacky Rosen

Latest podcast episodes about Jacky Rosen

LARRY
Rubio DETONATED Sara Jacobs' "Shoes" Gotcha And Left Her In RUINS On Camera

LARRY

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 5, 2026 19:12 Transcription Available


Marco Rubio walked into back-to-back oversight hearings and turned the Democrats' viral-stunt circus into a clinic. Ted Lieu, Sarah Jacobs, Jacky Rosen, and Cory Booker all came armed with staff-written TikTok scripts — about Trump "sleeping," the 2020 election, Rubio's shoes, and Iran "winning" — and Rubio dismantled every single one with the facts. It's the secretary of state reminding a room full of clout-chasers what a Foreign Affairs Committee is actually for. SHOP OUR MERCH: https://store.townhallmedia.com/ BUY A LARRY MUG: https://store.townhallmedia.com/products/larry-mug Watch LARRY with Larry O'Connor LIVE — Monday-Thursday at 12PM Eastern on YouTube, Facebook, & Rumble! Find LARRY with Larry O'Connor wherever you get your podcasts! SPOTIFY: https://open.spotify.com/show/7i8F7K4fqIDmqZSIHJNhMh?si=814ce2f8478944c0&nd=1&dlsi=e799ca22e81b456f APPLE: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/larry/id1730596733 Become a Townhall VIP Member today and use promo code LARRY for 50% off: https://townhall.com/subscribe?tpcc=poddescription https://townhall.com/ https://rumble.com/c/c-5769468 https://www.facebook.com/townhallcom/ https://www.instagram.com/townhallmedia/ https://twitter.com/townhallcomBecome a Townhall VIP member with promo code "LARRY": https://townhall.com/subscribeSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

The A.M. Update
Iowa's Gubernatorial X-Factor | Blanche Permanent at DOJ? | 6/4/26

The A.M. Update

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 4, 2026 21:17


Todd Blanche, Josh Turek, Ashley Hinson, Tim McBride, and Spencer Pratt headline today's A.M. Update. Trump tells Miranda Devine at the New York Post he wants acting AG Todd Blanche to stay permanently, and Aaron says the DOJ's activity record makes it hard to argue with. California primary results are still trickling in with Steve Hilton leading the Republican field at 27.8% and Spencer Pratt trailing Karen Bass by only about four points with votes still outstanding, and Aaron breaks down the campaign lessons Pratt's run already offers any candidate willing to learn them. Secretary of State Marco Rubio methodically dismantles Senator Jacky Rosen's gotcha question about the Pakistan negotiations, then tells Congressman Tim McBride that Greenland is part of Denmark "for now" — and Aaron says that was the best line of the week. Iowa's general election matchup is now set: Republican Ashley Hinson faces Paralympic gold medalist and Democrat Josh Turek for Joni Ernst's retiring Senate seat, and Aaron closes with a deep dive on what Zach Lahn's populist anti-big-ag message means for Iowa politics and why it might quietly split the Democratic coalition in November.

The Rubin Report
LA Mayor Humiliated by Spencer Pratt's Shocking Election Surge as Votes Come In

The Rubin Report

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 3, 2026 71:44


Dave Rubin of "The Rubin Report" talks about Spencer Pratt's unexpectedly strong turnout in the early election results for Los Angeles mayor which put him on the path to a November matchup  against Karen Bass; CNN's Steve Kornacki sharing new polling data of Steve Hilton's victory that should scare any Democrat running for governor of California; "60 Minutes'" Scott Pelley giving his first reaction to being fired by new producer Nick Bilton after audio was leaked of him screaming at Bari Weiss; Marco Rubio sparring with Cory Booker at a senate hearing over the current state of the Iran War peace talks and why the United States continues to have the upper hand; Marco Rubio humiliating Jacky Rosen for lying about him and not knowing the basic facts of the Strait of Hormuz crisis and the state of the Iran peace talks; a rare look inside a US Marshals warehouse where seized assets are being stored that have been taken from criminals like Paul Randall who have stolen millions of dollars of taxpayer money though medical fraud schemes; and much more. Join me for a LIVE Event with Governor Ron DeSantis, plus special appearances by Jillian Michaels, and Adam Carolla on June 11th! Get Tickets Here: https://daverubin.com/events WATCH the MEMBER-EXCLUSIVE segment of the show here: https://rubinreport.locals.com/ Check out the NEW RUBIN REPORT MERCH here: https://daverubin.store/ ---------- Today's Sponsors: Relief Factor - Relief Factor is an alternative to help your body's natural inflammatory response causing the achy, soreness, stiffness, and discomfort from daily living that keeps you from doing the things you love. Try Relief Factor's 3-Week QuickStart—just $19.95.  Go to: https://www.relieffactor.com or call 800-4-RELIEF. Shopify - Turn your big business idea into money with Shopify on your side. Shopify is the commerce platform behind millions of businesses around the world from household names to brands just getting started. Go to Shopify and sign up for your one-dollar-per-month trial and start selling today at Go to: http://shopify.com/rubin Chef iQ - Take the stress out of not knowing if your meat will come out good! CHEF iQ Sense continuously monitors and predicts precisely when your food will be done. Get 40% off sitewide with code RUBIN!  Go to: http://chefiq.com 

Pat Gray Unleashed
How Spencer Pratt Plans to Crush Woke Mayor Karen Bass in November | 6/3/26

Pat Gray Unleashed

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 3, 2026 100:47


Spencer Pratt just laid out his aggressive plan to take down failing Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass in the November runoff. If you're tired of woke leadership destroying American cities, this is a must-watch. Reality TV star and Republican fighter Spencer Pratt advanced to face Karen Bass head-to-head after strong primary results. In his victory speech, Pratt made it crystal clear: He's coming for the incumbent with everything he's got. From cleaning up the homeless crisis that has turned Los Angeles into a nightmare to holding officials accountable for the devastating wildfires that destroyed homes — including his own — Pratt is promising common-sense solutions over endless progressive excuses. We also cover: Marco Rubio DESTROYS the Left. Candace Owens' family vacation in St. Petersburg, Russia. DOJ scraps Trump's Anti-Weaponization Fund. James Talarico says God is not a Christian. Tom Homan is back, and this time he's ANGRY. This November runoff represents a real chance for conservatives and fed-up independents to reject radical Democrat governance in one of America's biggest cities. Pratt isn't afraid to call out the failures, debate Bass any time, and fight for real change. What do you think: Can Spencer Pratt pull off this upset and save L.A.? Drop your thoughts in the comments below! Should cities like L.A. finally get tough on homelessness and crime? Like this video if you support putting America First and fighting back against woke mayors! 00:00 Pat Gray UNLEASHED! 00:20 California Governor & LA Mayor Elections 09:28 Jesse Watters' Latest Update on Iran 13:53 Marco Rubio VS. Cory Booker on Iran 18:30 Chris Van Hollen Asks if Cuba is a Terrorist Threat 20:57 Marco Rubio VS. Jacky Rosen on Party in Miami 25:01 Todd Blanche on Anti-Weaponization Fund 33:08 Chewing the Fat 45:53 Tweets on James Talarico 48:21 Candace Owens is Pro-Russia? 57:07 Candace Owens Russia Montage 1:01:02 Discussing More of Candace Owens & Russia 1:10:10 James Talarico Says "God is Not a Christian" 1:18:31 Tom Homan on ICE in New Jersey 1:22:01 Bill Pulte Replacing Tulsi Gabbard?! 1:23:16 Confiscated Eggs & Lieutenant McQuail 1:28:52 Pat Gray BINGO! Winner 1:30:14 Dr. Oz on Lowering the Cost of Drugs 1:33:35 Dr. Oz Asked about Cure for TDS 1:34:15 Dr. Oz compliments the Current Administration Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Deadline: White House
"What the Clinton testimonies shows us"

Deadline: White House

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 28, 2026 41:30


February 27, 2026; The steady drumbeat of questioning into the probe on Jeffrey Epstein is starting to shine a spotlight on prominent figures like Bill and Hillary Clinton. Ironically, the latest might raise more questions than it answers. If calling on former presidents is in fact on the table, why not Donald Trump? Nicolle Wallace dives in with Ben Wieder, Mary McCord, Jacky Rosen and Epstein survivor Dani Bensky.   For more, follow us on Instagram @deadlinewh For more from Nicolle, follow and download her podcast, “The Best People with Nicolle Wallace,” wherever you get your podcasts.To listen to this show and other MS podcasts without ads, sign up for MS NOW Premium on Apple Podcasts. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.

The Daily Beans
TACO Tuesday (feat. Adam Klasfeld)

The Daily Beans

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 27, 2026 65:20


Tuesday, January 27th, 2026Today, the dominoes are falling as multiple prominent Republicans criticize ICE and call for an independent investigation into the murder of Alex Pretti; moderate Senator Jacky Rosen is calling for Kristi Noem's impeachment; Republican gubernatorial candidate is withdrawing from the race over ICE presence in Minnesota; DHS says it has the body-worn camera footage of Pretti's murder; Mike Pence calls for an independent investigation into the murder; Governor Abbott has called on the White House to recalibrate ICE; the Trump administration is now pulling Bovino and all Customs and Border Protection agents out of Minneapolis; and Allison and Dana deliver your Good News.Thank You, DeleteMeGet 20% off your DeleteMe plan when you go to joindeleteme.com/DAILYBEANS and use promo code DAILYBEANS at checkout. Thank You, BabbelGet up to 55% off your Babbel subscription – at Babbel.com/DAILYBEANS.Guest: Adam KlasfeldAll Rise News@allrisenews|Bluesky, @klasfeldreports.com|BlueSky, @KlasfeldReports|Twitter, @senecaprojectus - InstagramThe LatestICE OUT of Minnesota TRO Hearing | The BreakdownStoriesJudge to hear arguments on Minnesota immigration crackdown as calls grow for probe into Alex Pretti shooting - updates | CNNAbbott says ICE needs to recalibrate, work from different direction | El Paso TimesModerate Sen. Jacky Rosen urges Noem's impeachment as Dem fury grows over Minneapolis shooting | AP NewsChris Madel, a Republican running for Minnesota governor, ends his bid and criticizes ICE | CNN PoliticsAlex Pretti's killing was recorded on body-camera videos, DHS says | NBC NewsLindsey Halligan is no longer employed by the Justice Department after her departure from Virginia U.S. attorney's office | NBC News Good TroubleCharlotte Clymer posted on Bluesky:Looking for ways to support organizations and mutual aid projects on the ground in Minnesota? Here's a great directory for exactly that: standwithminnesota.comhttps://bsky.app/profile/charlotteclymer.bsky.social/post/3mddq3o5pas2d→Tell Congress Ice out Now - Take Action Now | Indivisible→standwithminnesota.com→Defund ICE (UPDATED 1/21) - HOUSE VOTE THURSDAY→Congress: Divest From ICE and CBP | ACLU→ICE List  →iceout.org→2026 Trans Girl Scouts To Order Cookies From! | Erin in the Morning Good Newsstandwithminnesota.comTimberwolves Chaplain Speaks Out | Fred ClarkPatuxent Roller DerbyTour Dates — DANA GOLDBERG→Go To Good News & Good Trouble - The Daily Beans to Share YoursSubscribe to the MSW YouTube Channel - MSW Media - YouTubeOur Donation LinksPathways to Citizenship link to MATCH Allison's Donationhttps://crm.bloomerang.co/HostedDonation?ApiKey=pub_86ff5236-dd26-11ec-b5ee-066e3d38bc77&WidgetId=6388736Allison is donating $20K to It Gets Better and inviting you to help match her donations. Your support makes this work possible, Daily Beans fam. Donate to It Gets Better / The Daily Beans FundraiserJoin Dana and The Daily Beans and support on Giving Tuesday with a MATCHED Donation http://onecau.se/_ekes71More Donation LinksNational Security Counselors - Donate

City Cast Las Vegas
Nevada Senators Propose ICE Funding Diversion, School Start Times, and a New Sphere Goes Where?

City Cast Las Vegas

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 23, 2026 28:23


Amid rallying cries on the left of "defund ICE," the Senators from Nevada, Catherine Cortez-Masto and Jacky Rosen, have proposed a middleground solution: Diverting close to half of the $175 billion in Big Beautiful Bill funds earmarked for the agency towards local law enforcement. Will it work? And does it matter? Today, host Sonja Cho Swanson talks with Nevada Current editor April Corbin Girnus and writer Scott Dickensheets about the proposal, along with the valleywide impacts of later school start times for CCSD high schoolers, and why a proposed second Sphere in the DC suburbs has us feeling jealous. Want to get in touch? Follow us @CityCastVegas on Instagram, or email us at lasvegas@citycast.fm. You can also call or text us at 702-514-0719. For more Las Vegas news, make sure to sign up for our morning newsletter, Hey Las Vegas. Learn more about becoming a City Cast Las Vegas Neighbor at membership.citycast.fm. Looking to advertise on City Cast Las Vegas? Check out our options for podcast and newsletter ads at citycast.fm/advertise.

City Cast Las Vegas
Why Senator Rosen Ended the Shutdown, Housekeeping Olympics, and the TI Pirate Show

City Cast Las Vegas

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 14, 2025 38:36


This week, we discuss why Senator Jacky Rosen of Nevada ⁠joined forces⁠ with seven other Democrats, crossing party lines to vote for the GOP's budget bill and end our country's longest federal shutdown. But at ⁠whose urging⁠? Nevada Independent opinions editor Andrew Kiraly joins co-hosts Sarah Lohman and Dayvid Figler to discuss. Plus, why the ⁠Housekeeping Olympics⁠, now in its 35th year, matter more than ever, and how the return of the ⁠TI pirate show⁠ turned out to be a big ol' rumor. Learn more about the sponsors of this November 14th episode: ⁠Southern Nevada Water Authority⁠ ⁠Black Mountain Institute⁠ ⁠JK Studios!⁠ ⁠The Neon Museum⁠ - Nevada residents, light up your night with 50% off admission to The Neon Museum!  ⁠Babbel⁠ - Get up to 55% off at ⁠Babbel.com/CITYCAST⁠ Want to get in touch? Follow us @CityCastVegas on⁠ Instagram⁠, or email us at lasvegas@citycast.fm. You can also call or text us at 702-514-0719. For more Las Vegas news, make sure to sign up for our morning newsletter,⁠ Hey Las Vegas.⁠ Learn more about becoming a City Cast Las Vegas Neighbor at⁠ membership.citycast.fm⁠. Looking to advertise on City Cast Las Vegas? Check out our options for podcast and newsletter ads at⁠ citycast.fm/advertise⁠.

preservation of 1 with Alexandria August
I'm going through it with this 3 causing the government shutdown

preservation of 1 with Alexandria August

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 12, 2025 17:54


The three specific bills in the package are the Agriculture-FDA, Military Construction-Veterans Affairs (MilCon-VA), and Legislative Branch appropriations billsThe shutdown's cause: The ongoing government shutdown is a result of broader Congressional disagreements on appropriations bills, not a specific failure of the 2025 Military Construction, Veterans Affairs, and Related Agencies Act.The bill as a solution: The 2025 Military Construction and Veterans Affairs bill is one of the spending measures being considered by the Senate to end the shutdown.Proposed funding: The bill proposes to fully fund veterans' healthcare and benefits, and provide significant funding for military construction, including family housing. Well, at least the military will keep its full healthcare and funding but these people here sided with the reds smh Sen. Dick Durbin of IllinoisSen. Angus King of Maine (independent who caucuses with Democrats)Sen. Catherine Cortez Masto of NevadaSen. Jacky Rosen of NevadaSen. John Fetterman of PennsylvaniaSen. Tim Kaine of VirginiaSen. Jeanne Shaheen of New HampshireSen. Maggie Hassan of New Hampshirejust why?,

Countdown with Keith Olbermann
8 DEMOCRATIC SENATE QUISLINGS CAVE. EXPEL THEM. AND CHUCK SCHUMER - 11.10.25

Countdown with Keith Olbermann

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 10, 2025 59:20 Transcription Available


SEASON 4 EPISODE 32: COUNTDOWN WITH KEITH OLBERMANN A-Block (2:30) SPECIAL COMMENT: Quislings. Traitors. Cowards. Capitulators. Collaborators. Fakes. Frauds. Enablers. Betrayers. Failures. Political Prostitutes. Senators Durbin, Kaine, Fetterman, Shaheen, Cortez-Masto, Hassan, Rosen, and King need to be expelled from the Democratic party and any that mistakenly think they have a chance of retaining their seats must be primaried. Must be. They are not progressives, they are not pragmatists, they are not even moderates. They are fools. Their careers must be ended. Now. Durbin, Kaine, Fetterman, Shaheen, Cortez-Masto, Hassan, Rosen, and King. Now. Done. Forgotten. Let us hear their names no more. Last night these eight Senators voted to fold, without any pressure, without any bribe, without anything. They voted to kick millions of Americans off ObamaCare in order to reopen and fund the government – for only three months, mind you – in exchange not for magic beans but just the promise of a vote in which they’ll GET magic beans – a vote ON the health care subsidies - IF half a dozen Republicans defy Trump. A vote about magic beans. Which they won’t win. Their rationalizations were pathetic and suggested their familiarity with the reality of the Senate, of Trump, of the Republican Party, was less than that of the average Senate Page. What's worse is, this happens now as the reality becomes more and clear: Trump’s mind is gone. It’s so bad even The Washington Post noticed. It’s so bad The Washington Post even put it on their front page. He’s hyping weight loss drugs. In The Oval Office. And how he and he alone can bring down their price. And a weight loss patient there to extoll weight loss drugs and say how safe they are and praise Trump’s wonderfulness… collapses. Folds. Drops, slow-motion, like a deflating inflatable tube man at a used car sales lot. Trump – whose mind is gone - not only doesn’t help the guy on the floor… he’s offended he upstaged him. And then Trump – whose MIND IS GONE - falls asleep. For the second time. Or as The Washington Post put it: “A Closer Look At Trump’s Apparent Struggles To Fight Off Sleep In The Oval Office” read the Post headline. “A Washington Post analysis of multiple video feeds found that the president spent nearly 20 minutes apparently battling to keep his eyes open…” 815 words follow. And four pictures. One of Trump – whose mind is gone - with one eye closed. One with one eye closed and two fingers rubbing it. One with both eyes closed. One where you can almost SEE the snoring. Even. The Washington Post. Knows It. Let’s step back from the nuts-and-bolts of the government shutdown to try to process how it was perceived by Trump…whose mind is gone. HE thought it would be a GOOD idea to cut off food stamps so lines at soup kitchens would get longer just as it was getting cold. He thought the correct political move as the Holidays approached was… government-sponsored starvation. He believed that the country would praise him for… gradually shutting down all air travel – including all air travel FOR HIS SUPPORTERS – first for Thanksgiving and then for Christmas and New Year’s. He thought these were good political moves. SPORTSBALLCENTER (30:00): Yes, legal gambling could send two Cleveland pitchers to jail for 65 years. But no, they didn't actually make a Shohei Ohtani Used Jockstrap baseball card. B-Block (38:00) THE WORST PERSONS IN THE WORLD: Politico thinks the first thing a Mayor-Elect of New York has to do is answer questions about the 2028 Senate elections. The Breaker media newsletter finds the New York Times fricasseeing its own digital books. That's right: FIFA isn't just polishing Trump's knob, it's inventing a "Peace Prize" so it can polish it harder. And Dr. Oz wants you to lose 400 pounds by the midterms. C-Block (55:00) WHY I'M NOT A HOCKEY ANNOUNCER: One of my favorite sportscasting stories: how my budding career as a plucky pucky play-by-play guy was thwarted when the team we were broadcasting "forgot to rent the rink" - and how I avenged myself.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

The Dana Show with Dana Loesch
Zohran Mamdani Fallout, Trump's Tariff Test & Shutdown Screaming Matches

The Dana Show with Dana Loesch

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 6, 2025 97:46 Transcription Available


Craig Collins sits in for Dana. The fallout from Zohran Mandani continues where leftists are continuing to praise his victory. The Supreme Court will hear a massive case on Trump's ability to impose tariffs. Speaker Johnson denounces anti-Semitism. Barack Obama's words about government shutdowns have come back to haunt Democrats. Sen. Jacky Rosen gets embarrassed during a back-and-forth in Congress on who's to blame for the shutdown.  President Trump has a hilarious reaction to Nancy Pelosi announcing her retirement. A Jewish NYPD Officer is resigning over Zohran Mamdani.Thank you for supporting our sponsors that make The Dana Show possible…Patriot Mobilehttps://PatriotMobile.com/Dana  OR CALL 972-PATRIOTStand for freedom with Dana's personal cell phone provider--Patriot Mobile. Get a FREE MONTH of service code DANANoble Goldhttps://NobleGoldInvestments.com/DanaOpen a new qualified IRA or cash account with Noble Gold and get a free 10-ounce Silver Flag Bar plus a Silver American Eagle Proof Coin. Limited-time offer. Byrnahttps://Byrna.com/DanaTake advantage of Byrna's Black Friday and Cyber Monday sale with 15% off sitewide.  PreBornhttps://Preborn.com/DANAAnswer the call and help save lives—dial pound 250 and say “Baby,” or give securely online. Make your gift today.AmmoSquaredhttps://AmmoSquared.comDon't get caught without ammo, and be sure to tell them you heard about Ammo Squared on this show. Keltechttps://KelTecWeapons.comKelTec builds every KS7 GEN2 right here in the USA with American materials and workers—upgrade your home defense today. All Family Pharmacyhttps://AllFamilyPharmacy.com/Dana Don't wait until flu season knocks at your door. Use code DANA10 at checkout to save 10%. Relief Factorhttps://ReliefFactor.com OR CALL 1-800-4-RELIEFTurn the clock back on pain with Relief Factor. Get their 3-week Relief Factor Quick Start for only $19.95 today! HumanNhttps://HumanN.comStart supporting your cardiovascular health with SuperBeets, now available at your local Walmart.

The Joyce Kaufman Show
The Joyce Kaufman Show 11/6/25 - Zohran Mamdani policies, Sen,. Jacky Rosen accuses Sen. Bernie Moreno of stalking, Airports reducing services

The Joyce Kaufman Show

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 6, 2025 40:44


Joyce discusses how New Yorkers are upset about the Zohran Mamdani Mayoral win, and the legality of his policies.She also talks about how Mamdani was about to convince young woman and Muslims to come out in droves to vote for him because of his message of affordability. Sen. Jacky Rosen accuses Sen. Bernie Moreno of stalking democratic colleagues after he gained access to their vin numbers to prove a point. Nancy Pelosi to retire. Germany canceling some of it's Christmas Markets due to fear of terror attacks. Major airports reducing services due to the government shutdown and TSA members having to call out and find temporary jobs to support themselves.Why the Biden and Obama Administrations couldn't achieve peace in the Middle East. Chinese scholars at the University of Michigan tied to biological materials smuggling plot.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

Just For This
Senator Jacky Rosen – Leading Into The New Year

Just For This

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 22, 2025 29:44


Welcome back to Just For This. Each week, host Rabbi Liz P.G. Hirsch (she/her) interviews women in leadership about women and leadership. Inspired by the story of Esther, we feature powerful stories of women who stand out in their fields, who have stepped up just for this moment.  Our guest this week is Senator Jacky Rosen. She has served as the junior senator for Nevada since 2019. She is also the first member of the senate to previously serve as a temple president. We discuss the dilemma of security expenses for synagogues and other houses of worship, the need for bipartisan support to combat hate, and a story of hope as we enter the new Jewish year. Follow Just For This on instagram: @justforthispodcast

The Don Lemon Show
LEMON DROP | Don On The Scene: Senator Jacky Rosen Says Trump Is NOT A King!

The Don Lemon Show

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 20, 2025 17:34


Don Lemon sits down once again with Senator Jacky Rosen for a candid conversation about the state of free speech in America. With MAGA ramping up efforts to silence dissent and punish critics, what's really at stake? What does this moment mean for our democracy, and how can we stop the erosion of one of our most fundamental rights? Don and Senator Rosen break down the dangers, the path forward, and why protecting free speech has never been more urgent. This episode is brought to you by BetterHelp. Give online therapy a try at betterhelp.com/donlemon and get on your way to being your best self. This episode is brought to you by Wild Alaskan. Not all fish are the same! Get seafood you can trust. Go to https://wildalaskan.com/LEMON for $35 off your first box of premium, wild-caught seafood. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

The Don Lemon Show
LEMON DROP | Don On The Scene: Sen. Jacky Rosen Says 'Donald Trump Doesn't Care!'

The Don Lemon Show

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 17, 2025 11:56


Don sits down with Senator Jacky Rosen for a conversation about the state of the country. From skyrocketing food prices to the cost of healthcare, jobs, and overall affordability, the challenges her constituents in Nevada are facing are the same issues weighing on families across America. Sen. Rosen makes it clear that these aren't partisan problems, they're everyday problems. But while people are desperate for solutions, Trump continues to show he doesn't care about actually fixing them. This is a candid look at where America stands right now, and what's at stake if these issues aren't addressed. This episode is brought to you by BetterHelp. Give online therapy a try at betterhelp.com/donlemon and get on your way to being your best self. This episode is brought to you by Wild Alaskan. Not all fish are the same! Get seafood you can trust. Go to https://wildalaskan.com/LEMON for $35 off your first box of premium, wild-caught seafood. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

The Last Word with Lawrence O’Donnell
Lawrence: Donald Trump doesn't want us to talk about Jeffrey Epstein's emails. So we will.

The Last Word with Lawrence O’Donnell

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 16, 2025 39:11


Tonight on The Last Word: New emails reveal the extent of the Jeffrey Epstein-Ghislaine Maxwell partnership. Also, a federal appeals court rules against Donald Trump in his effort to oust Federal Reserve Board Governor Lisa Cook ahead of its meeting this week. Plus, the CBO finds unemployment and inflation will be worse this year than projected. And a Los Angeles honor student talks to MSNBC after being deported to Guatemala with her mother. Jason Leopold, Andrew Weissmann, Sen. Jacky Rosen, and Jacob Soboroff join Lawrence O'Donnell. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.

Nevada Outlook
9/7/25 - Casey Peeks, Center for American Progress

Nevada Outlook

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 7, 2025 10:20


After Congress failed to pass the Child Care for Working Families Act, supported by Representative Dina Titus and Senators Catherine Cortez-Masto and Jacky Rosen, Nevadans could face an increase in childcare costs. Casey Peeks with the Center for American Progress joins the show to forecast how the bill's death could affect families in Northern Nevada.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

childcare american progress northern nevada nevadans peeks center for american progress jacky rosen
City Cast Las Vegas
Why Sen. Rosen Says Trump's Bill Is Screwing Over Las Vegans

City Cast Las Vegas

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 23, 2025 29:32


The Trump administration's omnibus budget bill was signed into law earlier this month — but the Dems aren't going down easy. Senator Jacky Rosen joins co-host Dayvid Figler to talk about how the so-called "Big Beautiful Bill" will impact Las Vegans, what she's doing about it, and what we can all do to help each other weather its impacts. (Spoiler: The Senator has some spicy takes on the backers of this bill!) Learn more about the sponsors of this July 23rd episode: Babbel - Get up to 60% off at Babbel.com/CITYCAST Crush Pad The Neon Museum - Nevada residents, light up your night with 50% off admission to The Neon Museum!  Want to get in touch? Follow us @CityCastVegas on Instagram, or email us at lasvegas@citycast.fm. You can also call or text us at 702-514-0719. For more Las Vegas news, make sure to sign up for our morning newsletter, Hey Las Vegas. Learn more about becoming a City Cast Las Vegas Neighbor at membership.citycast.fm. Looking to advertise on City Cast Las Vegas? Check out our options for podcast and newsletter ads at citycast.fm/advertise. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

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The Constitutionalist
#62 - The Mayflower Compact

The Constitutionalist

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 6, 2025 43:48


On the sixty-second episode of the Constitutionalist, Ben, Shane, and Matthew discuss the Mayflower Compact, and its implications for American political life as one of the nation's earliest constitutional compacts. We want to hear from you! Constitutionalistpod@gmail.com The Constitutionalist is proud to be sponsored by the Jack Miller Center for Teaching America's Founding Principles and History. For the last twenty years, JMC has been working to preserve and promote that tradition through a variety of programs at the college and K-12 levels. Through their American Political Tradition Project, JMC has partnered with more than 1,000 scholars at over 300 college campuses across the country, especially through their annual Summer Institutes for graduate students and recent PhDs. The Jack Miller Center is also working with thousands of K-12 educators across the country to help them better understand America's founding principles and history and teach them effectively, to better educate the next generation of citizens. JMC has provided thousands of hours of professional development for teachers all over the country, reaching millions of students with improved civic learning. If you care about American education and civic responsibility, you'll want to check out their work, which focuses on reorienting our institutions of learning around America's founding principles. To learn more or get involved, visit jackmillercenter.org. The Constitutionalist is a podcast co-hosted by Professor Benjamin Kleinerman, the RW Morrison Professor of Political Science at Baylor University and Founder and Editor of The Constitutionalist Blog, Shane Leary, a graduate student at Baylor University, and Dr. Matthew Reising, a John and Daria Barry Postdoctoral Research Fellow at Princeton University. Each week, they discuss political news in light of its constitutional implications, and explore a unique constitutional topic, ranging from the thoughts and experiences of America's founders and statesmen, historical episodes, and the broader philosophic ideas that influence the American experiment in government.

united states america american university history founders president donald trump culture power house washington politics college state doctors phd professor colorado joe biden elections washington dc dc local congress political supreme court union senate bernie sanders democracy federal kamala harris blm constitution conservatives heritage nonprofits political science liberal abraham lincoln civil rights public policy impeachment amendment graduate baylor george washington american history princeton university presidency ballot public affairs ted cruz ideology constitutional elizabeth warren thomas jefferson founding fathers benjamin franklin mitt romney electoral college mitch mcconnell marco rubio baylor university supreme court justice american politics john adams rand paul polarization joe manchin chuck schumer alexander hamilton james madison cory booker lindsey graham bill of rights tim scott civic engagement federalist amy klobuchar rule of law john kennedy dianne feinstein civil liberties senate judiciary committee josh hawley mike lee claremont polarized constitutional law supreme court decisions ron johnson paul revere ideological house of representatives george clinton constitutional rights chris murphy department of education federalism aaron burr james smith robert morris rick scott tom cotton thomas paine department of justice kirsten gillibrand senate hearings political theory susan collins political philosophy constitutional convention constitutional amendments john witherspoon bob menendez john hancock fourteenth patrick henry 14th amendment benedict arnold john marshall john cornyn political history department of defense chuck grassley tim kaine american government john quincy adams marsha blackburn samuel adams aei james wilson john paul jones john jay social activism political discourse dick durbin mark warner political debate joni ernst jack miller colonial america political thought ben sasse sherrod brown tammy duckworth political commentary bill cassidy abigail adams david perdue american experiment checks and balances ed markey john thune ron wyden grad student department of homeland security war powers american presidency originalism political analysis michael bennet legal education thom tillis publius john hart constitutional studies national constitution center richard blumenthal separation of powers electoral reform civic education legal analysis american founding chris van hollen chris coons department of labor legal history department of energy constitutionalism tina smith james lankford tammy baldwin stephen hopkins summer institute department of transportation richard burr rob portman john morton angus king constitutionalists mayflower compact bob casey benjamin harrison department of agriculture judicial review jon tester mazie hirono jeff merkley mike braun pat toomey social ethics john dickinson plymouth colony benjamin rush todd young civic responsibility jmc patrick leahy civic leadership gary peters deliberative democracy historical analysis debbie stabenow landmark cases american constitution society founding principles demagoguery department of veterans affairs george taylor samuel huntington political education constitutional government charles carroll cory gardner temperance movement lamar alexander ben cardin mike rounds antebellum america kevin cramer department of state george ross cindy hyde smith state sovereignty revolutionary america brian schatz jeanne shaheen apush department of commerce civic participation founding documents founding era roger sherman constitutional change jim inhofe gouverneur morris maggie hassan constitutional advocacy early american republic martin heinrich contemporary politics john barrasso roger wicker william williams pat roberts jacky rosen american political thought george wythe elbridge gerry william floyd civic learning mercy otis warren constitutional accountability center living constitution richard henry lee department of the interior constitutional affairs tom carper mayflower pilgrims constitutional conventions samuel chase american political development legal philosophy alcohol prohibition richard stockton mike crapo government structure department of health and human services american governance lyman hall constitutional conservatism constitutional rights foundation constitutional literacy
The Constitutionalist
#61 - Bureaucracy and the Constitution w/ Joseph Natali

The Constitutionalist

Play Episode Listen Later May 30, 2025 83:19


On the sixty-first episode, Shane and Ben are joined by Joseph Natali, a Ph.D. student at Baylor University dissertating on the constitutionalism of bureaucracy and how Presidents succeed or fail in exercising control over the executive branch. We want to hear from you! Constitutionalistpod@gmail.com The Constitutionalist is proud to be sponsored by the Jack Miller Center for Teaching America's Founding Principles and History. For the last twenty years, JMC has been working to preserve and promote that tradition through a variety of programs at the college and K-12 levels. Through their American Political Tradition Project, JMC has partnered with more than 1,000 scholars at over 300 college campuses across the country, especially through their annual Summer Institutes for graduate students and recent PhDs. The Jack Miller Center is also working with thousands of K-12 educators across the country to help them better understand America's founding principles and history and teach them effectively, to better educate the next generation of citizens. JMC has provided thousands of hours of professional development for teachers all over the country, reaching millions of students with improved civic learning. If you care about American education and civic responsibility, you'll want to check out their work, which focuses on reorienting our institutions of learning around America's founding principles. To learn more or get involved, visit jackmillercenter.org. The Constitutionalist is a podcast cohosted by Professor Benjamin Kleinerman, the RW Morrison Professor of Political Science at Baylor University and Founder and Editor of The Constitutionalist Blog, Shane Leary, a graduate student at Baylor University, and Dr. Matthew K. Reising, a John and Daria Barry Postdoctoral Research Fellow at Princeton University. Each week, they discuss political news in light of its constitutional implications, and explore a unique constitutional topic, ranging from the thoughts and experiences of America's founders and statesmen, historical episodes, and the broader philosophic ideas that influence the American experiment in government.

united states america american university history founders president donald trump culture power house washington politics college state doctors phd professor colorado joe biden elections washington dc dc local congress political supreme court union senate bernie sanders democracy federal kamala harris blm constitution conservatives heritage nonprofits presidents political science liberal abraham lincoln civil rights public policy impeachment amendment graduate baylor george washington american history princeton university presidency ballot public affairs ted cruz ideology constitutional elizabeth warren thomas jefferson founding fathers benjamin franklin mitt romney electoral college mitch mcconnell marco rubio baylor university supreme court justice american politics john adams rand paul polarization joe manchin chuck schumer alexander hamilton james madison bureaucracy cory booker lindsey graham bill of rights tim scott civic engagement federalist amy klobuchar rule of law john kennedy dianne feinstein civil liberties senate judiciary committee josh hawley mike lee claremont polarized constitutional law supreme court decisions ron johnson paul revere ideological house of representatives george clinton constitutional rights chris murphy department of education federalism aaron burr james smith robert morris rick scott tom cotton thomas paine department of justice kirsten gillibrand senate hearings political theory susan collins political philosophy constitutional convention constitutional amendments john witherspoon bob menendez john hancock fourteenth natali patrick henry 14th amendment benedict arnold john marshall john cornyn political history department of defense chuck grassley tim kaine american government john quincy adams samuel adams marsha blackburn aei james wilson john paul jones john jay social activism political discourse dick durbin mark warner political debate joni ernst jack miller political thought ben sasse sherrod brown tammy duckworth political commentary bill cassidy david perdue abigail adams american experiment checks and balances ed markey john thune ron wyden grad student department of homeland security war powers american presidency originalism political analysis michael bennet thom tillis legal education publius john hart constitutional studies richard blumenthal national constitution center separation of powers electoral reform civic education legal analysis american founding chris van hollen chris coons department of labor legal history department of energy constitutionalism tina smith james lankford tammy baldwin stephen hopkins summer institute department of transportation richard burr rob portman john morton angus king constitutionalists bob casey benjamin harrison department of agriculture jon tester judicial review mazie hirono jeff merkley mike braun pat toomey social ethics john dickinson benjamin rush todd young civic responsibility jmc patrick leahy civic leadership gary peters deliberative democracy historical analysis debbie stabenow landmark cases american constitution society demagoguery founding principles george taylor department of veterans affairs samuel huntington political education constitutional government charles carroll cory gardner temperance movement lamar alexander ben cardin mike rounds antebellum america kevin cramer department of state george ross cindy hyde smith state sovereignty revolutionary america brian schatz jeanne shaheen department of commerce apush civic participation founding documents founding era roger sherman jim inhofe constitutional change gouverneur morris maggie hassan constitutional advocacy early american republic martin heinrich contemporary politics john barrasso roger wicker william williams pat roberts jacky rosen american political thought george wythe elbridge gerry william floyd civic learning mercy otis warren constitutional accountability center living constitution richard henry lee department of the interior constitutional affairs tom carper constitutional conventions samuel chase american political development legal philosophy alcohol prohibition mike crapo richard stockton government structure department of health and human services american governance lyman hall constitutional conservatism constitutional rights foundation constitutional literacy
The Constitutionalist
#60 - Educating the Statesman with Shilo Brooks

The Constitutionalist

Play Episode Listen Later May 24, 2025 59:57


On the sixtieth episode, Matthew and Ben are joined by Shilo Brooks, Executive Director of the James Madison Program in American Ideals and Institutions at Princeton University, to discuss his immensely popular course "The Art of Statesmanship and the Political Life." We want to hear from you! Constitutionalistpod@gmail.com The Constitutionalist is proud to be sponsored by the Jack Miller Center for Teaching America's Founding Principles and History. For the last twenty years, JMC has been working to preserve and promote that tradition through a variety of programs at the college and K-12 levels. Through their American Political Tradition Project, JMC has partnered with more than 1,000 scholars at over 300 college campuses across the country, especially through their annual Summer Institutes for graduate students and recent PhDs. The Jack Miller Center is also working with thousands of K-12 educators across the country to help them better understand America's founding principles and history and teach them effectively, to better educate the next generation of citizens. JMC has provided thousands of hours of professional development for teachers all over the country, reaching millions of students with improved civic learning. If you care about American education and civic responsibility, you'll want to check out their work, which focuses on reorienting our institutions of learning around America's founding principles. To learn more or get involved, visit jackmillercenter.org. The Constitutionalist is a podcast cohosted by Professor Benjamin Kleinerman, the RW Morrison Professor of Political Science at Baylor University and Founder and Editor of The Constitutionalist Blog, Shane Leary, a graduate student at Baylor University, and Dr. Matthew K. Reising, a John and Daria Barry Postdoctoral Research Fellow at Princeton University. Each week, they discuss political news in light of its constitutional implications, and explore a unique constitutional topic, ranging from the thoughts and experiences of America's founders and statesmen, historical episodes, and the broader philosophic ideas that influence the American experiment in government.

united states america american university history founders president donald trump culture power art house washington politics college state doctors phd professor colorado executive director joe biden elections washington dc dc local congress political supreme court union senate bernie sanders democracy federal kamala harris blm constitution conservatives heritage nonprofits political science liberal abraham lincoln civil rights public policy impeachment amendment graduate educating baylor george washington american history princeton university presidency ballot public affairs ted cruz institutions ideology constitutional elizabeth warren thomas jefferson founding fathers benjamin franklin mitt romney electoral college mitch mcconnell marco rubio baylor university supreme court justice american politics john adams rand paul polarization joe manchin chuck schumer alexander hamilton james madison cory booker lindsey graham bill of rights tim scott civic engagement federalist amy klobuchar rule of law john kennedy dianne feinstein civil liberties senate judiciary committee josh hawley mike lee claremont polarized constitutional law supreme court decisions ron johnson paul revere ideological house of representatives george clinton constitutional rights chris murphy department of education federalism aaron burr james smith robert morris rick scott tom cotton thomas paine department of justice kirsten gillibrand senate hearings political theory susan collins political philosophy constitutional convention constitutional amendments john witherspoon bob menendez statesman john hancock fourteenth patrick henry 14th amendment benedict arnold john marshall john cornyn department of defense chuck grassley tim kaine american government john quincy adams marsha blackburn samuel adams aei james wilson john paul jones john jay social activism political discourse dick durbin mark warner political debate joni ernst shilo jack miller political thought ben sasse sherrod brown political leadership tammy duckworth political commentary bill cassidy david perdue abigail adams american experiment checks and balances ed markey john thune ron wyden grad student department of homeland security war powers american presidency originalism michael bennet legal education thom tillis publius john hart constitutional studies richard blumenthal national constitution center separation of powers electoral reform political life civic education legal analysis american founding chris van hollen chris coons department of labor legal history department of energy constitutionalism tina smith james lankford liberal education tammy baldwin american ideals stephen hopkins summer institute department of transportation richard burr rob portman john morton angus king constitutionalists statesmanship bob casey benjamin harrison james madison program department of agriculture judicial review jon tester mazie hirono jeff merkley mike braun pat toomey social ethics john dickinson benjamin rush todd young civic responsibility jmc patrick leahy civic leadership gary peters historical analysis deliberative democracy debbie stabenow landmark cases american constitution society demagoguery founding principles george taylor department of veterans affairs moral leadership samuel huntington political education constitutional government charles carroll temperance movement cory gardner lamar alexander ben cardin mike rounds antebellum america kevin cramer department of state george ross cindy hyde smith state sovereignty revolutionary america brian schatz jeanne shaheen apush department of commerce founding documents civic participation roger sherman founding era jim inhofe constitutional change gouverneur morris maggie hassan constitutional advocacy early american republic martin heinrich contemporary politics john barrasso roger wicker william williams pat roberts jacky rosen george wythe elbridge gerry american political thought william floyd civic learning mercy otis warren constitutional accountability center living constitution richard henry lee department of the interior tom carper constitutional conventions samuel chase american political development legal philosophy alcohol prohibition mike crapo richard stockton government structure department of health and human services american governance lyman hall constitutional conservatism constitutional rights foundation constitutional literacy
The Constitutionalist
#59 - Tocqueville - The Omnipotence of the Majority

The Constitutionalist

Play Episode Listen Later May 16, 2025 52:00


On the fifty-ninth episode of the Constitutionalist, Ben and Matthew discuss Volume 1, Part 2, Chapter 7 of Alexis De Tocqueville's "Democracy in America" on the omnipotence of the majority. They discuss Tocqueville's warnings of the detrimental effects of democracy on the citizen. We want to hear from you! Constitutionalistpod@gmail.com The Constitutionalist is proud to be sponsored by the Jack Miller Center for Teaching America's Founding Principles and History. For the last twenty years, JMC has been working to preserve and promote that tradition through a variety of programs at the college and K-12 levels. Through their American Political Tradition Project, JMC has partnered with more than 1,000 scholars at over 300 college campuses across the country, especially through their annual Summer Institutes for graduate students and recent PhDs. The Jack Miller Center is also working with thousands of K-12 educators across the country to help them better understand America's founding principles and history and teach them effectively, to better educate the next generation of citizens. JMC has provided thousands of hours of professional development for teachers all over the country, reaching millions of students with improved civic learning. If you care about American education and civic responsibility, you'll want to check out their work, which focuses on reorienting our institutions of learning around America's founding principles. To learn more or get involved, visit jackmillercenter.org. The Constitutionalist is a podcast co-hosted by Professor Benjamin Kleinerman, the RW Morrison Professor of Political Science at Baylor University and Founder and Editor of The Constitutionalist Blog, Shane Leary, a graduate student at Baylor University, and Dr. Matthew Reising, a John and Daria Barry Postdoctoral Research Fellow at Princeton University. Each week, they discuss political news in light of its constitutional implications, and explore a unique constitutional topic, ranging from the thoughts and experiences of America's founders and statesmen, historical episodes, and the broader philosophic ideas that influence the American experiment in government.

united states america american university history founders president donald trump culture power washington politics college state doctors phd professor colorado joe biden washington dc dc local congress political supreme court union senate bernie sanders democracy federal kamala harris blm constitution conservatives heritage nonprofits political science liberal abraham lincoln civil rights public policy impeachment amendment graduate baylor george washington american history princeton university presidency ballot public affairs ted cruz majority ideology constitutional elizabeth warren thomas jefferson founding fathers benjamin franklin mitt romney electoral college mitch mcconnell marco rubio baylor university supreme court justice american politics john adams rand paul polarization joe manchin chuck schumer alexander hamilton james madison cory booker lindsey graham bill of rights tim scott civic engagement amy klobuchar rule of law john kennedy dianne feinstein civil liberties senate judiciary committee josh hawley mike lee claremont polarized constitutional law supreme court decisions ron johnson paul revere house of representatives george clinton constitutional rights chris murphy department of education federalism aaron burr james smith omnipotence robert morris rick scott tom cotton thomas paine alexis de tocqueville department of justice kirsten gillibrand senate hearings political theory susan collins political philosophy constitutional convention constitutional amendments john witherspoon bob menendez john hancock fourteenth patrick henry 14th amendment benedict arnold john marshall john cornyn political history department of defense chuck grassley tim kaine american government john quincy adams marsha blackburn samuel adams aei james wilson john paul jones john jay social activism political discourse dick durbin mark warner political debate joni ernst jack miller political thought ben sasse sherrod brown tammy duckworth bill cassidy political commentary abigail adams david perdue american experiment checks and balances ed markey john thune ron wyden grad student department of homeland security war powers originalism political analysis michael bennet thom tillis legal education publius john hart constitutional studies national constitution center richard blumenthal separation of powers electoral reform civic education legal analysis american founding chris van hollen chris coons department of labor legal history constitutionalism tina smith james lankford tammy baldwin stephen hopkins department of transportation summer institute richard burr rob portman john morton angus king constitutionalists bob casey benjamin harrison department of agriculture jon tester mazie hirono judicial review jeff merkley mike braun pat toomey social ethics john dickinson benjamin rush todd young civic responsibility jmc patrick leahy civic leadership gary peters deliberative democracy historical analysis debbie stabenow landmark cases american constitution society founding principles demagoguery department of veterans affairs george taylor samuel huntington political education constitutional government charles carroll temperance movement cory gardner lamar alexander ben cardin mike rounds antebellum america kevin cramer department of state george ross cindy hyde smith state sovereignty revolutionary america brian schatz jeanne shaheen apush department of commerce founding documents civic participation roger sherman founding era jim inhofe constitutional change gouverneur morris maggie hassan constitutional advocacy early american republic martin heinrich contemporary politics john barrasso roger wicker william williams pat roberts jacky rosen american political thought george wythe elbridge gerry william floyd civic learning mercy otis warren constitutional accountability center richard henry lee department of the interior tom carper constitutional conventions american political development samuel chase alcohol prohibition mike crapo richard stockton government structure department of health and human services american governance lyman hall constitutional conservatism constitutional rights foundation constitutional literacy
Ballot Battleground: Nevada
Mail time! Answering listener questions on public lands, no tax on tips, GSR arena and 2026 midterms with Chris Murphy

Ballot Battleground: Nevada

Play Episode Listen Later May 14, 2025 34:14


It's mail time at Ballot Battleground: Nevada. This week, we're digging through the listener mailbag for the first time in 2025 with News 4 and Fox 11 morning show anchor Chris Murphy. Ben and Chris answer questions ranging from public lands bills and no tax on tips to special sessions at the Nevada legislature and yes - the 2026 midterms. Not to mention the GSR arena, jackpot thresholds and which Aces team is more likely to win the championship this season. Do you have questions for our next mailbag? Send them to bjmargiott@sbgtv.com and put Ballot Battleground: Nevada in the subject line. Sen. Jacky Rosen on tariffs, deportations, voter ID and federal lands bills Nevada Rep. Mark Amodei on tariffs, Signalgate, DOGE, immigration and more Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

The Constitutionalist
#57 - Tocqueville's Point of Departure

The Constitutionalist

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 25, 2025 65:24


On the fifty-seventh episode of the Constitutionalist, Shane and Matthew discuss Volume 1, Chapter 2 of Alexis De Tocqueville's "Democracy in America." We want to hear from you! Constitutionalistpod@gmail.com The Constitutionalist is proud to be sponsored by the Jack Miller Center for Teaching America's Founding Principles and History. For the last twenty years, JMC has been working to preserve and promote that tradition through a variety of programs at the college and K-12 levels. Through their American Political Tradition Project, JMC has partnered with more than 1,000 scholars at over 300 college campuses across the country, especially through their annual Summer Institutes for graduate students and recent PhDs. The Jack Miller Center is also working with thousands of K-12 educators across the country to help them better understand America's founding principles and history and teach them effectively, to better educate the next generation of citizens. JMC has provided thousands of hours of professional development for teachers all over the country, reaching millions of students with improved civic learning. If you care about American education and civic responsibility, you'll want to check out their work, which focuses on reorienting our institutions of learning around America's founding principles. To learn more or get involved, visit jackmillercenter.org. The Constitutionalist is a podcast co-hosted by Professor Benjamin Kleinerman, the RW Morrison Professor of Political Science at Baylor University and Founder and Editor of The Constitutionalist Blog, Shane Leary, a graduate student at Baylor University, and Dr. Matthew Reising, a John and Daria Barry Postdoctoral Research Fellow at Princeton University. Each week, they discuss political news in light of its constitutional implications, and explore a unique constitutional topic, ranging from the thoughts and experiences of America's founders and statesmen, historical episodes, and the broader philosophic ideas that influence the American experiment in government.

united states america american university history founders president donald trump culture power house washington politics college state doctors phd professor colorado joe biden elections washington dc dc local congress political supreme court union senate bernie sanders democracy federal kamala harris blm constitution conservatives heritage nonprofits political science liberal abraham lincoln civil rights public policy impeachment amendment graduate baylor george washington american history princeton university presidency departure ballot public affairs ted cruz ideology constitutional elizabeth warren thomas jefferson founding fathers benjamin franklin mitt romney electoral college mitch mcconnell marco rubio baylor university supreme court justice american politics john adams rand paul polarization joe manchin chuck schumer alexander hamilton james madison cory booker lindsey graham bill of rights american democracy tim scott civic engagement amy klobuchar rule of law john kennedy dianne feinstein civil liberties senate judiciary committee josh hawley mike lee claremont polarized constitutional law supreme court decisions ron johnson paul revere ideological house of representatives george clinton constitutional rights chris murphy department of education federalism aaron burr james smith robert morris rick scott tom cotton thomas paine american exceptionalism alexis de tocqueville department of justice kirsten gillibrand senate hearings political theory susan collins political philosophy constitutional convention constitutional amendments john witherspoon bob menendez john hancock fourteenth patrick henry 14th amendment benedict arnold john marshall john cornyn political history department of defense chuck grassley tim kaine american government john quincy adams samuel adams marsha blackburn aei james wilson john paul jones john jay social activism political discourse dick durbin mark warner political debate joni ernst jack miller political thought ben sasse sherrod brown tammy duckworth political commentary bill cassidy david perdue abigail adams american experiment checks and balances ed markey john thune ron wyden grad student department of homeland security war powers originalism michael bennet thom tillis legal education publius john hart constitutional studies richard blumenthal national constitution center separation of powers electoral reform civic education legal analysis american founding chris van hollen chris coons department of labor legal history department of energy constitutionalism tina smith james lankford tammy baldwin stephen hopkins summer institute department of transportation richard burr rob portman john morton angus king constitutionalists democracy in america bob casey benjamin harrison department of agriculture mazie hirono jon tester judicial review jeff merkley mike braun pat toomey social ethics john dickinson benjamin rush todd young civic responsibility jmc patrick leahy civic leadership gary peters historical analysis deliberative democracy debbie stabenow landmark cases american constitution society demagoguery founding principles george taylor department of veterans affairs samuel huntington political education constitutional government charles carroll cory gardner temperance movement lamar alexander ben cardin mike rounds antebellum america kevin cramer department of state george ross cindy hyde smith state sovereignty revolutionary america brian schatz jeanne shaheen department of commerce apush civic participation founding documents founding era roger sherman jim inhofe constitutional change gouverneur morris maggie hassan constitutional advocacy early american republic martin heinrich roger wicker john barrasso william williams pat roberts jacky rosen american political thought george wythe elbridge gerry william floyd civic learning mercy otis warren constitutional accountability center civic culture living constitution richard henry lee department of the interior constitutional affairs tom carper constitutional conventions samuel chase american political development legal philosophy alcohol prohibition mike crapo richard stockton government structure department of health and human services american governance american political culture lyman hall constitutional conservatism constitutional rights foundation
Ballot Battleground: Nevada
Sen. Jacky Rosen on tariffs, deportations, voter ID and federal lands bills

Ballot Battleground: Nevada

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 18, 2025 30:36


Jacky Rosen is back in the U.S. Senate for a second term representing the Silver State - after she barely hung on to her seat amid the red wave. Democrats are in the minority in both the Senate and House, but Senator Rosen says they're finding their footing when it comes to pushing back on tariffs, deportations, DOGE and more. This episode, host Ben Margiott sits down with Senator Rosen for an extended one-on-one conversation on all of that - not to mention her opinion of a new voter ID proposal, the criticism of her Washoe County lands bill and how her first job as a cocktail waitress on the Vegas Strip informs her work in Congress. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

The Constitutionalist
#56 - Federalist 37

The Constitutionalist

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 18, 2025 52:14


On the fifty-sixth episode of the Constitutionalist, Shane, Ben, and Matthew discuss Federalist 37, and Madison's teachings on political and epistemological limits. We want to hear from you! Constitutionalistpod@gmail.com The Constitutionalist is proud to be sponsored by the Jack Miller Center for Teaching America's Founding Principles and History. For the last twenty years, JMC has been working to preserve and promote that tradition through a variety of programs at the college and K-12 levels. Through their American Political Tradition Project, JMC has partnered with more than 1,000 scholars at over 300 college campuses across the country, especially through their annual Summer Institutes for graduate students and recent PhDs. The Jack Miller Center is also working with thousands of K-12 educators across the country to help them better understand America's founding principles and history and teach them effectively, to better educate the next generation of citizens. JMC has provided thousands of hours of professional development for teachers all over the country, reaching millions of students with improved civic learning. If you care about American education and civic responsibility, you'll want to check out their work, which focuses on reorienting our institutions of learning around America's founding principles. To learn more or get involved, visit jackmillercenter.org. The Constitutionalist is a podcast co-hosted by Professor Benjamin Kleinerman, the RW Morrison Professor of Political Science at Baylor University and Founder and Editor of The Constitutionalist Blog, Shane Leary, a graduate student at Baylor University, and Dr. Matthew Reising, a John and Daria Barry Postdoctoral Research Fellow at Princeton University. Each week, they discuss political news in light of its constitutional implications, and explore a unique constitutional topic, ranging from the thoughts and experiences of America's founders and statesmen, historical episodes, and the broader philosophic ideas that influence the American experiment in government.

united states america american university history founders president donald trump culture power house washington politics college state doctors phd professor colorado joe biden elections washington dc dc local congress political supreme court union senate bernie sanders democracy federal kamala harris blm constitution conservatives heritage nonprofits political science liberal civil rights public policy impeachment amendment graduate baylor george washington american history princeton university presidency ballot public affairs ted cruz ideology constitutional elizabeth warren thomas jefferson founding fathers benjamin franklin mitt romney electoral college mitch mcconnell marco rubio baylor university supreme court justice american politics john adams rand paul polarization joe manchin chuck schumer alexander hamilton james madison cory booker lindsey graham bill of rights tim scott civic engagement federalist amy klobuchar rule of law john kennedy dianne feinstein civil liberties senate judiciary committee josh hawley mike lee claremont polarized constitutional law supreme court decisions ron johnson paul revere ideological house of representatives george clinton constitutional rights chris murphy department of education federalism aaron burr james smith robert morris rick scott tom cotton thomas paine department of justice kirsten gillibrand senate hearings political theory susan collins political philosophy constitutional convention constitutional amendments john witherspoon bob menendez john hancock fourteenth patrick henry 14th amendment benedict arnold john marshall john cornyn political history department of defense chuck grassley tim kaine american government john quincy adams marsha blackburn samuel adams aei james wilson john paul jones john jay political discourse dick durbin mark warner political debate joni ernst jack miller political thought ben sasse sherrod brown tammy duckworth bill cassidy political commentary abigail adams david perdue american experiment checks and balances ed markey john thune ron wyden grad student war powers department of homeland security american presidency originalism political analysis michael bennet thom tillis legal education publius john hart constitutional studies richard blumenthal national constitution center separation of powers electoral reform civic education legal analysis american founding chris van hollen chris coons department of labor legal history department of energy constitutionalism tina smith james lankford tammy baldwin stephen hopkins department of transportation summer institute richard burr rob portman john morton angus king constitutionalists bob casey benjamin harrison department of agriculture jon tester mazie hirono judicial review jeff merkley mike braun pat toomey john dickinson benjamin rush todd young civic responsibility jmc patrick leahy civic leadership gary peters deliberative democracy historical analysis debbie stabenow landmark cases american constitution society founding principles demagoguery department of veterans affairs george taylor samuel huntington political education constitutional government charles carroll cory gardner lamar alexander ben cardin mike rounds kevin cramer department of state george ross cindy hyde smith state sovereignty revolutionary america brian schatz jeanne shaheen apush department of commerce founding documents civic participation roger sherman founding era jim inhofe constitutional change gouverneur morris maggie hassan constitutional advocacy early american republic martin heinrich contemporary politics john barrasso roger wicker william williams pat roberts jacky rosen american political thought george wythe elbridge gerry william floyd civic learning mercy otis warren constitutional accountability center living constitution richard henry lee department of the interior constitutional affairs tom carper constitutional conventions american political development samuel chase legal philosophy mike crapo richard stockton government structure department of health and human services american governance lyman hall constitutional conservatism constitutional rights foundation constitutional literacy
The Constitutionalist
#55 - Gouverneur Morris with Dennis C. Rasmussen

The Constitutionalist

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 11, 2025 60:27


Purchase Professor Rasmussen's book here.We want to hear from you! Constitutionalistpod@gmail.com  The Constitutionalist is proud to be sponsored by the Jack Miller Center for Teaching America's Founding Principles and History. For the last twenty years, JMC has been working to preserve and promote that tradition through a variety of programs at the college and K-12 levels. Through their American Political Tradition Project, JMC has partnered with more than 1,000 scholars at over 300 college campuses across the country, especially through their annual Summer Institutes for graduate students and recent PhDs. The Jack Miller Center is also working with thousands of K-12 educators across the country to help them better understand America's founding principles and history and teach them effectively, to better educate the next generation of citizens. JMC has provided thousands of hours of professional development for teachers all over the country, reaching millions of students with improved civic learning. If you care about American education and civic responsibility, you'll want to check out their work, which focuses on reorienting our institutions of learning around America's founding principles. To learn more or get involved, visit jackmillercenter.org.The Constitutionalist is a podcast cohosted by Professor Benjamin Kleinerman, the RW Morrison Professor of Political Science at Baylor University and Founder and Editor of The Constitutionalist Blog, Shane Leary, a graduate student at Baylor University, and Dr. Matthew Reising, a John and Daria Barry Postdoctoral Research Fellow at Princeton University. Each week, they discuss political news in light of its constitutional implications, and explore a unique constitutional topic, ranging from the thoughts and experiences of America's founders and statesmen, historical episodes, and the broader philosophic ideas that influence the American experiment in government.   

united states america american history founders president donald trump culture house politics college doctors phd colorado joe biden elections dc local congress political supreme court union bernie sanders democracy kamala harris blm constitution conservatives heritage nonprofits political science liberal civil rights public policy impeachment amendment baylor george washington american history princeton university presidency ballot public affairs ted cruz ideology constitutional elizabeth warren thomas jefferson founding fathers benjamin franklin mitt romney electoral college mitch mcconnell marco rubio baylor university supreme court justice american politics john adams rand paul polarization joe manchin chuck schumer alexander hamilton james madison cory booker lindsey graham bill of rights tim scott civic engagement federalist amy klobuchar rule of law john kennedy dianne feinstein civil liberties senate judiciary committee josh hawley mike lee claremont polarized supreme court decisions ron johnson paul revere ideological house of representatives george clinton constitutional rights chris murphy department of education federalism aaron burr james smith robert morris rick scott tom cotton thomas paine department of justice kirsten gillibrand senate hearings political theory susan collins political philosophy constitutional convention constitutional amendments john witherspoon bob menendez john hancock fourteenth patrick henry 14th amendment benedict arnold john marshall john cornyn political history department of defense chuck grassley tim kaine american government john quincy adams samuel adams marsha blackburn aei james wilson john paul jones john jay political discourse dick durbin mark warner political debate joni ernst jack miller political thought ben sasse sherrod brown tammy duckworth political commentary bill cassidy abigail adams david perdue american experiment checks and balances ed markey john thune ron wyden grad student department of homeland security war powers american presidency originalism political analysis michael bennet thom tillis legal education john hart constitutional studies richard blumenthal national constitution center separation of powers electoral reform legal analysis american founding chris van hollen chris coons department of labor legal history department of energy constitutionalism tina smith james lankford tammy baldwin stephen hopkins summer institute department of transportation richard burr rob portman john morton angus king constitutionalists bob casey benjamin harrison department of agriculture judicial review jon tester mazie hirono jeff merkley mike braun pat toomey john dickinson benjamin rush todd young civic responsibility jmc patrick leahy civic leadership gary peters historical analysis deliberative democracy debbie stabenow landmark cases american constitution society founding principles demagoguery george taylor department of veterans affairs samuel huntington political education constitutional government charles carroll cory gardner lamar alexander ben cardin mike rounds kevin cramer department of state george ross cindy hyde smith state sovereignty revolutionary america brian schatz jeanne shaheen department of commerce apush civic participation founding documents founding era roger sherman jim inhofe constitutional change gouverneur morris maggie hassan constitutional advocacy early american republic martin heinrich contemporary politics john barrasso roger wicker william williams pat roberts jacky rosen american political thought george wythe elbridge gerry william floyd civic learning mercy otis warren constitutional accountability center living constitution richard henry lee department of the interior constitutional affairs tom carper constitutional conventions american political development samuel chase legal philosophy richard stockton mike crapo government structure department of health and human services american governance dennis c rasmussen lyman hall constitutional conservatism constitutional rights foundation constitutional literacy
The Constitutionalist
#54 - Defending the Electoral College (Martin Diamond and Herbert Storing)

The Constitutionalist

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 4, 2025 64:38


On the fifty-fourth episode of the Constitutionalist, Shane, Ben, and Matthew discuss the arguments of Martin Diamond and Herbert Storing in favor of preserving the Electoral College, presented to the Subcommittee on the Constitution of the Senate Judiciary Committee in July 1977. The readings may be accessed here: Martin Diamond: http://www.electoralcollegehistory.com/electoral/docs/diamond.pdf Herbert Storing (Chapter 21 in this volume): https://www.aei.org/wp-content/uploads/2014/07/-toward-a-more-perfect-union_154408483501.pdf?x85095 We want to hear from you! Constitutionalistpod@gmail.com The Constitutionalist is proud to be sponsored by the Jack Miller Center for Teaching America's Founding Principles and History. For the last twenty years, JMC has been working to preserve and promote that tradition through a variety of programs at the college and K-12 levels. Through their American Political Tradition Project, JMC has partnered with more than 1,000 scholars at over 300 college campuses across the country, especially through their annual Summer Institutes for graduate students and recent PhDs. The Jack Miller Center is also working with thousands of K-12 educators across the country to help them better understand America's founding principles and history and teach them effectively, to better educate the next generation of citizens. JMC has provided thousands of hours of professional development for teachers all over the country, reaching millions of students with improved civic learning. If you care about American education and civic responsibility, you'll want to check out their work, which focuses on reorienting our institutions of learning around America's founding principles. To learn more or get involved, visit jackmillercenter.org. The Constitutionalist is a podcast co-hosted by Professor Benjamin Kleinerman, the RW Morrison Professor of Political Science at Baylor University and Founder and Editor of The Constitutionalist Blog, Shane Leary, a graduate student at Baylor University, and Dr. Matthew Reising, a John and Daria Barry Postdoctoral Research Fellow at Princeton University. Each week, they discuss political news in light of its constitutional implications, and explore a unique constitutional topic, ranging from the thoughts and experiences of America's founders and statesmen, historical episodes, and the broader philosophic ideas that influence the American experiment in government.

united states america american university history founders president donald trump culture power house washington politics college state doctors phd professor colorado joe biden elections washington dc dc local congress political supreme court union senate bernie sanders democracy federal kamala harris blm constitution diamond conservatives heritage nonprofits defending political science liberal civil rights public policy impeachment amendment graduate baylor george washington herbert american history princeton university presidency ballot public affairs ted cruz ideology constitutional elizabeth warren thomas jefferson founding fathers benjamin franklin mitt romney electoral college mitch mcconnell marco rubio baylor university supreme court justice american politics john adams rand paul polarization joe manchin chuck schumer alexander hamilton james madison cory booker lindsey graham storing bill of rights tim scott civic engagement federalist amy klobuchar rule of law john kennedy dianne feinstein civil liberties senate judiciary committee josh hawley mike lee claremont polarized constitutional law supreme court decisions ron johnson paul revere ideological house of representatives george clinton constitutional rights chris murphy department of education federalism aaron burr james smith robert morris subcommittee rick scott tom cotton thomas paine department of justice kirsten gillibrand senate hearings political theory susan collins political philosophy constitutional convention constitutional amendments john witherspoon bob menendez john hancock fourteenth patrick henry 14th amendment benedict arnold john marshall john cornyn political history department of defense chuck grassley tim kaine american government john quincy adams marsha blackburn samuel adams aei james wilson john paul jones john jay political discourse dick durbin mark warner political debate joni ernst jack miller political thought ben sasse sherrod brown tammy duckworth political commentary bill cassidy abigail adams david perdue american experiment checks and balances ed markey john thune ron wyden grad student department of homeland security war powers american presidency originalism political analysis michael bennet thom tillis legal education publius john hart constitutional studies national constitution center richard blumenthal separation of powers electoral reform civic education legal analysis american founding chris van hollen chris coons department of labor legal history department of energy constitutionalism tina smith james lankford tammy baldwin stephen hopkins summer institute richard burr rob portman john morton angus king constitutionalists bob casey benjamin harrison department of agriculture judicial review mazie hirono jon tester jeff merkley mike braun pat toomey john dickinson benjamin rush todd young civic responsibility jmc patrick leahy civic leadership gary peters historical analysis deliberative democracy debbie stabenow landmark cases american constitution society founding principles demagoguery george taylor department of veterans affairs samuel huntington political education constitutional government charles carroll cory gardner david nichols lamar alexander ben cardin mike rounds kevin cramer department of state george ross cindy hyde smith state sovereignty revolutionary america brian schatz jeanne shaheen apush department of commerce civic participation founding documents founding era roger sherman jim inhofe constitutional change gouverneur morris maggie hassan constitutional advocacy early american republic martin heinrich contemporary politics john barrasso roger wicker william williams pat roberts jacky rosen american political thought george wythe elbridge gerry william floyd civic learning mercy otis warren constitutional accountability center living constitution richard henry lee department of the interior constitutional affairs tom carper constitutional conventions american political development samuel chase legal philosophy richard stockton mike crapo government structure department of health and human services american governance lyman hall constitutional conservatism constitutional rights foundation constitutional literacy
The Constitutionalist
#53 - Lincoln's Temperance Address

The Constitutionalist

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 28, 2025 61:40


On the fifty-third episode of the Constitutionalist, Shane, Ben, and Matthew discuss Lincoln's famous "Temperance Address," delivered on Washington's birthday in 1842 to the Washington Society in Springfield, Illinois. We want to hear from you! Constitutionalistpod@gmail.com The Constitutionalist is proud to be sponsored by the Jack Miller Center for Teaching America's Founding Principles and History. For the last twenty years, JMC has been working to preserve and promote that tradition through a variety of programs at the college and K-12 levels. Through their American Political Tradition Project, JMC has partnered with more than 1,000 scholars at over 300 college campuses across the country, especially through their annual Summer Institutes for graduate students and recent PhDs. The Jack Miller Center is also working with thousands of K-12 educators across the country to help them better understand America's founding principles and history and teach them effectively, to better educate the next generation of citizens. JMC has provided thousands of hours of professional development for teachers all over the country, reaching millions of students with improved civic learning. If you care about American education and civic responsibility, you'll want to check out their work, which focuses on reorienting our institutions of learning around America's founding principles. To learn more or get involved, visit jackmillercenter.org. The Constitutionalist is a podcast co-hosted by Professor Benjamin Kleinerman, the RW Morrison Professor of Political Science at Baylor University and Founder and Editor of The Constitutionalist Blog, Shane Leary, a graduate student at Baylor University, and Dr. Matthew Reising, a John and Daria Barry Postdoctoral Research Fellow at Princeton University. Each week, they discuss political news in light of its constitutional implications, and explore a unique constitutional topic, ranging from the thoughts and experiences of America's founders and statesmen, historical episodes, and the broader philosophic ideas that influence the American experiment in government.

united states america american university history founders president donald trump culture power house washington politics college state doctors phd professor colorado joe biden elections washington dc dc local illinois congress political supreme court senate bernie sanders democracy federal kamala harris blm address constitution conservatives heritage nonprofits political science liberal abraham lincoln civil rights public policy impeachment amendment graduate baylor springfield george washington american history princeton university presidency ballot public affairs ted cruz ideology constitutional elizabeth warren thomas jefferson founding fathers benjamin franklin mitt romney mitch mcconnell marco rubio baylor university supreme court justice american politics john adams rand paul polarization joe manchin chuck schumer alexander hamilton james madison cory booker lindsey graham bill of rights temperance tim scott civic engagement federalist amy klobuchar rule of law john kennedy dianne feinstein civil liberties josh hawley mike lee claremont polarized constitutional law supreme court decisions ron johnson paul revere ideological house of representatives george clinton constitutional rights chris murphy department of education federalism aaron burr james smith robert morris rick scott tom cotton thomas paine department of justice kirsten gillibrand political theory susan collins political philosophy constitutional amendments john witherspoon bob menendez john hancock fourteenth patrick henry 14th amendment benedict arnold john marshall john cornyn political history department of defense chuck grassley tim kaine american government john quincy adams marsha blackburn samuel adams aei james wilson john paul jones john jay social activism political discourse dick durbin mark warner political debate joni ernst jack miller political thought ben sasse sherrod brown tammy duckworth bill cassidy political commentary abigail adams david perdue american experiment checks and balances ed markey john thune ron wyden grad student war powers department of homeland security american presidency originalism political analysis michael bennet thom tillis legal education publius john hart constitutional studies national constitution center richard blumenthal separation of powers civic education legal analysis chris van hollen chris coons department of labor legal history department of energy constitutionalism tina smith james lankford tammy baldwin stephen hopkins summer institute richard burr rob portman john morton angus king constitutionalists bob casey benjamin harrison department of agriculture judicial review jon tester mazie hirono jeff merkley mike braun pat toomey social ethics john dickinson benjamin rush todd young civic responsibility jmc patrick leahy civic leadership gary peters historical analysis debbie stabenow landmark cases american constitution society founding principles demagoguery george taylor department of veterans affairs samuel huntington political education constitutional government charles carroll cory gardner temperance movement lamar alexander ben cardin mike rounds antebellum america kevin cramer department of state george ross cindy hyde smith brian schatz jeanne shaheen apush department of commerce founding documents civic participation roger sherman constitutional change jim inhofe gouverneur morris maggie hassan constitutional advocacy martin heinrich contemporary politics john barrasso roger wicker william williams pat roberts jacky rosen american political thought elbridge gerry george wythe william floyd civic learning mercy otis warren constitutional accountability center living constitution richard henry lee department of the interior constitutional affairs tom carper constitutional conventions samuel chase legal philosophy alcohol prohibition mike crapo richard stockton government structure department of health and human services american governance lyman hall washington society constitutional rights foundation constitutional literacy
The Constitutionalist
#52 - Texas Annexation - Adding the Lone Star with Jordan Cash

The Constitutionalist

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 21, 2025 66:19


On the fifty-second episode of the Constitutionalist, Shane, Ben, and Matthew are joined by Jordan Cash, Assistant Professor at the James Madison College at Michigan State University, to discuss Texas's declaration of independence from Mexico, and its annexation by the United States. We want to hear from you! Constitutionalistpod@gmail.com The Constitutionalist is proud to be sponsored by the Jack Miller Center for Teaching America's Founding Principles and History. For the last twenty years, JMC has been working to preserve and promote that tradition through a variety of programs at the college and K-12 levels. Through their American Political Tradition Project, JMC has partnered with more than 1,000 scholars at over 300 college campuses across the country, especially through their annual Summer Institutes for graduate students and recent PhDs. The Jack Miller Center is also working with thousands of K-12 educators across the country to help them better understand America's founding principles and history and teach them effectively, to better educate the next generation of citizens. JMC has provided thousands of hours of professional development for teachers all over the country, reaching millions of students with improved civic learning. If you care about American education and civic responsibility, you'll want to check out their work, which focuses on reorienting our institutions of learning around America's founding principles. To learn more or get involved, visit jackmillercenter.org. The Constitutionalist is a podcast cohosted by Professor Benjamin Kleinerman, the RW Morrison Professor of Political Science at Baylor University and Founder and Editor of The Constitutionalist Blog, Shane Leary, a graduate student at Baylor University, and Dr. Matthew Reising, a John and Daria Barry Postdoctoral Research Fellow at Princeton University. Each week, they discuss political news in light of its constitutional implications, and explore a unique constitutional topic, ranging from the thoughts and experiences of America's founders and statesmen, historical episodes, and the broader philosophic ideas that influence the American experiment in government.

united states america american university history founders texas president donald trump culture power house washington politics college mexico state doctors phd professor colorado joe biden elections washington dc dc local congress political supreme court union senate bernie sanders democracy federal kamala harris blm constitution conservatives assistant professor heritage nonprofits michigan state university political science liberal civil rights public policy impeachment amendment graduate baylor george washington american history princeton university presidency sherman ballot public affairs ted cruz ideology constitutional elizabeth warren thomas jefferson founding fathers benjamin franklin mitt romney declaration of independence mitch mcconnell marco rubio baylor university supreme court justice american politics alamo lone star john adams rand paul polarization joe manchin chuck schumer alexander hamilton james madison cory booker lindsey graham bill of rights tim scott civic engagement federalist amy klobuchar rule of law john kennedy dianne feinstein civil liberties josh hawley mike lee claremont polarized constitutional law supreme court decisions ron johnson paul revere ideological house of representatives george clinton constitutional rights manifest destiny chris murphy department of education federalism aaron burr james smith robert morris rick scott tom cotton thomas paine department of justice kirsten gillibrand sam houston political theory susan collins political philosophy constitutional convention constitutional amendments john witherspoon bob menendez john hancock fourteenth annexation patrick henry 14th amendment benedict arnold john cornyn political history department of defense chuck grassley davy crockett tim kaine american government john quincy adams samuel adams marsha blackburn aei james wilson john paul jones john jay political discourse dick durbin mark warner political debate joni ernst jack miller political thought ben sasse sherrod brown tammy duckworth political commentary bill cassidy david perdue abigail adams american experiment checks and balances ed markey john thune ron wyden grad student department of homeland security war powers american presidency originalism political analysis michael bennet legal education thom tillis publius john hart constitutional studies richard blumenthal national constitution center separation of powers civic education legal analysis american founding chris van hollen chris coons department of labor legal history department of energy constitutionalism tina smith james lankford tammy baldwin stephen hopkins summer institute texas history richard burr rob portman john morton angus king constitutionalists bob casey benjamin harrison department of agriculture mazie hirono jon tester judicial review jeff merkley mike braun pat toomey texas revolution benjamin rush todd young civic responsibility jmc patrick leahy civic leadership gary peters historical analysis debbie stabenow landmark cases demagoguery founding principles department of veterans affairs george taylor samuel huntington political education constitutional government charles carroll cory gardner lamar alexander ben cardin mike rounds kevin cramer department of state george ross cindy hyde smith state sovereignty revolutionary america brian schatz jeanne shaheen department of commerce apush founding documents civic participation founding era jim inhofe constitutional change gouverneur morris maggie hassan constitutional advocacy mexican history early american republic martin heinrich contemporary politics john barrasso roger wicker william williams pat roberts jacky rosen american political thought george wythe elbridge gerry william floyd texas independence james madison college civic learning mercy otis warren constitutional accountability center living constitution richard henry lee texians department of the interior james bowie constitutional affairs tom carper constitutional conventions samuel chase american political development legal philosophy mike crapo richard stockton government structure department of health and human services american governance texas republic lyman hall constitutional rights foundation constitutional literacy
The Constitutionalist
#51 - Madison on Property

The Constitutionalist

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 14, 2025 45:47


On the fifty-first episode of the Constitutionalist, Shane Leary and Matthew Reising discuss James Madison's Note on Property for the National Gazette, published March 27, 1792 We want to hear from you! Constitutionalistpod@gmail.com The Constitutionalist is proud to be sponsored by the Jack Miller Center for Teaching America's Founding Principles and History. For the last twenty years, JMC has been working to preserve and promote that tradition through a variety of programs at the college and K-12 levels. Through their American Political Tradition Project, JMC has partnered with more than 1,000 scholars at over 300 college campuses across the country, especially through their annual Summer Institutes for graduate students and recent PhDs. The Jack Miller Center is also working with thousands of K-12 educators across the country to help them better understand America's founding principles and history and teach them effectively, to better educate the next generation of citizens. JMC has provided thousands of hours of professional development for teachers all over the country, reaching millions of students with improved civic learning. If you care about American education and civic responsibility, you'll want to check out their work, which focuses on reorienting our institutions of learning around America's founding principles. To learn more or get involved, visit jackmillercenter.org. The Constitutionalist is a podcast cohosted by Professor Benjamin Kleinerman, the RW Morrison Professor of Political Science at Baylor University and Founder and Editor of The Constitutionalist Blog, Shane Leary, a graduate student at Baylor University, and Dr. Matthew Reising, a John and Daria Barry Postdoctoral Research Fellow at Princeton University. Each week, they discuss political news in light of its constitutional implications, and explore a unique constitutional topic, ranging from the thoughts and experiences of America's founders and statesmen, historical episodes, and the broader philosophic ideas that influence the American experiment in government.

united states america american university history founders president donald trump culture power house washington politics college state doctors phd professor colorado joe biden elections washington dc dc local congress political supreme court union rights senate bernie sanders democracy federal kamala harris blm property constitution conservatives heritage nonprofits political science liberal civil rights public policy impeachment amendment graduate baylor george washington american history princeton university presidency ballot public affairs ted cruz ideology constitutional elizabeth warren thomas jefferson founding fathers benjamin franklin mitt romney mitch mcconnell marco rubio baylor university supreme court justice american politics john adams rand paul polarization joe manchin chuck schumer alexander hamilton james madison cory booker lindsey graham bill of rights tim scott civic engagement federalist amy klobuchar rule of law john kennedy dianne feinstein civil liberties josh hawley mike lee claremont polarized constitutional law supreme court decisions ron johnson paul revere ideological house of representatives george clinton constitutional rights chris murphy department of education federalism aaron burr james smith robert morris rick scott tom cotton thomas paine department of justice kirsten gillibrand political theory susan collins political philosophy constitutional convention constitutional amendments john witherspoon bob menendez john hancock fourteenth patrick henry 14th amendment benedict arnold john marshall john cornyn political history department of defense chuck grassley tim kaine american government john quincy adams marsha blackburn samuel adams aei james wilson john paul jones john jay political discourse dick durbin mark warner political debate joni ernst jack miller political thought ben sasse sherrod brown tammy duckworth bill cassidy political commentary abigail adams david perdue american experiment checks and balances ed markey john thune ron wyden grad student department of homeland security war powers american presidency originalism political analysis michael bennet thom tillis legal education publius john hart constitutional studies richard blumenthal national constitution center separation of powers civic education legal analysis american founding chris van hollen chris coons department of labor legal history department of energy constitutionalism tina smith james lankford tammy baldwin stephen hopkins summer institute richard burr rob portman john morton angus king constitutionalists bob casey benjamin harrison department of agriculture judicial review jon tester mazie hirono jeff merkley mike braun pat toomey john dickinson benjamin rush todd young civic responsibility jmc patrick leahy civic leadership gary peters historical analysis debbie stabenow landmark cases american constitution society demagoguery founding principles department of veterans affairs george taylor samuel huntington political education constitutional government charles carroll cory gardner lamar alexander ben cardin mike rounds kevin cramer department of state george ross cindy hyde smith state sovereignty revolutionary america brian schatz jeanne shaheen department of commerce apush founding documents civic participation roger sherman founding era constitutional change jim inhofe gouverneur morris maggie hassan constitutional advocacy early american republic martin heinrich contemporary politics john barrasso roger wicker william williams pat roberts jacky rosen elbridge gerry george wythe american political thought william floyd civic learning mercy otis warren constitutional accountability center living constitution richard henry lee department of the interior constitutional affairs tom carper constitutional conventions american political development samuel chase legal philosophy mike crapo richard stockton government structure department of health and human services american governance lyman hall constitutional rights foundation constitutional literacy
The Constitutionalist
#50 - The Constitution of 1787

The Constitutionalist

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 7, 2025 56:11


To commemorate the fiftieth episode of The Constitutionalist, Benjamin Kleinerman, Shane Leary, and Matthew Reising discuss the Constitution of 1787. We want to hear from you! Constitutionalistpod@gmail.com The Constitutionalist is proud to be sponsored by the Jack Miller Center for Teaching America's Founding Principles and History. For the last twenty years, JMC has been working to preserve and promote that tradition through a variety of programs at the college and K-12 levels. Through their American Political Tradition Project, JMC has partnered with more than 1,000 scholars at over 300 college campuses across the country, especially through their annual Summer Institutes for graduate students and recent PhDs. The Jack Miller Center is also working with thousands of K-12 educators across the country to help them better understand America's founding principles and history and teach them effectively, to better educate the next generation of citizens. JMC has provided thousands of hours of professional development for teachers all over the country, reaching millions of students with improved civic learning. If you care about American education and civic responsibility, you'll want to check out their work, which focuses on reorienting our institutions of learning around America's founding principles. To learn more or get involved, visit jackmillercenter.org. The Constitutionalist is a podcast cohosted by Professor Benjamin Kleinerman, the RW Morrison Professor of Political Science at Baylor University and Founder and Editor of The Constitutionalist Blog, Shane Leary, a graduate student at Baylor University, and Dr. Matthew Reising, a John and Daria Barry Postdoctoral Research Fellow at Princeton University. Each week, they discuss political news in light of its constitutional implications, and explore a unique constitutional topic, ranging from the thoughts and experiences of America's founders and statesmen, historical episodes, and the broader philosophic ideas that influence the American experiment in government.

united states america american university history founders president donald trump culture power house washington politics college state doctors phd professor colorado joe biden elections washington dc dc local congress political supreme court union senate bernie sanders democracy federal kamala harris blm constitution conservatives heritage nonprofits political science liberal civil rights public policy impeachment amendment graduate baylor george washington american history princeton university presidency ballot public affairs ted cruz ideology constitutional elizabeth warren thomas jefferson founding fathers benjamin franklin mitt romney mitch mcconnell marco rubio baylor university supreme court justice american politics john adams rand paul polarization joe manchin chuck schumer alexander hamilton james madison cory booker lindsey graham bill of rights tim scott civic engagement federalist amy klobuchar rule of law john kennedy dianne feinstein civil liberties josh hawley mike lee claremont polarized constitutional law supreme court decisions ron johnson paul revere ideological house of representatives george clinton constitutional rights chris murphy department of education federalism aaron burr james smith robert morris rick scott tom cotton thomas paine department of justice kirsten gillibrand political theory susan collins political philosophy constitutional convention constitutional amendments john witherspoon bob menendez john hancock fourteenth patrick henry 14th amendment benedict arnold john marshall john cornyn political history department of defense chuck grassley tim kaine american government john quincy adams marsha blackburn samuel adams aei james wilson john paul jones john jay political discourse dick durbin mark warner political debate joni ernst jack miller political thought ben sasse sherrod brown tammy duckworth political commentary bill cassidy abigail adams david perdue american experiment checks and balances ed markey john thune ron wyden grad student department of homeland security war powers american presidency originalism political analysis michael bennet thom tillis legal education publius john hart constitutional studies richard blumenthal national constitution center separation of powers civic education legal analysis american founding chris van hollen chris coons department of labor legal history department of energy constitutionalism tina smith james lankford tammy baldwin stephen hopkins summer institute richard burr rob portman john morton angus king constitutionalists bob casey benjamin harrison department of agriculture jon tester mazie hirono judicial review jeff merkley mike braun pat toomey john dickinson benjamin rush todd young civic responsibility jmc patrick leahy civic leadership gary peters historical analysis debbie stabenow landmark cases american constitution society demagoguery founding principles department of veterans affairs george taylor samuel huntington political education constitutional government charles carroll cory gardner lamar alexander ben cardin mike rounds kevin cramer department of state george ross cindy hyde smith state sovereignty revolutionary america brian schatz jeanne shaheen department of commerce apush founding documents civic participation roger sherman founding era constitutional change jim inhofe gouverneur morris maggie hassan constitutional advocacy early american republic martin heinrich contemporary politics john barrasso roger wicker william williams pat roberts jacky rosen american political thought george wythe elbridge gerry william floyd civic learning mercy otis warren constitutional accountability center living constitution richard henry lee department of the interior constitutional affairs tom carper constitutional conventions samuel chase american political development legal philosophy mike crapo richard stockton government structure department of health and human services american governance lyman hall constitutional rights foundation constitutional literacy
The Constitutionalist
#49 - Madison's Notes on Ancient and Modern Confederacies

The Constitutionalist

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 28, 2025 55:45


On the forty-ninth episode of The Constitutionalist, Benjamin Kleinerman, Shane Leary, and Matthew Reising discuss James Madison's "Notes on Ancient and Modern Confederacies," compiled in 1786, and his early thinking regarding confederacies, union, and the necessity of a new Constitution. We want to hear from you! Constitutionalistpod@gmail.com The Constitutionalist is proud to be sponsored by the Jack Miller Center for Teaching America's Founding Principles and History. For the last twenty years, JMC has been working to preserve and promote that tradition through a variety of programs at the college and K-12 levels. Through their American Political Tradition Project, JMC has partnered with more than 1,000 scholars at over 300 college campuses across the country, especially through their annual Summer Institutes for graduate students and recent PhDs. The Jack Miller Center is also working with thousands of K-12 educators across the country to help them better understand America's founding principles and history and teach them effectively, to better educate the next generation of citizens. JMC has provided thousands of hours of professional development for teachers all over the country, reaching millions of students with improved civic learning. If you care about American education and civic responsibility, you'll want to check out their work, which focuses on reorienting our institutions of learning around America's founding principles. To learn more or get involved, visit jackmillercenter.org. The Constitutionalist is a podcast cohosted by Professor Benjamin Kleinerman, the RW Morrison Professor of Political Science at Baylor University and Founder and Editor of The Constitutionalist Blog, Shane Leary, a graduate student at Baylor University, and Dr. Matthew Reising, a John and Daria Barry Postdoctoral Research Fellow at Princeton University. Each week, they discuss political news in light of its constitutional implications, and explore a unique constitutional topic, ranging from the thoughts and experiences of America's founders and statesmen, historical episodes, and the broader philosophic ideas that influence the American experiment in government.

united states america american university history founders president donald trump culture power house washington politics college state doctors phd professor colorado joe biden elections washington dc dc local modern congress political supreme court union senate bernie sanders democracy federal kamala harris ancient blm constitution conservatives heritage nonprofits political science liberal civil rights public policy impeachment amendment graduate baylor george washington american history princeton university presidency ballot public affairs ted cruz ideology constitutional elizabeth warren thomas jefferson founding fathers benjamin franklin mitt romney mitch mcconnell marco rubio baylor university supreme court justice american politics john adams rand paul polarization joe manchin chuck schumer alexander hamilton james madison cory booker lindsey graham bill of rights tim scott civic engagement federalist amy klobuchar rule of law john kennedy dianne feinstein civil liberties josh hawley mike lee claremont polarized constitutional law supreme court decisions ron johnson paul revere ideological house of representatives george clinton constitutional rights chris murphy department of education federalism aaron burr james smith robert morris rick scott tom cotton thomas paine department of justice kirsten gillibrand political theory susan collins political philosophy constitutional convention constitutional amendments john witherspoon bob menendez john hancock fourteenth patrick henry 14th amendment benedict arnold john marshall john cornyn political history department of defense chuck grassley tim kaine american government john quincy adams marsha blackburn samuel adams aei james wilson john paul jones john jay political discourse dick durbin mark warner political debate joni ernst jack miller political thought ben sasse sherrod brown tammy duckworth bill cassidy political commentary abigail adams david perdue american experiment checks and balances ed markey john thune ron wyden grad student department of homeland security war powers american presidency originalism political analysis michael bennet thom tillis legal education publius john hart constitutional studies richard blumenthal national constitution center separation of powers civic education legal analysis american founding chris van hollen chris coons department of labor legal history department of energy constitutionalism tina smith james lankford tammy baldwin stephen hopkins summer institute richard burr rob portman john morton angus king constitutionalists bob casey benjamin harrison department of agriculture judicial review jon tester mazie hirono jeff merkley mike braun pat toomey john dickinson benjamin rush todd young civic responsibility jmc patrick leahy civic leadership gary peters historical analysis debbie stabenow landmark cases american constitution society demagoguery founding principles department of veterans affairs george taylor samuel huntington political education constitutional government charles carroll cory gardner lamar alexander ben cardin mike rounds kevin cramer department of state george ross cindy hyde smith state sovereignty revolutionary america brian schatz jeanne shaheen department of commerce apush founding documents civic participation roger sherman founding era constitutional change jim inhofe gouverneur morris maggie hassan constitutional advocacy early american republic martin heinrich contemporary politics john barrasso roger wicker william williams pat roberts jacky rosen elbridge gerry george wythe american political thought william floyd civic learning mercy otis warren constitutional accountability center living constitution richard henry lee department of the interior constitutional affairs tom carper constitutional conventions american political development samuel chase legal philosophy mike crapo richard stockton government structure department of health and human services american governance lyman hall constitutional rights foundation constitutional literacy
The Constitutionalist
#48 - Adams and Jefferson on Natural Aristocracy

The Constitutionalist

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 21, 2025 52:48


On the forty-eighth episode of the Constitutionalist, Shane Leary and Matthew Reising discuss John Adams and Thomas Jefferson's discussion of natural aristocracy, in a series of letter from August 14 to October 28 of 1813. We want to hear from you! Constitutionalistpod@gmail.com The Constitutionalist is proud to be sponsored by the Jack Miller Center for Teaching America's Founding Principles and History. For the last twenty years, JMC has been working to preserve and promote that tradition through a variety of programs at the college and K-12 levels. Through their American Political Tradition Project, JMC has partnered with more than 1,000 scholars at over 300 college campuses across the country, especially through their annual Summer Institutes for graduate students and recent PhDs. The Jack Miller Center is also working with thousands of K-12 educators across the country to help them better understand America's founding principles and history and teach them effectively, to better educate the next generation of citizens. JMC has provided thousands of hours of professional development for teachers all over the country, reaching millions of students with improved civic learning. If you care about American education and civic responsibility, you'll want to check out their work, which focuses on reorienting our institutions of learning around America's founding principles. To learn more or get involved, visit jackmillercenter.org. The Constitutionalist is a podcast cohosted by Professor Benjamin Kleinerman, the RW Morrison Professor of Political Science at Baylor University and Founder and Editor of The Constitutionalist Blog, Shane Leary, a graduate student at Baylor University, and Dr. Matthew Reising, a John and Daria Barry Postdoctoral Research Fellow at Princeton University. Each week, they discuss political news in light of its constitutional implications, and explore a unique constitutional topic, ranging from the thoughts and experiences of America's founders and statesmen, historical episodes, and the broader philosophic ideas that influence the American experiment in government.

united states america american university history founders president donald trump culture power house washington politics college state doctors phd professor colorado joe biden elections washington dc dc local congress political natural supreme court senate bernie sanders democracy federal adams kamala harris blm constitution conservatives heritage nonprofits political science liberal civil rights public policy impeachment amendment graduate baylor george washington american history princeton university presidency ballot public affairs ted cruz ideology constitutional elizabeth warren thomas jefferson founding fathers benjamin franklin mitt romney mitch mcconnell marco rubio baylor university supreme court justice american politics john adams rand paul polarization joe manchin chuck schumer alexander hamilton james madison cory booker lindsey graham bill of rights tim scott civic engagement federalist amy klobuchar rule of law john kennedy dianne feinstein civil liberties josh hawley mike lee claremont polarized constitutional law supreme court decisions ron johnson paul revere ideological house of representatives george clinton constitutional rights chris murphy department of education federalism aaron burr james smith robert morris rick scott tom cotton thomas paine department of justice kirsten gillibrand political theory susan collins political philosophy constitutional amendments john witherspoon bob menendez john hancock fourteenth patrick henry 14th amendment benedict arnold john marshall john cornyn political history department of defense chuck grassley tim kaine american government john quincy adams marsha blackburn samuel adams aei james wilson montesquieu john paul jones john jay political discourse dick durbin mark warner political debate joni ernst jack miller aristocracy political thought ben sasse sherrod brown republicanism tammy duckworth political commentary bill cassidy david perdue abigail adams american experiment checks and balances ed markey john thune ron wyden grad student department of homeland security war powers american presidency originalism political analysis michael bennet thom tillis legal education publius john hart constitutional studies richard blumenthal national constitution center separation of powers civic education legal analysis american founding chris van hollen chris coons department of labor legal history department of energy constitutionalism tina smith james lankford tammy baldwin stephen hopkins summer institute richard burr rob portman john morton angus king constitutionalists bob casey benjamin harrison department of agriculture judicial review jon tester mazie hirono jeff merkley mike braun pat toomey john dickinson benjamin rush todd young civic responsibility jmc patrick leahy civic leadership gary peters historical analysis debbie stabenow landmark cases american constitution society demagoguery founding principles department of veterans affairs george taylor samuel huntington political education constitutional government charles carroll cory gardner lamar alexander ben cardin mike rounds kevin cramer department of state george ross cindy hyde smith brian schatz jeanne shaheen department of commerce apush founding documents civic participation roger sherman constitutional change jim inhofe gouverneur morris maggie hassan constitutional advocacy martin heinrich contemporary politics roger wicker john barrasso william williams pat roberts jacky rosen american political thought george wythe elbridge gerry william floyd civic learning mercy otis warren constitutional accountability center living constitution richard henry lee department of the interior constitutional affairs tom carper constitutional conventions samuel chase legal philosophy richard stockton mike crapo government structure department of health and human services american governance lyman hall constitutional rights foundation constitutional literacy
The Constitutionalist
#47 - The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance with Matthew Reising

The Constitutionalist

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 11, 2025 69:10


On the forty-seventh episode of The Constitutionalist, Shane Leary and Benjamin Kleinerman are joined by Dr. Matthew Reising, a John and Daria Barry Postdoctoral Research Fellow at Princeton University, to discuss John Ford's classic film "The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance." We want to hear from you! Constitutionalistpod@gmail.com The Constitutionalist is proud to be sponsored by the Jack Miller Center for Teaching America's Founding Principles and History. For the last twenty years, JMC has been working to preserve and promote that tradition through a variety of programs at the college and K-12 levels. Through their American Political Tradition Project, JMC has partnered with more than 1,000 scholars at over 300 college campuses across the country, especially through their annual Summer Institutes for graduate students and recent PhDs. The Jack Miller Center is also working with thousands of K-12 educators across the country to help them better understand America's founding principles and history and teach them effectively, to better educate the next generation of citizens. JMC has provided thousands of hours of professional development for teachers all over the country, reaching millions of students with improved civic learning. If you care about American education and civic responsibility, you'll want to check out their work, which focuses on reorienting our institutions of learning around America's founding principles. To learn more or get involved, visit jackmillercenter.org. The Constitutionalist is a podcast cohosted by Professor Benjamin Kleinerman, the RW Morrison Professor of Political Science at Baylor University and Founder and Editor of The Constitutionalist Blog, and his student, Shane Leary. Each week, they discuss political news in light of its constitutional implications, and explore a unique constitutional topic, ranging from the thoughts and experiences of America's founders and statesmen, historical episodes, and the broader philosophic ideas that influence the American experiment in government.

united states america american university history founders president donald trump culture power house washington politics college law state doctors phd truth professor colorado joe biden elections washington dc dc local lies congress political supreme court force senate bernie sanders democracy federal kamala harris blm constitution conservatives heritage nonprofits political science liberal civil rights public policy impeachment amendment graduate baylor george washington american history princeton university presidency ballot public affairs ted cruz ideology constitutional elizabeth warren thomas jefferson founding fathers benjamin franklin mitt romney mitch mcconnell john wayne marco rubio baylor university supreme court justice american politics john adams rand paul polarization joe manchin chuck schumer alexander hamilton james madison cory booker lindsey graham old west bill of rights tim scott jimmy stewart civic engagement federalist amy klobuchar rule of law john kennedy dianne feinstein civil liberties josh hawley mike lee claremont polarized john ford constitutional law supreme court decisions ron johnson paul revere ideological house of representatives george clinton james stewart constitutional rights chris murphy department of education federalism aaron burr james smith robert morris rick scott tom cotton thomas paine department of justice kirsten gillibrand political theory susan collins political philosophy constitutional amendments john witherspoon bob menendez john hancock fourteenth patrick henry 14th amendment benedict arnold john marshall john cornyn political history department of defense chuck grassley tim kaine american government john quincy adams samuel adams marsha blackburn aei james wilson john paul jones john jay political discourse dick durbin mark warner lee marvin political debate joni ernst jack miller political thought ben sasse sherrod brown republicanism tammy duckworth political commentary bill cassidy abigail adams david perdue american experiment checks and balances ed markey john thune ron wyden grad student department of homeland security war powers american presidency originalism political analysis michael bennet thom tillis legal education publius john hart constitutional studies richard blumenthal national constitution center separation of powers civic education legal analysis chris van hollen chris coons department of labor legal history department of energy constitutionalism tina smith james lankford american cinema tammy baldwin stephen hopkins summer institute liberty valance richard burr classic hollywood rob portman john morton angus king constitutionalists bob casey benjamin harrison department of agriculture mazie hirono judicial review jon tester jeff merkley mike braun pat toomey john dickinson benjamin rush todd young civic responsibility jmc patrick leahy civic leadership gary peters historical analysis debbie stabenow landmark cases american constitution society founding principles demagoguery george taylor department of veterans affairs samuel huntington political education constitutional government charles carroll man who shot liberty valance cory gardner lamar alexander ben cardin mike rounds kevin cramer department of state george ross cindy hyde smith brian schatz jeanne shaheen department of commerce apush civic participation founding documents roger sherman jim inhofe constitutional change gouverneur morris maggie hassan constitutional advocacy martin heinrich contemporary politics western genre john barrasso roger wicker william williams pat roberts jacky rosen american political thought george wythe elbridge gerry william floyd civic learning mercy otis warren constitutional accountability center living constitution richard henry lee department of the interior constitutional affairs tom carper cowboy code constitutional conventions samuel chase legal philosophy richard stockton mike crapo government structure department of health and human services hollywood westerns american governance lyman hall constitutional rights foundation constitutional literacy
City Cast Las Vegas
Sen. Rosen Defends Working With Republicans

City Cast Las Vegas

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 27, 2025 22:46


Nevada is red again, which is really to say that we've been purple all along — and perhaps no one knows this better than Senator Jacky Rosen, who has made bipartisanship a cornerstone of her brand. Today, co-host Dayvid Figler sits down with the Senator to discuss how she's working with Republicans, from her controversial vote on the Laken Riley bill, to three new bills she is cosponsoring with Senate Republicans, aimed at improving housing affordability, removing taxes on tips, and expanding affordable childcare for Nevadans. With the party of Trump in control of both houses and the executive branch, is bipartisanship the key to Democrats getting things done? We're doing a survey to learn more about our listeners. We'd be grateful if you took the survey at citycast.fm/survey — it's only 7 minutes long. You'll be doing us a big favor. Plus, anyone who takes the survey will be eligible to win a $250 Visa gift card — and City Cast City swag. Learn more about the sponsors of this January 27th episode: Black Mountain Institute Want to get in touch? Follow us @CityCastVegas on Instagram, or email us at lasvegas@citycast.fm. You can also call or text us at 702-514-0719. For more Las Vegas news, make sure to sign up for our morning newsletter, Hey Las Vegas. Looking to advertise on City Cast Las Vegas? Check out our options for podcast and newsletter ads at citycast.fm/advertise. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

What A Day
Will Senate Stymie Trump feat. Sen. Jacky Rosen

What A Day

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 6, 2024 17:11


There are only two weeks left for the 118th Congress to legislate. And there's a lot to do. Lawmakers must pass a federal spending package to prevent a government shutdown, approve a defense budget, and decide how much money to set aside for relief after a rough year of natural disasters—no big deal. In the Senate, Democrats also need to confirm as many as President Joe Biden's remaining judicial nominations before they lose power. Nevada Senator Jacky Rosen joins us to discuss what's on the Senate Democrats' agenda for the remainder of the year.And in headlines: Elon Musk and Vivek Ramaswamy paraded around Capitol Hill to push their vision for DOGE, the Justice Department says the Memphis Police Department violates residents' constitutional rights, and Republicans face a historically small House majority in the next Congress.Show Notes:Learn more about protests in Georgia – https://tinyurl.com/5n6vpvcuSubscribe to the What A Day Newsletter – https://tinyurl.com/3kk4nyz8What A Day – YouTube – https://www.youtube.com/@whatadaypodcastFollow us on Instagram – https://www.instagram.com/crookedmedia/For a transcript of this episode, please visit crooked.com/whataday

The Last Word with Lawrence O’Donnell
Lawrence: Musk & Hegseth lead ‘humiliation parades' in the halls of Congress

The Last Word with Lawrence O’Donnell

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 6, 2024 41:36


Tonight on The Last Word: Pete Hegseth continues to meet with GOP senators. Also, House Republicans block the release of the Matt Gaetz ethics report. Plus, a California Democrat flips a GOP-held seat in the last House race to be called. And President Biden meets with descendants of William Tucker, the first African born into slavery in America. Sen. Jacky Rosen, Rep. Glenn Ivey, Rep.-elect Adam Gray, and Wanda Tucker join Lawrence O'Donnell.

The Last Word with Lawrence O’Donnell
Lawrence: The election was not even close to a landslide.

The Last Word with Lawrence O’Donnell

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 12, 2024 37:17


Tonight on The Last Word: The popular vote tightens as vote counting continues. Also, Donald Trump demands the GOP to allow nominees to bypass the Senate. Plus, NBC News projects Sen. Jacky Rosen is reelected in Nevada. And under President Biden, unemployment has been the lowest for the longest in modern American history. Norman Ornstein, Sen. Jacky Rosen, and Jeffrey Sonnenfeld join Lawrence O'Donnell.

Pod Save America
Let the Blame Game Commence!

Pod Save America

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 8, 2024 56:00


As Kamala Harris officially concedes after a terrible election, Democrats begin searching for lessons—and singling out others for blame. Jon, Lovett, Dan, and Tommy discuss Harris's farewell message, the various conflicting and enraging theories being floated as to why she lost, and how we should think about campaigns going forward. Plus: Sen. Jacky Rosen appears to score a win in Nevada, and Democratic House candidates in uncalled races see a path to victory—and maybe even a narrow majority.

What A Day
The Final Countdown

What A Day

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 5, 2024 21:05


Happy Election Day! Vice President Kamala Harris and former President Donald Trump spent their final full day on the campaign trail converging on the must-win state of Pennsylvania. Harris spent her entire day in the Keystone State, making direct appeals to Latino voters and young voters. For Trump, Pennsylvania was one of three swing states he stumped in Monday, continuing to muddle his closing message all along the way. Alyssa Mastromonaco, former White House deputy chief of staff under President Obama and co-host of the the Crooked podcast ‘Hysteria,' explains what the Election Day vibes are like on a presidential campaign.Also on the show: Nevada Democratic Sen. Jacky Rosen talks about how she's working to win her tight re-election race, and an update on a Florida ballot measure to enshrine abortion rights in the state's constitution.Show Notes:Subscribe to the What A Day Newsletter – https://tinyurl.com/3kk4nyz8What A Day – YouTube – https://www.youtube.com/@whatadaypodcastFollow us on Instagram – https://www.instagram.com/crookedmedia/For a transcript of this episode, please visit crooked.com/whataday

Townhall Review | Conservative Commentary On Today's News

Townhall Review - November 2, 2024 We dive into the final days before the 2024 election. The spotlight falls on President Biden as his recent controversial remarks about Trump supporters stirred the political landscape, overshadowing Kamala Harris's own campaign push.  Hugh Hewitt sits down with Matt Continetti of the Washington Free Beacon to analyze the potential impact of Biden's remarks. Matt Whitaker of the Trump campaign shares how this may sway undecided voters in the final hours. Turning to the congressional races, Hugh talks with Nevada Senate candidate and war veteran Sam Brown, who's challenging incumbent Jacky Rosen. On the House side, Orange County's 47th district is heating up as Scott Baugh campaigns to secure a GOP victory in a tightly contested California district. Hugh investigates. Former race car driver Danica Patrick shares her motivations for supporting Trump in a conversation with Charlie Kirk, signaling an interesting shift among influential voices in this election cycle. As Election Day approaches, Trish Regan closes the show with a reminder of the stakes involved, urging listeners to ensure their voices are heard at the polls. Every vote will shape the future, and this year's election could set the course for years to come.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

The Last Word with Lawrence O’Donnell
Lawrence: Using the language of Hitler, Trump calls Americans 'garbage' all the time

The Last Word with Lawrence O’Donnell

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 31, 2024 41:25


Tonight on The Last Word: Vice President Harris addresses Donald Trump's abortion ban. Also, the Harris campaign is focusing on “blue wall” states. And Senate control is critical to the next president's agenda. Ben Wikler, Sen. Jacky Rosen, and Sen. Gary Peters join Lawrence O'Donnell.

Pod Save America
Let the Bedwetting Begin

Pod Save America

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 11, 2024 61:05


With 25 days left until Election Day, the quadrennial October Freakout is upon us! Jon and Dan break down the tightening polls, the rival campaigns' strategies for the final push, and the reasons why it's okay to worry—but not to panic. Then, Nevada Senator Jacky Rosen joins Lovett to talk about her tight race for reelection and how she plans to pull off a win. For a closed-captioned version of this episode, click here. For a transcript of this episode, please email transcripts@crooked.com and include the name of the podcast.

Countdown with Keith Olbermann
TRUMP DOUBLES DOWN ON DEFILING ARLINGTON NATIONAL CEMETERY - 8.29.24

Countdown with Keith Olbermann

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 29, 2024 62:50 Transcription Available


SERIES 3 EPISODE 18: COUNTDOWN WITH KEITH OLBERMANN A-Block (1:44) SPECIAL COMMENT: Trump has doubled down on his defiling of Arlington National Cemetery. Title 32, Part 553, Subpart C: Memorial Services and Ceremonies at Army National Military Ceremonies will not include partisan political activities. Trump's team exploited a memorial service at Arlington on Monday, broke the law by privately photographing and filming it, physically assaulted Arlington National Cemetery staff who asked him to stop, he gave a thumbs up and smiled idiotically while literally standing on the graves of dead U-S military heroes, and now they have turned it into an online campaign advertisement – by definition, a partisan political activity. This could've been trivial. It could've been “there was a miscommunication.” Not even an apology – like anybody in the Trump campaign were human enough, or honest enough, or RESPECTFUL OF OUR WAR DEAD ENOUGH to apologize. Just “misunderstanding.” No. They blamed the Cemetery staffer, they blamed the media, they blamed Vice President Harris for not being there to commemorate the sad anniversary of deaths in Afghanistan – the commemoration Trump has illegally turned into a campaign AD – the commemoration Trump skipped last year and the year before. Because to Trump, and to this robot JV Vance, those buried AT Arlington are just another product, just another SELL, just another gimmick, just another BRAND NAME. And they got the brand name wrong. Trump thug Chris LaCivita wrote that Arlington "most hollowed" ground. Corrupted news outlets like The New York Times covered for it by claiming he wrote "hallowed." Hallowed, is Arlington. Hollowed, is Trump's brain. TRUMP IS NOW MORE DANGEROUS THAN EVER. Another new round of polls underscores: he's losing, and dragging down the down-ballot MAGA GOP: a total swing in four states of 25 points to Harris. She leads by one in Arizona, two in Georgia and Nevada, and has cut it to one in North Carolina. The Fox poll in Arizona scores the Senate as Ruben Gallego 56, Kari Lake 41. How is Kari lake going to be able to afford to buy 900 more camera filters THIS late in the race? The Fox poll in North Carolina scores the Governor's race as Josh Stein 54 Mark Robinson 43. The Fox poll in Nevada scores the Senate race as Jacky Rosen 55 Sam Brown 41.  TO LEAVEN THE MOOD A LITTLE: A comedian named Dan Wilbur has done a spot-on impression of JD Vance trying to be a human for 9 minutes at a donut shop. It's better if you go watch it. It's not bad if you listen to it here. B-Block (25:31) THE WORST PERSONS IN THE WORLD: Texas political hitman Ken Paxton sends nine armed troops to 87-year old Democratic woman's home because she registered voters. CNN/Gary Tuchman "Uncommitted Voter" scandal worsens: the guy is now selling t-shirts. And asked about phones for kids during emergencies at school Jesse The Idiot Watters thinks that means HIS emergency when he has to call them in math class. C-Block (36:00) THINGS I PROMISED NOT TO TELL: I was talking about Bill Clinton yesterday and I think it's time to tell the entire story of how NBC tried to blackmail me into NOT quitting the Clinton-Lewinsky MSNBC show in 1998 because it made them too much money. An emissary from then NBC News President Andy Lack threatened to sue me and get me blacklisted from television AND make sure my parents wound up homeless.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

The Last Word with Lawrence O’Donnell
Trump is indicted again in the January 6 case

The Last Word with Lawrence O’Donnell

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 28, 2024 42:14


Tonight on The Last Word: The DOJ indicts Trump on Jan. 6 again after the Supreme Court's immunity ruling. Plus, the Harris campaign slams Trump's tax and tariff policies. Also, Sen. Jacky Rosen joins Lawrence O'Donnell to discuss how the Nevada senate race could decide the balance of power. Andrew Weissmann, Sen. Ron Wyden, and Clara Bingham also join Lawrence O'Donnell. 

The Last Word with Lawrence O’Donnell
GOP conspiracies run wild after Hunter Biden verdict

The Last Word with Lawrence O’Donnell

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 12, 2024 41:58


Tonight on The Last Word: Donald Trump continues to attack DOJ officials. Also, Justice Alito attacks media in a new secret recording. Plus, recent Nevada polls show strong support for abortion access. And President Biden is slightly favored in a new 2024 forecast. Neal Katyal, Rep. James Clyburn, Kelley Robinson, Sen. Jacky Rosen, Ben Wikler, and Sandy Rindy join Jonathan Capehart.

The Last Word with Lawrence O’Donnell
Lawrence: I went to Trump's trial and found him in a jail of his own making

The Last Word with Lawrence O’Donnell

Play Episode Listen Later May 3, 2024 44:01


Tonight on The Last Word: Stormy Daniels' ex-lawyer details the hush money payment in Trump's criminal trial. Also, the Nevada abortion rights amendment surpasses the signature threshold for the November ballot. And a court room sketch artist captures the moment Donald Trump “glowered” at Lawrence O'Donnell. Andrew Weissmann, Adam Klasfeld, Sen. Jacky Rosen, and Isabelle Brourman join.

The Daily Beans
Contemptible

The Daily Beans

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 24, 2024 48:20


Wednesday, April 24th, 2024Today, Pecker takes the stand again after a gag order contempt hearing for Trump in the Manhattan election interference hush money trial; Governor Gavin Newsom announces a plan for Arizonans to get abortions in California; the FTC votes to ban non-compete agreements; a Florida restaurant owner is forced to fight for migrant workers; a new Biden rule grants overtime pay for 4 million US workers; plus Allison and Dana deliver your good news.  Liz Cheney: The Supreme Court Should Rule Swiftly on Trump's Immunity Claim (NYT)Gavin Newsom announces plan for Arizonans to get abortions in California (Politico)Biden rule grants overtime pay to 4 million US workers (Reuters)FTC votes to ban noncompete agreements (The Hill)Forced to fire undocumented worker, owner of landmark Florida restaurant seeks change (Miami Herald) Subscribe to Lawyers, Guns, And MoneyAd-free premium feed: https://lawyersgunsandmoney.supercast.comSubscribe for free everywhere else:https://lawyersgunsandmoney.simplecast.com/episodes/1-miami-1985Check out other MSW Media podcastshttps://mswmedia.com/shows/Follow AG and Dana on Social MediaDr. Allison Gill Follow Mueller, She Wrote on Posthttps://post.news/@/MuellerSheWrote?utm_source=TwitterAG&utm_medium=creator_organic&utm_campaign=muellershewrote&utm_content=FollowMehttps://twitter.com/MuellerSheWrotehttps://www.threads.net/@muellershewrotehttps://www.tiktok.com/@muellershewrotehttps://instagram.com/muellershewroteDana Goldberghttps://twitter.com/DGComedyhttps://www.instagram.com/dgcomedyhttps://www.facebook.com/dgcomedyhttps://danagoldberg.comHave some good news; a confession; or a correction?Good News & Confessions - The Daily Beanshttps://www.dailybeanspod.com/confessional/From The Good NewsAdopt Goose (Atlanta, GA) - Search “Goose”https://furkids.org/cat-adoptionsSea.Ya.Later (TikTok)https://www.tiktok.com/@sea.ya.laterhttps://www.tiktok.com/@sea.ya.later/playlist/Hells%20Belles-7223542271319427886c.m.alongi (TikTok)https://www.tiktok.com/@c.m.alongi_authorhttps://www.tiktok.com/@c.m.alongi_author/playlist/CaFae%20Latte-7196692302344014638Curve Power Listhttps://www.curvemag.com/articles/curve-power-list-50-lgbtq-women-and-nonbinary-trailblazersUpcoming Live Show Dateshttps://allisongill.com (for tickets and show dates)Sunday, June 2nd – Chicago IL – Schubas TavernFriday June 14th – Philadelphia PA – City WinerySaturday June 15th – New York NY – City WinerySunday June 16th – Boston MA – City WineryMonday June 17th Boston, MA https://tinyurl.com/Beans-Bos2Wednesday July 10th – Portland OR – Polaris Hall(with Dana!)Thursday July 11th – Seattle WA – The Triple Door(with Dana!)Thursday July 25th Milwaukee, WI https://tinyurl.com/Beans-MKESunday July 28th Nashville, TN - with Phil Williams https://tinyurl.com/Beans-TennWednesday July 31st St. Louis, MO https://tinyurl.com/Beans-STLFriday August 16th Washington, DC - with Andy McCabe, Pete Strzok, Glenn Kirschner https://tinyurl.com/Beans-in-DCSaturday August 24 San Francisco, CA https://tinyurl.com/Beans-SF Live Show Ticket Links:https://allisongill.com (for all tickets and show dates)Sunday, June 2nd – Chicago IL – Schubas TavernFriday June 14th – Philadelphia PA – City WinerySaturday June 15th – New York NY – City WinerySunday June 16th – Boston MA – City WineryMonday June 17th Boston, MA https://tinyurl.com/Beans-Bos2Wednesday July 10th – Portland OR – Polaris Hall(with Dana!)Thursday July 11th – Seattle WA – The Triple Door(with Dana!)Thursday July 25th Milwaukee, WI https://tinyurl.com/Beans-MKESunday July 28th Nashville, TN - with Phil Williams https://tinyurl.com/Beans-TennWednesday July 31st St. Louis, MO https://tinyurl.com/Beans-STLFriday August 16th Washington, DC - with Andy McCabe, Pete Strzok, Glenn Kirschner https://tinyurl.com/Beans-in-DCSaturday August 24 San Francisco, CA https://tinyurl.com/Beans-SF Listener Survey:http://survey.podtrac.com/start-survey.aspx?pubid=BffJOlI7qQcF&ver=shortFollow the Podcast on Apple:The Daily Beans on Apple PodcastsWant to support the show and get it ad-free and early?Supercasthttps://dailybeans.supercast.com/OrPatreon https://patreon.com/thedailybeansOr subscribe on Apple Podcasts with our affiliate linkThe Daily Beans on Apple Podcasts

The Daily Beans
Lake Unclear

The Daily Beans

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 23, 2024 37:04


Tuesday, April 23rd, 2024Today, David Pecker takes the stand after opening statements in the Trump election interference trail; an agreement is reached between prosecutors and Trump attorney's on the $175M NYAG civil fraud bond; Proud Boys appear at a Trump rally drawing criticism from President Biden; how Mike Johnson came to embrace Ukraine aid; the Supreme Court waves off another Kari Lake lawsuit; Trump's legal bills drain millions from his coffers; plus Allison and Dana deliver your good news. Promo Code: Proud Boys appear at Trump rally, drawing condemnation from Biden (WaPo)Supreme Court waves off Kari Lake lawsuit over electronic voting machines (CNN)How Johnson came to embrace Ukraine aid and defy his right flank (CNN)Trump's legal bills drain millions more from his political committees (WaPo) Subscribe to Lawyers, Guns, And MoneyAd-free premium feed: https://lawyersgunsandmoney.supercast.comSubscribe for free everywhere else:https://lawyersgunsandmoney.simplecast.com/episodes/1-miami-1985Check out other MSW Media podcastshttps://mswmedia.com/shows/Follow AG and Dana on Social MediaDr. Allison Gill Follow Mueller, She Wrote on Posthttps://post.news/@/MuellerSheWrote?utm_source=TwitterAG&utm_medium=creator_organic&utm_campaign=muellershewrote&utm_content=FollowMehttps://twitter.com/MuellerSheWrotehttps://www.threads.net/@muellershewrotehttps://www.tiktok.com/@muellershewrotehttps://instagram.com/muellershewroteDana Goldberghttps://twitter.com/DGComedyhttps://www.instagram.com/dgcomedyhttps://www.facebook.com/dgcomedyhttps://danagoldberg.comHave some good news; a confession; or a correction?Good News & Confessions - The Daily Beanshttps://www.dailybeanspod.com/confessional/From The Good NewsWarrensburg First Presbyterian Church (Warrensburg, MO)https://www.fpcwbg.orgThe Flight of the Bucket Podcasthttps://open.spotify.com/show/6cvM3zuJLiRxWttsXkrdaSUpcoming Live Show Dateshttps://allisongill.com (for tickets and show dates)Sunday, June 2nd – Chicago IL – Schubas TavernFriday June 14th – Philadelphia PA – City WinerySaturday June 15th – New York NY – City WinerySunday June 16th – Boston MA – City WineryMonday June 17th Boston, MA https://tinyurl.com/Beans-Bos2Wednesday July 10th – Portland OR – Polaris Hall(with Dana!)Thursday July 11th – Seattle WA – The Triple Door(with Dana!)Thursday July 25th Milwaukee, WI https://tinyurl.com/Beans-MKESunday July 28th Nashville, TN - with Phil Williams https://tinyurl.com/Beans-TennWednesday July 31st St. Louis, MO https://tinyurl.com/Beans-STLFriday August 16th Washington, DC - with Andy McCabe, Pete Strzok, Glenn Kirschner https://tinyurl.com/Beans-in-DCSaturday August 24 San Francisco, CA https://tinyurl.com/Beans-SF Live Show Ticket Links:Chicago, IL https://tinyurl.com/Beans-ChiPhiladelphia, PA https://tinyurl.com/Beans-PhillyNew York, NY https://tinyurl.com/Beans-NYCBoston, MAhttps://tinyurl.com/Beans-Bos2Portland, ORhttps://tinyurl.com/Beans-PDXSeattle, WAhttps://tinyurl.com/Beans-SEA Listener Survey:http://survey.podtrac.com/start-survey.aspx?pubid=BffJOlI7qQcF&ver=shortFollow the Podcast on Apple:The Daily Beans on Apple PodcastsWant to support the show and get it ad-free and early?Supercasthttps://dailybeans.supercast.com/OrPatreon https://patreon.com/thedailybeansOr subscribe on Apple Podcasts with our affiliate linkThe Daily Beans on Apple Podcasts