The Chuck ToddCast

Interview Only w/ Sarah Isgur - Will The Supreme Court Reshape The Balance Of Power In D.C.?

Dec 1, 2025
Sarah Isgur, a legal and political commentator with ties to The Dispatch and SCOTUSblog, offers intriguing insights on the Supreme Court's role in American governance. She argues that it stands as the sole institution operating as the founders intended. The conversation explores two significant cases poised to recalibrate the balance of power in D.C., the dysfunction of Congress, and the idea of expanding the House to 1,200 members for better representation. They also delve into historical what-ifs and the challenges posed by an activist class relying on executive actions over legislative solutions.
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INSIGHT

Court As Constitutional Ballast

  • The Supreme Court is the branch the founders would still recognize today because Congress and the presidency have drifted from their intended roles.
  • Sarah Isgur argues the Court now functions as a constitutional ballast amid a weakened legislature and an enlarged administrative presidency.
INSIGHT

SCOTUS Could Rebalance Branches

  • Two major SCOTUS cases could force Congress to reclaim lawmaking and limit executive improvisation from old statutes.
  • Isgur expects rulings that constrain agency power but increase presidential control over personnel while demanding clearer congressional text.
INSIGHT

Evaporation Of Congressional Authority

  • The gravest constitutional threat is the evaporation of Congress, not just executive overreach.
  • A weakened Congress drives presidents to act unilaterally and activists to prefer photo-op fixes over durable legislation.
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