

Can Congress work its way back to relevance?
51 snips Sep 5, 2025
Mike Dubke, a veteran GOP communications strategist, and Elizabeth Brunig, a staff writer for The Atlantic, dive into Congress's waning authority amid executive overreach. They discuss the implications of the Trump administration's foreign aid control and its impact on legislative power. The conversation shifts to the new IRS rules that permit churches to endorse candidates, raising questions about the blurring lines between faith and politics. Lastly, they tackle the importance of language in political discourse, exploring how it can unite or divide voters.
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Congress Has Ceded Its Constitutional Lead
- Congress has steadily ceded power to the executive branch, culminating in brazen moves like the pocket rescission.
- That erosion reveals a constitutional inflection point where legislative weakness now enables executive overreach.
Loss Of Regular Order Weakened Congress
- Mike Dubke traces Congress's decline to loss of regular order and the removal of earmarks, which weakened legislative leverage.
- Leadership-driven, committee-less lawmaking replaced member-driven processes and hollowed out Congress's power.
A Bipartisan Abdication Created A Power Vacuum
- The problem is bipartisan: both parties have yielded authority to the executive when politically convenient.
- That mutual abdication creates a vacuum that strengthens the presidency and judiciary alike.