Bay Area Innovators

From the Founders' Genius to Today's Debates: How the Constitution Was Built to Last

58 min · I går
episode From the Founders' Genius to Today's Debates: How the Constitution Was Built to Last cover

Description

What makes the U.S. Constitution different from every other governing document in history—and is it still working the way the founders intended? In this episode of Bay Area Innovators, host Steve Ispas sits down with Ilan Wurman, constitutional law professor at the University of Minnesota and author of the upcoming book "The Constitution of 1789." Raised in Palo Alto and educated at Stanford, Wurman is one of the leading voices on the original meaning of the Constitution and the structure of American government. The conversation covers the revolutionary origins of written constitutionalism, the genius behind the separation of powers, and how the founders designed each branch of government to function well—not just to prevent tyranny. Wurman explains the rise of the modern administrative state, often called the "fourth branch," and argues that today's independent agencies operate in ways the Constitution never intended. The discussion also tackles judicial power and its limits, what happens when the Supreme Court gets a major decision wrong, the constitutional tools meant to address corruption, and the ongoing debate over birthright citizenship and the 14th Amendment. Watch the full episode for a wide-ranging conversation about the structure, history, and enduring relevance of America's founding document.

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episode From the Founders' Genius to Today's Debates: How the Constitution Was Built to Last artwork

From the Founders' Genius to Today's Debates: How the Constitution Was Built to Last

What makes the U.S. Constitution different from every other governing document in history—and is it still working the way the founders intended? In this episode of Bay Area Innovators, host Steve Ispas sits down with Ilan Wurman, constitutional law professor at the University of Minnesota and author of the upcoming book "The Constitution of 1789." Raised in Palo Alto and educated at Stanford, Wurman is one of the leading voices on the original meaning of the Constitution and the structure of American government. The conversation covers the revolutionary origins of written constitutionalism, the genius behind the separation of powers, and how the founders designed each branch of government to function well—not just to prevent tyranny. Wurman explains the rise of the modern administrative state, often called the "fourth branch," and argues that today's independent agencies operate in ways the Constitution never intended. The discussion also tackles judicial power and its limits, what happens when the Supreme Court gets a major decision wrong, the constitutional tools meant to address corruption, and the ongoing debate over birthright citizenship and the 14th Amendment. Watch the full episode for a wide-ranging conversation about the structure, history, and enduring relevance of America's founding document.

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