The Lawfare Podcast: Patreon Edition

Lawfare Daily: What the Supreme Court Said About the President's Power Over Independent Agencies

1 h 0 min · 2. juli 2026
episode Lawfare Daily: What the Supreme Court Said About the President's Power Over Independent Agencies cover

Description

On today's podcast, Executive Editor Natalie Orpett talks with Nick Bednar, a professor at the University of Minnesota Law School and a contributing editor at Lawfare. They talk about two Supreme Court cases issued last week that will have a huge impact on the president's authority over agencies that Congress set up to be independent. In Slaughter v. Trump, the Court held that the president has the power to remove members of independent agencies who had previously been understood to have employment protections that forbade the president from firing them. In Cook v. Trump, the Court carved out a special exception to that rule for the Federal Reserve. They discuss Nick's recent article [https://www.lawfaremedia.org/article/slaughter-s-silence] for Lawfare, what the opinions say, what they fail to say, and what it means for the workforce that makes the federal government function. ---------------------------------------- Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy [https://acast.com/privacy] for more information.

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episode Lawfare Daily: AI Targeting Systems Are Coming—But Not as Fast as You Think artwork

Lawfare Daily: AI Targeting Systems Are Coming—But Not as Fast as You Think

On this episode, Senior Editor Kate Klonick speaks with Steve Feldstein, senior fellow at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, about his recent Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists essay [https://thebulletin.org/2026/06/ai-targeting-systems-are-coming-but-not-as-fast-as-many-assume/] on AI targeting systems. Feldstein argues that the conventional wisdom about AI warfare has it backwards: the technology's battlefield debut in Iran, Ukraine, and Gaza is real and consequential, but AI targeting is not a model you download—it's a stack of surveillance infrastructure, data pipelines, battle management software, and strike capacity that takes decades and billions to build, which means it will spread far more slowly and unevenly than the common narrative suggests. Among the things they discuss: what the Iran War's staggering Maven numbers do and don't prove, how Israel became the case study in what it actually takes to build an AI kill chain, why the same handful of American tech companies that govern online speech now supply the infrastructure of targeting—and who is accountable when they do, whether the UAE is next, and whether export controls, or norms, can realistically slow any of it down. Additional resources: * Steve Feldstein, “Bytes and Bullets: Global Rivalry, Private Tech, and the New Shape of Modern Warfare [https://us.macmillan.com/books/9781250394088/bytesandbullets/]” (St. Martin's Press, September 2026) * Steve Feldstein, "Anthropic-Pentagon Feud Over AI Technology Is a Bad Sign [https://foreignpolicy.com/2026/02/25/anthropic-pentagon-feud-ai/]" (Foreign Policy, February 2026) * Steve Feldstein, “The Rise of Digital Repression: How Technology is Reshaping Power, Politics, and Resistance [https://www.amazon.com/Rise-Digital-Repression-Technology-Resistance/dp/0190057491]” (Oxford University Press, 2021) ---------------------------------------- Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy [https://acast.com/privacy] for more information.

15. juli 202648 min
episode Lawfare Daily: The Trials of the Trump Administration, June 10 artwork

Lawfare Daily: The Trials of the Trump Administration, June 10

In a live conversation on YouTube [https://youtube.com/live/WVO2m0PoHAU], Lawfare Editor in Chief Benjamin Wittes sat down with Senior Editors Eric Columbus, Anna Bower, Molly Roberts, and Roger Parloff to discuss the Justice Department settling a second suit with Michael Flynn, developments in the E. Jean Carroll litigation, the D.C. Circuit denying a stay pending appeal of the order to take Trump’s name off the Kennedy Center, and more. You can find information on legal challenges to Trump administration actions here [https://www.lawfaremedia.org/trumplitigationtracker]. And check out Lawfare’s new homepage on the litigation [https://www.lawfaremedia.org/projects-series/trials-of-the-trump-administration], new Bluesky account [https://bsky.app/profile/trumplitigation.lawfaremedia.org], and new WITOAD merch [https://thelawfarestore.com/]. To receive ad-free podcasts, become a Lawfare Material Supporter at www.patreon.com/lawfare [http://www.patreon.com/lawfare]. You can also support Lawfare by making a one-time donation at https://givebutter.com/lawfare-institute. ---------------------------------------- Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy [https://acast.com/privacy] for more information.

13. juli 20261 h 32 min
episode Lawfare Archive: What French Politics Means for Europe and the United States artwork

Lawfare Archive: What French Politics Means for Europe and the United States

From April 10, 2025: On today's episode, Executive Editor Natalie Orpett spoke with Tara Varma, a fellow at the Brookings Institution, about the latest in French politics. On March 31, far-right leader Marine Le Pen was convicted of embezzlement and banned from politics, though polling showed her in the lead for the 2027 presidential elections. In the last few weeks, current French president Emmanuel Macron has been carving out a place for French leadership amidst the upheaval in Europe’s relationship with the United States. Meanwhile, the push to build European defense capacity—and Trump’s new tariffs—are raising a lot of complicated questions. ---------------------------------------- Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy [https://acast.com/privacy] for more information.

11. juli 20261 h 0 min