Justice ReDesigned Podcast
In this episode of Justice ReDesigned, we examine The Illusion of Precedent—a story about executive power, legal deception, congressional backlash, and the one institution political loyalty cannot fully control: the legal profession itself. The episode follows Todd Blanche’s attempt to defend an extraordinary IRS settlement by wrapping it in the language of precedent. But the comparison to the Obama-era Keepseagle settlement collapses under scrutiny. Unlike Keepseagle, this deal was not the product of years of adversarial litigation, judicial review, or public accountability. It was negotiated in secrecy, designed to bypass the courts, and structured to protect political power under the appearance of legal normalcy. What followed was not just outrage from critics, but bipartisan alarm from Congress. The episode explores why even members of the President’s own party recoiled at the idea of using taxpayer dollars to fund a politically branded “Anti-Weaponization Fund,” and why the controversy exposed a deeper constitutional problem: the executive branch may enforce the law, but it does not own the Treasury. At its core, this episode is about the limits of political protection. Presidents may pardon. Parties may defend. Administrations may shield their own for a season. But lawyers answer to something older and more permanent than political office: their oath, their ethical duties, and their bar card. This is the story of what happens when law becomes loyalty, when precedent becomes camouflage, and when the final check on abuse may come not from Congress or the courts, but from the profession that promised to uphold the rule of law. Get full access to Justice ReDesigned at steventeske.substack.com/subscribe [https://steventeske.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_4]
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