The Rule of Law Brief

The Constitutional Problem with DHS's Airport Threat

3 min · 29. maj 2026
episode The Constitutional Problem with DHS's Airport Threat cover

Description

The Department of Homeland Security is reportedly considering shutting down Customs and Border Protection processing at certain airports and redirecting international travelers elsewhere. The issue is not whether DHS has authority over customs and immigration. The issue is whether it can use that authority for openly political purposes. In this episode of The Rule of Law Brief, attorney Nate Charles examines the constitutional doctrine prohibiting arbitrary and capricious government action and explains why the administration’s own stated rationale may create serious legal problems. The Supreme Court has repeatedly held that agencies must base their decisions on facts, evidence, and lawful governmental objectives. Agencies cannot rely on factors Congress never authorized them to consider, and courts are not required to accept explanations that do not match reality. This episode explores: • What the arbitrary-and-capricious standard actually means• Why agencies must provide rational explanations for their decisions• The difference between legitimate operational justifications and political retaliation• Why openly political motives can undermine otherwise lawful governmental actions• How due process protects against arbitrary exercises of governmental power At stake is a fundamental principle of constitutional government: public power must be exercised for public purposes, not political grudges. Can the federal government use immigration and customs authority to punish cities whose politics it dislikes? In this episode, attorney Nate Charles explains the constitutional doctrine that may make such actions unlawful and why the administration’s own public statements could be its biggest legal problem. Get full access to The Rule of Law Brief at natecharles.substack.com/subscribe [https://natecharles.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_4]

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144 episodes

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Textualism Defends Birthright Citizenship

The debate over birthright citizenship has produced no shortage of historical quotations—but are those quotations being interpreted correctly? In this episode of The Rule of Law Brief, attorney Nate Charles examines one of the most frequently cited statements from Senator Jacob Howard, the principal Senate sponsor of the Fourteenth Amendment. Rather than arguing politics, he applies traditional canons of statutory construction to the text itself. The episode covers: * Why the plain language of the Fourteenth Amendment should be the starting point for any legal analysis. * What “subject to the jurisdiction thereof” means under ordinary principles of legal interpretation. * The difference between constitutional text and legislative history. * The Series-Qualifier Canon and the Canon Against Surplusage. * Why Senator Howard’s statement, read according to ordinary English grammar, supports a much narrower exception than many online commentators suggest. * The surprising source of these interpretive rules: Justice Antonin Scalia’s Reading Law: The Interpretation of Legal Texts. Whether you agree with the outcome or not, legal interpretation requires consistency. Textualism only has value if it is applied the same way regardless of whose argument is being evaluated. If you’re going to claim to be a textualist, you have to follow the rules of textualism. Here’s why Antonin Scalia’s own canons of statutory interpretation undermine a common argument against birthright citizenship. Get full access to The Rule of Law Brief at natecharles.substack.com/subscribe [https://natecharles.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_4]

8. juli 20266 min
episode Survive: The Most Important Lesson Before America's 250th artwork

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29. juni 20265 min
episode What the Third Amendment Reveals About NATO artwork

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28. juni 20266 min
episode Defending the Defenseless: Why Immigration Is a Constitutional Cause artwork

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26. juni 20268 min
episode The Search Warrant That Should Never Have Been Signed artwork

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24. juni 20263 min