By using this site, you agree to the Privacy Policy and Terms of Use.
Accept
Concealed RepublicanConcealed Republican
  • Home
  • Latest News
  • Guns
  • Politics
  • Videos
Reading: Trump v. Slaughter exposes who really fears democracy
Share
Notification Show More
Font ResizerAa
Font ResizerAa
Concealed RepublicanConcealed Republican
  • News
  • Guns
  • Politics
  • Videos
  • Home
  • Latest News
  • Guns
  • Politics
  • Videos
Have an existing account? Sign In
Follow US
  • Advertise
  • Advertise
© 2022 Foxiz News Network. Ruby Design Company. All Rights Reserved.
Concealed Republican > Blog > News > Trump v. Slaughter exposes who really fears democracy
News

Trump v. Slaughter exposes who really fears democracy

Jim Taft
Last updated: December 16, 2025 9:11 am
By Jim Taft 15 Min Read
Share
Trump v. Slaughter exposes who really fears democracy
SHARE

In the recently argued Trump v. Slaughter case, most of the U.S. Supreme Court seemed to affirm what should be obvious: The president has a constitutional right under Article II to dismiss federal employees in the executive branch when it suits him.

That conclusion strikes many of us as self-evident. Executive-branch employees work under the president, who alone among them is chosen in a nationwide election. Bureaucrats are not. Why, then, should the chief executive’s subordinates be insulated from his control?

When the Roberts Court overturned Roe in 2022 and returned the issue to the states, many voters responded with fury. The electorate did not welcome responsibility. It resented it.

A vocal minority on the court appears to reject that premise. Justices Ketanji Brown Jackson and Sonia Sotomayor warned that allowing a president — implicitly a Republican one — to control executive personnel would unleash political chaos. Jackson suggested Trump “would be free to fire all the scientists, the doctors, the economists, and PhDs” working for the federal government. Sotomayor went further, claiming the administration was “asking to destroy the structure of government.”

David Harsanyi, in a perceptive commentary, identified what animates this view: “fourth-branch blues.” The administrative state now exercises power that rivals or exceeds that of the constitutional branches. As Harsanyi noted, nothing in the founders’ design envisioned “a sprawling autonomous administrative state empowered to create its own rules, investigate citizens, adjudicate guilt, impose fines, and destroy lives.”

Yet defenders of this system frame presidential oversight as a threat to “democracy.” Democrats, who present themselves as democracy’s guardians, warn that allowing agency officials to answer to the elected president places the nation in peril. The argument recalls their reaction to the Dobbs case, when the court returned abortion policy to voters and was accused of “undermining democracy” by doing so.

RELATED: This Supreme Court case could reverse a century of bureaucratic overreach

Photo By Bill Clark/CQ Roll Call

On that point, Harsanyi and I agree. Judicial and bureaucratic overreach distort constitutional government. The harder question is whether voters object.

From what I can tell, most do not. Many Americans seem content to trade constitutional self-government for managerial rule, provided the system delivers benefits and protects their expressive preferences. The populist right may bristle at this arrangement, but a leftist administrative state that claims to speak for “the people” may reflect the electorate’s will.

Recent elections reinforce that suspicion. Voters showed little interest in reclaiming authority from courts or bureaucracies. They appeared far more interested in government largesse and symbolic rights than in the burdens of republican self-rule.

Consider abortion. Roe v. Wade rested on shaky legal ground, yet large segments of the public enthusiastically embraced it for nearly 50 years. When the Roberts Court overturned Roe in 2022 and returned the issue to the states, many voters responded with fury. States enacted expansive abortion laws, and Democrats benefited from unusually high turnout. The electorate did not welcome responsibility. It resented it.

This reaction should not surprise anyone familiar with history. In 1811, Spaniards rejected the liberal constitution imposed by French occupiers, crying “abajo el liberalismo” — down with liberalism. They did not want abstract rights. They wanted familiar authority.

At least half of today’s American electorate appears similarly disposed. Many prefer guided democracy administered by judges and managers to the uncertainties of self-government. Their votes signal approval for continued rule by the administrative state. Republicans may slow this process at the margins, but Democrats expand it openly, and voters just empowered them to do so.

RELATED: Stop letting courts and consultants shrink Trump’s signature promise

Yuri Gripas/Abaca/Bloomberg via Getty Images

I anticipated this outcome decades ago. In “After Liberalism” (1999), I argued that democracy as a universal ideal tends to produce expanded managerial control with popular consent. Nineteenth-century fears that mass suffrage would yield chaos proved unfounded. Instead the extension of the franchise coincided with more centralized, remote, and less accountable government.

As populations lost shared traditions and common authority, governance shifted away from democratic participation and toward expert administration. The state grew less personal, less local, and less answerable, even as it claimed to act in the people’s name.

Equally significant has been the administrative state’s success in presenting itself as the custodian of an invented “science of government.” According to this view, administrators form an enlightened elite, morally and intellectually superior to the unwashed masses. Justice Jackson’s warnings reflect this assumption.

I would like to believe, as Harsanyi suggests, that Americans find such attitudes insulting. I am no longer sure they do. Many seem pleased to be managed. They want judges and bureaucrats to make decisions for them.

That preference should trouble anyone who still cares about constitutional government.



Read the full article here

You Might Also Like

Heroic gas station clerk saves girl from sex offender amid alleged kidnapping after she mouths desperate plea to him

Florida Democrats Pushing Bills They Know Are Doomed

Florida girl returns to beach after shark attack nearly severed her hand

AEW’s Jeff Jarrett talks guitar shots

Woke Colorado Dems target natural gas: 70% of homes face skyrocketing bills for unreliable electric heat

Share This Article
Facebook X Email Print
Previous Article Jake Tapper defends Trump age coverage after skipping over Biden Jake Tapper defends Trump age coverage after skipping over Biden
Next Article Trump Goes Off on Incompetent CO Governor Polis Over Tina Peters Treatment [WATCH] Trump Goes Off on Incompetent CO Governor Polis Over Tina Peters Treatment [WATCH]
Leave a Comment

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

- Advertisement -
Ad image

Latest News

Former Disney Star Dylan Sprouse Tackles Trespasser, Holds at Gunpoint Until Police Arrive [WATCH]
Former Disney Star Dylan Sprouse Tackles Trespasser, Holds at Gunpoint Until Police Arrive [WATCH]
Politics
Ilhan Omar Uses Columbine to Pine for Gun Control Law that Failed to Stop Columbine
Ilhan Omar Uses Columbine to Pine for Gun Control Law that Failed to Stop Columbine
News
Universal basic income is a dangerous delusion
Universal basic income is a dangerous delusion
News
Trump admin loosens regulations on state-licensed medical marijuana
Trump admin loosens regulations on state-licensed medical marijuana
News
Military Drops the Flu Shot Mandate ‘Effective Immediately’ Citing Restored Freedom
Military Drops the Flu Shot Mandate ‘Effective Immediately’ Citing Restored Freedom
Politics
Question to Ponder: Is There Anything That Democrats Support That Is Not Fraudulent?
Question to Ponder: Is There Anything That Democrats Support That Is Not Fraudulent?
Politics
© 2025 Concealed Republican. All Rights Reserved.
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of use
  • Press Release
  • Advertise
  • Contact
Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Username or Email Address
Password

Lost your password?