By Jonah Goldberg
Wednesday, October 08, 2025
Whatever you think about American politics and
government, whether you are on the right, the left or somewhere in the middle,
you should be mad at Congress. I don’t just mean the Republican-controlled
Congress—though, by all means, be mad at them—I mean the institution as a
whole.
Let’s start with the big picture.
In our constitutional system, Congress is the supreme
branch of government. It is not “coequal” to other branches, and any claims to
the contrary are Nixonian
propaganda. The Nixon White House forced “coequal” into mainstream usage to
defend itself from congressional oversight. “Coequal” doesn’t appear in the
Constitution. It’s used sparingly in the Federalist Papers, but never to
describe the relationship between the three branches of government to each
other (save for once, to describe the parity between the House and Senate).
Just look at the powers assigned to Congress. It can fire
members of the other branches; the other branches can’t fire anyone in
Congress. Congress writes the laws. It has sole authority to raise taxes
(hardly a minor issue to the Founding Fathers, tax rebels all), borrow money,
regulate commerce, and to raise armies and declare war. Congress creates all
the courts and federal agencies not specified in the Constitution. It sets and
pays their salaries. It has sole authority to admit states to the union. The
other branches have nothing like these powers or authorities.
But over the last century, Congress has taken itself
apart like a robot ordered to put itself back in the box, giving its functions
to the other branches. It bequeathed much of its regulatory powers to the
executive branch and the courts. It gifted most of its war and trade
authorities to the president.
Congressional leaders also stripped not just members but
committee chairs of meaningful influence in the crafting of legislation,
effectively disenfranchising the voters who elect them. Leadership simply
declares what Congress will do and expects everyone to fall in line. When the
same party controls the White House and Congress, the speaker and Senate
majority leader peddle the president’s agenda.
Now, consider the moment we’re in. Across a vast array of
fronts, President Donald Trump is certainly testing and arguably exceeding his
authority. But because he is popular with Republican voters, congressional
Republicans won’t do anything about it. Just in the last week or so, Trump
ordered troops into Portland, Oregon, against the wishes of the governor
(remember the Founders did think states were coequal with the federal
government). The administration also once again rejected Congress’ power of the
purse, declaring its refusal to spend money already allocated by Congress, to
punish domestic opponents. Oh, and it unilaterally declared we’re at war with
drug cartels—after it had ordered three military strikes on alleged
drug-smuggling boats in the Caribbean, killing 17 people.
What has Congress done? Nothing.
But a federal judge did step in to temporarily halt the
incursion into what Trump calls “war ravaged” Portland. In response, White
House deputy chief of staff Stephen Miller accused the judge—a Trump
appointee!—of being just another “far left Democrat”
guilty of “judicial
insurrection” in league with domestic “terrorist networks.”
Now, I think that is ludicrous and dangerous nonsense.
But maybe you don’t. Maybe you think Miller’s right. You know who could settle
things? I’ll give you a hint: It rhymes with “shmongress.”
The judiciary isn’t supposed to be the primary check on
the executive, Congress is. The vacuum created by Congress invites the
president to fill it. In response, opponents go straight to the courts to
thwart it, pulling the judiciary into political fights for which it’s not
suited.
Indeed, if you love everything Trump has done, you should
still be mad at Congress because the vast majority of his “achievements” are
written in the disappearing ink of executive orders. Congress could make it
impossible for judges to overrule his tariffs by making them law. By passing
legislation, Congress could also prevent the next Democratic president from
rescinding Trump’s orders, the way Trump rescinded Biden’s and Obama’s and
Obama rescinded Bush’s.
The Founders certainly believed that courts could weigh
in on the constitutionality of legislative and executive action. But they also
believed that the Congress could.
Legislators swear an oath to the Constitution, too.
Indeed, for much of our history, they would enforce fidelity to the
Constitution. Congress would refuse to pass legislation or fund executive
action it deemed unconstitutional. And among the things it considered
unconstitutional were actions that encroached on its power and authority.
But the supreme branch today is a parliament of pundits,
a congress of cowards, far more concerned with partisan point-scoring than
honoring their oaths.
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