Sunday, June 7, 2026

Cut Platner Loose

By David Frum

Saturday, June 06, 2026

 

The Maine Senate race is far from the first time that an American political party has had to choose between character and power.

 

In 2017, Alabama Republicans nominated a state supreme court judge named Roy Moore for U.S. Senate. A month before election day, The Washington Post published a report that when Moore was a 32-year-old assistant district attorney, he initiated sexual contact with a 14-year-old girl. Three other women alleged that Moore had also pursued them when they, too, were underage. Asked on Sean Hannity’s radio show whether he had ever dated underage girls, Moore replied, “Not generally, no.” Then a fifth woman stepped forward to accuse Moore of sexually assaulting her in her teens. Four days after the Post story broke, local Alabama media reported that it was common knowledge in the area that Moore stalked teenage girls—so flagrantly that a local mall banned him from setting foot on their property. By Moore’s own account, he had become interested in the woman he subsequently married when she was in her mid-teens and he was in his early 30s.

 

The allegations created a quandary for Republicans. They had emerged from the 2016 elections with a slim majority in the Senate, just 52 seats. If they lost in Alabama, they would be reduced to 51—meaning that Republican Senate leadership would be utterly dependent on the shifting moods of the Senate mavericks John McCain, Lisa Murkowski, and Susan Collins.

 

On the other hand, Moore’s reported sexual misconduct not only embarrassed his party colleagues but also threatened to discredit them. The Jeffrey Epstein story was not yet the firestorm it would later become. But newly elected President Trump had already been scorched by allegations of unseemly interest in underage girls. In October 2016, five women told BuzzFeed News that Trump walked unannounced into their changing room during the Miss Teen USA pageant. Trump had told a variant of that story to Howard Stern in 2005. (In Trump’s version, he entered an adult changing room.) Moore’s elevation to the Senate could intensify the association between the GOP and men who once preyed on teenagers.

 

The first leading Republican to break ranks was McCain. After the Post published its story, McCain described the allegations as “deeply disturbing and disqualifying” and said that Moore “should immediately step aside and allow the people of Alabama to elect a candidate they can be proud of.” Two dozen other Republican senators accepted the allegations as credible and urged Moore to step aside if the claims proved true. When the second round of reports appeared on November 13, Republican Senate leader Mitch McConnell said he believed Moore’s accusers and demanded Moore end his run.

 

Moore refused to withdraw. His party then took an even more radical step: Two weeks before the December 12 special election, Moore’s prospective Alabama Senate colleague, Richard Shelby, told reporters that he had cast an advance ballot against Moore. “No, no, no, I voted absentee. I didn’t vote for him. I voted for a distinguished Republican write-in.” On December 12, Moore lost the Alabama Senate seat to Democrat Doug Jones by 22,000 votes.

 

Senate Republicans still played the political game hard and tough. McConnell delayed seating Jones until January 2018, an interval long enough for the Senate to pass the 2017 tax cut with the vote of Alabama’s appointed interim senator, Luther Strange. Everyone understood that Jones’s tenure would be brief: Jones lost his seat in the regular election in 2020 to Tommy Tuberville. Even after Jones was seated, Republicans still succeeded in passing some major legislation, including a partial rollback of the 2010 Dodd-Frank financial regulations, signed by Trump in May 2018. Senate Republicans retained enough votes to confirm Trump executive-branch and judicial appointees, including Supreme Court nominees Brett Kavanaugh and Amy Coney Barrett.

 

Not as paragons of moral virtue but as pragmatic politicians, the Senate Republicans of 2017 made and executed a calculation: We are better off sacrificing the Alabama Senate seat for three years than enduring Roy Moore as a Senate colleague for who knows how long. If Moore had won in 2017, then gained reelection in 2020, he’d have been serving that first full term during the congressional Epstein hearings of 2025. How would that have looked for the GOP?

 

In 2026, it’s the Democrats’ turn for strategic choice. The allegations against Graham Platner differ from those against Moore. As of June 6, Platner stands accused of laying hands on one named woman, and of intimidating behavior against two other women who thus far have not been named. (Platner told The New York Times that he “strongly disputes” any claims of physical intimidation or altercations.) All three accusers were and are adults. No Platner supporter, however, can feel certain that the shocks have ceased. Platner’s own reassurances by now lack credibility, and fellow Democrats express deep unease about his chances in November.

 

The stakes are high this year. Maine was the Democrats’ brightest hope for a net gain in the Senate. Drawing a route to a Democratic Senate majority that bypasses Maine is difficult, if not impossible.

 

But sticking by Platner has costs too.

 

Excluding Maine, the year’s most high-profile Senate races might be Texas, where a Republican impeached by his own party for corruption faces a former candidate for the ministry; North Carolina, where a business-friendly two-term former governor faces a Trump ultra-loyalist who has never won an election to any office at any level of government; and Georgia, where one of the Democratic Party’s most adept communicators faces a bitterly divided Republican Party that has still not united on a nominee.

 

With Platner, the Maine election will offer voters a contest between a moderate Republican woman who voted to convict Trump at his 2021 impeachment trial and a man who can be plausibly depicted as a violent misogynist whose working-class image is built on fictions and fakes. How much will Roy Cooper, Jon Ossoff, and James Talarico love seeing Platner’s photograph alongside theirs in TV graphics about the 2026 election? Not much, one should think.

 

To defend Platner, Democrats will have to choose between two strategies: denouncing as liars a possibly growing number of women—or else accepting the stories, but then arguing that twisting a woman’s arm and locking her in a room is not quite the same as beating her. Do they want to haggle over just how inappropriate these romantic relationships were, even as they argue that wearing an SS tattoo throughout most of one’s adult life does not prove that one is a literal Nazi? These are not conversations that Democrats should wish to prolong in a year that might otherwise deal with Trump’s abuses of power, corruption, and economic mismanagement.

 

A majority of the American electorate is female. Nearly half of American women have suffered some form of intimate-partner violence. Platner’s most fervent supporters seem to be gambling that Democrats can win more votes from men who are sick and tired of women’s bellyaching than they stand to lose from women who might associate Platner with the abusers in their own lives. That seems a long-odds bet. A politician as unsentimental as Mitch McConnell could recognize when it was time to cut loose a moral and political liability. Can the Democrats of 2026 muster equal shrewdness and toughness?

The Downfall of the Postliberals

By Josh Appel

Sunday, June 07, 2026

 

In April 2026, Viktor Orbán’s Fidesz party was voted out of power in Hungary, losing its parliamentary majority for the first time in over a decade. A sober assessment of Orbán’s Hungary, alongside other postliberal regimes, should finally put to rest the imagined utopia of postliberalism. We can now say plainly that real postliberalism has been tried, and the results were far from perfect.

 

I am here evoking the longstanding notion in Marxist circles that regimes aligned with Communist ideals have fallen short only because “real socialism hasn’t been tried yet.” The endurance of that idea has been vital for those who still believe in the overall Marxist ethos. In this view, socialism’s dark history is due only to the corruption and wickedness of people like Joseph Stalin or Mao Zedong, not to socialism or Communism itself. But 109 years after the formation of the Soviet Union and 36 years after the fall of the Berlin Wall, it is nearly impossible to argue with any honesty that the failures of socialism were not aberrations but features. Food shortages, economic stagnation, corruption, and repression are inherent to collective ownership and centralized social planning. The failure to grasp such basic cause and effect is due to the romanticization of Communist utopia and the demonization of democratic capitalism. In this imagined world of perfection where socialism can work, everything good from our current order can remain the same while we simply fix the inequality of capitalism by superimposing socialism on top of it.

 

The “hasn’t been tried yet” fantasy is an attempt to have your cake and eat it too, to avoid the atrocities of socialism by keeping the parts of society that are good while doing away with the unfairnesses. What socialists refuse to grasp is that oftentimes those very good things they value are by-products of the system they so loathe.

 

A similar problem plagues those who self-identify as postliberal and/or integralist. Postliberals, such as the political philosophy professor Patrick Deneen, and integralists, such as the law professor Adrian Vermeule, successfully identify genuine cultural problems—and then issue sweeping and sensationalist solutions. Seeing a world bereft of order and virtue—as evidenced by alternative forms of marriage, the collapse of the nuclear family, the abandonment of the factory-working everyman, the proliferation of drugs and pornography combined with weak communal and religious institutions—postliberals then turn and blame the problem on liberalism itself.

 

For Deneen, liberalism’s emphasis on autonomy and rights has deemphasized the necessities of obligation, tradition, and community. But instead of noting the difference and calling for a revival of the mediating structures that try to set individualism within the framework of communitarianism, Deneen and others throw out the baby with the bathwater. The only way to rectify such issues, they argue, is through “regime change,” which happens to be the title of Deneen’s second book on the topic. Deneen concludes it with a call to action: “It is time to abandon the ruins we have made, seek shelter, and then build anew.” But what postliberals get wrong is that they believe they can maintain the “good” parts of liberalism while abolishing the parts they contemn.

 

Just like the Marxists, the postliberals refuse to make a cost-benefit analysis that ignores perfection as a possible end; instead, they rely on a utopian conception of the way things ought to be, and from which we are currently separated, to make value judgements on the way things currently are. This failure to appreciate the successes of liberalism in the first place is why they fall into a fatal trap—the belief that historical novelties such as the rule of law and economic prosperity are simply inevitable. In other words, for the post-liberals, all that we prize in society can exist absent liberalism; while at the same time, liberalism is holding us back from the way in which things can be even better.

 

This is where the postliberals have their own form of the “hasn’t truly been tried” myth. Instead of admitting that centralized, religious autocracy inevitably leads to all sorts of intended and unintended consequences—of which there is adequate proof—postliberals seem to believe that real religious autocracy, or real postliberalism/integralism, hasn’t been tried yet. But the truth is it has been tried and the results left much to be desired.

 

Three contemporary examples show us how postliberalism greatly weakens economic stability, hollows out authentic religious adherence, and does little to help the family grow.

 

***

 

The first is António de Oliveira Salazar’s regime between 1932 and 1968 in Portugal. In the aftermath of the First Republic of Portugal, Salazar created the Estado Novo, the New State, which combined Catholic social doctrine, nationalism, and economic corporatism. Salazar’s Estado Novo has in recent years received praise in the pages of the American Conservative and First Things.

 

That praise was unearned. Salazar’s corporatist system produced stagnation and peasantry. In 1962, the New York Times referred to Portugal as an “impoverished, backward, feudal country… the poorest and worst administered nation of non-Communist Europe.” The report continued, “Dr. Salazar has managed to keep law and order, the two primary aims of all dictators. Little else can be said for the regime.” By rejecting both free market dynamism and genuine competition, the Estado Novo further entrenched a poor, agrarian working class that was kept deliberately isolated to preserve control. Industries were organized into state-supervised guilds that suppressed innovation and protected incumbent owners. Almost half of the population worked the fields in abject poverty. Despite moderate GDP growth, Portugal remained one of the poorest countries in Western Europe. The economic gains that did materialize, often cited by postliberals, were a product of capitulating to “globalization”: the benefits of the Marshall Plan, extractions from African colonies, joining the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) and European Free Trade Association in 1960, and a trade agreement with the European Economic Community in 1972. While other European nations further industrialized rapidly after World War II, Portugal lagged.

 

The regime also failed in its professed commitment to the family. While Salazar championed traditional family structures, his economic policies made it difficult for families to thrive materially. Although Salazar rapidly expanded the number of schools, illiteracy rates remained among the highest in Europe. The combination of low wages and limited opportunity led to significant emigration to France. By 1969, more than 100,000 Portuguese citizens had fled there.

 

In addition to the economic consequences of corporatism, Salazar—as all authoritarians must in order to uphold control and “order”—relied on harsh censorship and domination. The PIDE, Portugal’s secret police, often engaged in extrajudicial torture and execution. The suppression of dissent created a culture of fear, not virtue.

 

Ultimately, Salazar was plagued by the same malady that tends to destroy all repressive uniparty regimes: Life is unpredictable, and no central authority—no matter how disciplined or well-intentioned—can anticipate every social, economic, or political contingency. When pressures arose in Portugal over its imperialist policies in Africa, the regime could not adapt without undermining its own foundations. Salazar was forced to respond by intensifying control, expanding the mandatory military draft, and diverting scarce resources to preserve order. The result was a precarious cycle in which each effort to suppress instability only deepened it, leaving Portugal poorer, more isolated, more unstable, and less capable of genuine renewal. The Estado Novo was upended by the Carnation Revolution in 1974 without a single shot being fired.

 

If Salazar’s Portugal was marked by economic stagnation and widespread peasantry, Francisco Franco’s Spain was far worse. Yet, American Reformer writer Josh Abbotoy once quipped that “basically, America is going to need a Protestant Franco”—later qualifying, but not fully retracting, the remark in First Things.

 

Franco came to power at the end of a bloody civil war and ruled from 1939 to 1975 over a regime that was both more authoritarian and more explicitly religious than Salazar’s. Franco’s autocracy was not subtle, and neither were its consequences. He vowed to root out what he called “Judeo-Masonic-Bolshevik” influence, and he styled himself El Caudillo por la gracia de Dios, leader by the grace of God. His Falange movement had been backed by Adolf Hitler and Benito Mussolini during the civil war, and absent Spain’s internal devastation, he may well have joined them in World War II. The civil war itself was catastrophic: More than 500,000 died, with roughly 200,000 victims of mob violence and torture. During the war, the Nationalists imprisoned hundreds of thousands in concentration camps. Upon taking control, Franco abolished all political opposition, centralized legislative power in his own hands, and executed more than 20,000 political enemies, ensuring that dissent would not reemerge.

 

Economically, Franco initially pursued autarky—an attempt at total economic self-sufficiency—and it proved disastrous. Famine spread, and civilians collapsed in the streets. Beggars reportedly lined the roads as Franco’s motorcade passed, hoping for scraps of bread. By some estimates, as many as 200,000 people died from starvation in the postwar years…in Spain. Like Salazar, Franco ultimately had to abandon his ideological commitments to preserve his regime. By 1950, Spain was taking loans from the United States, and the 1959 Plan de Estabilización opened the country to international capital, IMF assistance, and American military bases. Tourism surged, forcing the regime to tolerate cultural changes—including bikini-clad tourists on Mediterranean beaches—that sat uneasily with its professed Catholic moral order. By the 1960s, Spain had joined institutions like the OECD and integrated into global trade, effectively abandoning autarky. Yet even with foreign investment, Spain was the poor relation of its Western European neighbors. A regime that had promised economic independence and moral virtue ended up compromising both.

 

Beyond economics, Franco’s fusion of church and state did not strengthen Catholicism; it weakened the faith’s potency. By presenting himself as a divinely sanctioned ruler and suppressing any religious pluralism, the regime bound the fate of the church to its own repression. The association between church and state, combined with harsh repression, made way for an even stronger anti-Catholic backlash in the inevitable collapse of the Franco regime. Today, Spain is more secular than half of the countries in the European Union, ranking 16th out of 34 in religiosity, according to Pew Research. Only around 20 percent of Spaniards identify religion as “very important in their lives” and say they attend services at least monthly. Supposedly secular strongholds such as Poland, Ukraine, and Greece all rank higher than Spain.

 

This is no surprise. As Alexis de Tocqueville observed as early as 1835, the separation of church and state is not a boon for secularization but for religious authenticity and piety:

 

When a religion founds its empire upon the desire of immortality which lives in every human heart, it may aspire to universal dominion; but when it connects itself with a government, it must necessarily adopt maxims which are only applicable to certain nations. Thus, in forming an alliance with a political power, religion augments its authority over a few, and forfeits the hope of reigning over all.… The Church cannot share the temporal power of the State without being the object of a portion of that animosity which the latter excites.

 

According to Tocqueville, anticipating our current debate, by standing apart from the ephemeral and political state, the church strengthens true faith and virtue.

 

The same phenomenon is evident in Orbán’s Hungary. While touting itself as a postliberal Christian country, Hungary ranks even lower (20th) in religiosity than Spain. In the latest Hungarian census, 57 percent of Hungarians declined affiliation to any faith. Membership in the Catholic Church dropped by 30 percent—an estimated 1.1 million people—since 2011. Hungary’s Catholic demographic shrunk from 50 percent in 2001 to a lowly 28 percent today. This, despite the fact that large swaths of state funds have been poured into churches.

 

In addition to falling religious association, Hungary’s pro-natalist policies have done little to curb declining birth rates across Europe. Hungary’s birthrate (1.41) trails both France’s (1.61) and England’s (1.55).

 

***

 

And, just as Salazar and Franco were undone by economic trouble, the same is true of Orbán. Despite adopting free market policies between 1998 and 2002 during his second tenure as prime minister, Orbán later took a more corporatist stance, or what he deemed an “unorthodox economic policy.” He levied heavy taxes on banks, energy, and telecommunications, in addition to nationalizing private pensions. The Fidesz party took control of hundreds of corporations and businesses and invested greatly in Chinese lithium-ion batteries and electric-car plants. The investment did not pay off and left the economy in free fall. Orbán raised the minimum wage and put price caps on a number of products including gasoline, making the economic problem even worse. In 2025, Hungary’s growth in GDP was 0.4 percent, third to last among EU countries. As was the case with his postliberal predecessors, Orbán was forced to give in to his chief populist foe, the European Union. According to Johan Norberg, senior fellow at the Cato Institute, EU funds to Hungary “totaled up to 4%… similar to what East Germany received from West Germany after reunification.” An economic plight of Orbán’s own making, combined with pervasive corruption—rivaling that of countries like China and Cuba—helped sow the seeds of the regime’s demise.

 

What these case studies show us is that removing the pillars of the liberal democratic order doesn’t fix systemic inequality or stem the proliferation of pornography. It has a much more wide-ranging impact. Were we to follow these examples, as the benighted postliberal philosophical apologists for Orbán would have us do, we would risk upending the foundations of a prosperous society that allow us to have basic needs met in the first place. Autocratic regimes aren’t repressive because they have a depraved leader—although they oftentimes do—but because autocracy doesn’t govern by popular or republican consensus. Widespread poverty and a poor working class aren’t a coincidence but a consequence of corporatism, protectionism, and anti–free market policies. And the idea that they foment virtue is a proven absurdity. When you fuse church and state, you get a less authentic, more alienating religious order.

 

Instead of seeking utopia, postliberals, just like socialists, would be better served spending their time thinking about how liberalism has made our lives comparatively better than those of our predecessors while working on ways to fix whatever drawbacks come along with it. Winston Churchill said as much when he quipped, “Democracy is the worst form of government, except for all the others.” Maybe that’s why postliberals hate him so much.

A D-Day Model of Leadership America Should Seek to Follow

By James H. McGee

Friday, June 05, 2026

 

This weekend marks the 82nd anniversary of the D-Day landings. One suspects that, after the major celebrations that marked the 80th anniversary in 2024, 2026 will be a much quieter affair. This, perhaps, is appropriate. Of the 16.4 million Americans who served worldwide during World War II, only around 45,000 remain, and they die every day — the very youngest are now in their late 90s. Some 73,000 Americans actually landed in Normandy on D-Day. No one has precise figures for the number of American D-Day survivors, but if we extrapolate from the WWII figures, perhaps only approximately 200 of them are still alive — and it might be fewer.

 

So the “lived experience” of D-Day, to use a currently popular construction, is reaching its inevitable vanishing point. It’s now become all about remembrance, and, one hopes, honest remembrance and reflection worthy of the event’s immense historical significance. It’s good to see that D-Day still inspires thoughtful popular presentations, such as the recently released film Pressure, which dramatizes the critical role weather forecasting played in General Eisenhower’s D-Day decision-making.

 

This year, however, brings a unique juxtaposition of historical anniversaries, and one that calls for a moment’s joint reflection. This year’s D-Day anniversary falls scarcely a month before the 250th anniversary of the founding of our nation. The celebrations will be many and varied, and much will be made of the Declaration of Independence and our other founding documents. But before D-Day gives way to the larger anniversary, there are documents worthy of remembering, documents that connect D-Day to something larger, something worthy of reflection amidst the 250th anniversary celebrations. Both of these documents were written by General Eisenhower in his capacity as Supreme Allied Commander.

 

The first is his “Order of the Day,” the formal message to his troops on the eve of the invasion. In it, he spoke of a “Great Crusade,” of how “the hopes and prayers of liberty-loving people everywhere march with you.” He acknowledged the challenges they would face, saying, “Your enemy is well-trained, well-equipped, and battle-hardened. He will fight savagely.” He offered encouragement by reminding his soldiers that they were themselves well-prepared and well-equipped for the coming battle. And he concluded by beseeching the blessing “of Almighty God upon this great and noble undertaking.”

 

The second Eisenhower document, I would argue, is one that matters even more. As he ordered the landings to take place, he also took a quiet moment in which to secretly consider the possibility of failure. He scribbled a short note, that read as follows:

 

Our landings in the Cherbourg-Havre area have failed to gain a satisfactory foothold and I have withdrawn the troops. My decision to attack at this time and place was based upon the best information available. The troops, the air, and the Navy did all that bravery and devotion to duty could do. If any blame or fault attaches to the attempt, it is mine alone.

 

Thankfully, the landings succeeded, albeit at great cost, and Eisenhower was spared the need to make this message public. Also thankfully, a thoughtful aide retrieved the discarded note and preserved it for posterity.

 

Taken together, these documents speak to what made Eisenhower a great general and a greater man. For all the volumes written about Eisenhower’s weaknesses as a strategist — in my opinion, greatly overblown — his character made him perhaps the only figure capable of welding together the grand Allied coalition. Not Patton, nor Montgomery, nor Bradley, nor any of the others whose success required a vision that consistently rose above the petty and the personal.

 

But more than anything else, his second, never-needed note of failure reminds us of the moral qualities we should always hope to find in a great leader — qualities that, as one looks around today, seem all too often lacking in those who jockey for positions of leadership. In that quiet moment on the eve of D-Day, and in all his actions as Supreme Commander, Eisenhower combined strength with humility.

 

I don’t mean to make this all about Eisenhower. Harry Truman, for example, made a similar message more pungently with his famous axiom, “The buck stops here.” Truman’s quiet and dignified departure from the presidency, at a time when there were no huge book deals nor even a pension fund for ex-presidents, offers yet another lesson in character and leadership.

 

One of the greatest of the Founding Fathers, John Adams, spoke directly to the need for these kinds of leaders, writing that “our Constitution was made only for a moral and religious people. It is wholly inadequate to the government of any other.” Implicit in Adams’s message was the understanding that only such a people could be trusted to elect and support moral and religious leaders.

 

On this, then, the 82nd anniversary of D-Day, let’s honor the handful of survivors who remain, those who, in President Franklin Roosevelt’s words, “this day set upon a mighty endeavor, a struggle to preserve our Republic, our religion, our civilization, and to set free a struggling humanity.” Let’s remember their comrades whose lives ended on that day.

 

But let’s also take the occasion to ask something more of ourselves, to ask that, as citizens, we insist on leaders whose character might combine strength with humility, as exemplified by General Eisenhower as he prepared himself to acknowledge — and to take responsibility for — what would have become the war’s greatest failure. As we honor the anniversary of D-Day, we might also see in his example the model of leadership that might see us through the 250 years to come.

The Scott Pelley Meltdown Is Revealing

By Becket Adams

Sunday, June 07, 2026

 

CBS News fired 60 Minutes correspondent Scott Pelley last week following alleged clashes with management.

 

The firing itself, like Pelley, wasn’t particularly interesting.

 

It was the reaction that stood out.

 

Notable about the tantrum thrown by journalists and a considerable number of elected Democrats was that it was part of a larger conniption that has run uninterrupted since Bari Weiss took over as the network’s editor in chief in October 2025.

 

“Scott Pelley told the truth,” ex-ABC News correspondent Terry Moran, who was himself fired for unprofessionalism not too long ago, claimed without evidence. “So, CBS News fired him.”

 

Speaking in reference to the recent editorial hirings and firings at CBS, former 60 Minutes correspondent Steve Kroft said, “I think it has been disastrous for the show, for the audience, which is not insubstantial.”

 

What this long-running “outrage” reveals, what with its boilerplate rhetoric about oligarchies and its vague, specifics-free allegations of wrongdoing by Weiss and 60 Minutes executive producer Nick Bilton, is that a lot of people in the news business think of their profession as something akin to a public university.

 

This upside-down view goes a long way toward explaining how the credibility gap, the single greatest threat facing journalism today, has gotten so wide.

 

Sloppy and one-sided reporting helped to crater trust, yes, but the industry’s move toward total insularity, detachment, single-mindedness, and contemptible self-regard makes the problem intractable.

 

Weiss is obviously trying to run CBS as a business, one with broad appeal and plump profit margins. This means updating, adjusting, and modernizing an organization whose workplace culture is still proudly stuck in the 1960s and where attempts at change are resisted with invocations of an anchor whose final newscast was the year John Hinckley Jr. shot President Reagan.

 

Running a successful newsroom today also means accounting for the credibility crisis, which makes sense given that it is the most pressing issue.

 

No one trusts us. This is a problem.

 

Without trust, there’s no audience; without an audience, there’s no point.

 

How do you serve the public interest if you have no public? For that matter, how can you afford to keep the lights on, let alone afford to produce quality journalism, if there are no customers?

 

As obvious as this seems, there are those in the press who view change, especially change that addresses the credibility problem, as a threat to their comfort, their careers, and their preferred politics.

 

Oh, they’ll say their opposition is motivated by the belief that the free press is too sacred to have to address matters as pedestrian as “market forces” and “audience disapproval,” but the resistance is rarely any deeper than professional self-preservation, fighting for perks and good salaries, and for the freedom to indulge their partisan preferences in subtle and not-so-subtle ways.

 

We see this in the Pelleys and the NPRs of the world and their supporters in media — those who’d like to enjoy all the benefits and prestige of major league journalism with none of the market pressures or business concerns, and certainly none of the personal moderation required by such things.

 

They often condemn efforts to impose accountability, adjust editorial positions, account for opposing perspectives held by the other 50 percent of the country, or address ideological blind spots as attacks on the First Amendment and editorial independence.

 

They’ve become so accustomed to a version of the news industry that operates like a public university — where revenues are unconnected to performance, where a captive audience is a given, where viewpoint conformity is ruthlessly enforced, where loyalty is rewarded with lifetime employment, and where criticism is worthy of attention only if it comes from within the institution — that even the suggestion of operating under a for-profit business model has them breaking out in hives and leaking to competing newsrooms.

 

The irony is that the public university–style approach to journalism is how CBS arrived at its current predicament.

 

Like many legacy newsrooms, CBS has taken its audience for granted, viewing them not just as an afterthought but as something of a nuisance. Unfortunately for the legacy league, this attitude is no great secret. Audiences are keenly aware of the press’s dismissiveness, especially when it comes to legitimate concerns and criticisms, worsening the already serious credibility crisis.

 

There’s a reason an astonishing 94 percent of U.S. news consumers believe it is important for “people to do their own research to check the accuracy of the news they get,” according to recent Pew Research Center data.

 

This skepticism did not appear overnight.

 

It is a direct result of how the industry has operated over the past 50-some years.

 

So now newsrooms such as CBS have new, younger talent who recognize the crisis and are asking questions such as: “What can we do differently to appeal to the widest number of viewers?” and “How do we win back trust?”

 

But rather than answer these questions, CBS’s longtime staffers mount a months-long internal revolt, complete with leaks from staffers upset that anyone would dare to ask them what they do during work hours.

 

Pelley’s firing is just a microcosm of a larger and more exciting story playing out in media, where the legacy brands — those gargantuan dinosaur models and networks — have yet to concede that their ideal of modern journalism has very little in common with reality.

 

Whether the old guard likes it or not, our news media are in a transitional phase, driven by technological change and exacerbated by audience distrust (a feeling that increasingly appears to be mutual). Old assumptions about how the business works no longer hold.

 

Remember: Bill O’Reilly hosted the top-rated show on Fox News for two decades, earning as much as $25 million annually. Then, in 2017, he was replaced overnight by Tucker Carlson, who delivered comparable ratings for significantly less money.

 

Everything is up for grabs. Everyone is replaceable.

 

The savvy journalist understands this.

 

The same apparently can’t be said of Pelley, who cut his teeth in journalism in an era that predates the invention of the Post-it note.

 

This isn’t a gratuitous dig. Pelley is 68 years old. He was born the year the Soviets hurled Sputnik into the stratosphere. In contrast, Weiss is 42 and Bilton is 49. Forget Sputnik. Three of the four Space Race presidents were already dead by the time they were born.

 

Moreover, the average age in the 60 Minutes audience is 65, which is not ideal for the show’s long-term prospects.

 

If you don’t think the age gap and audience demographics played a role in Pelley getting the heave-ho, you’re fooling yourself. It has played out exactly thus in newsrooms across the country, with the possible difference being that Pelley’s purported unprofessionalism likely made management’s decision easier than most.

 

When you hack your way through all the self-glorifying language about “our democracy” and the sacredness of journalism, you’ll find at the bottom of everything that this is a business.

 

Pelley and his entourage of apparent superfans in the House and Senate Democratic caucuses may not like it, but it’s true, and a business isn’t like a public university.

 

This is the private sector. They expect results.

Ukraine Is Not Losing. Russia Is Not Winning.

By Anne Applebaum

Sunday, June 07, 2026

 

In a field outside of Kyiv last weekend, a van was parked discreetly behind some trees. Inside the van there were no passenger seats, just a long desk, two office chairs, two laptops, extra screens. Outside appearances to the contrary, this was a mobile drone-interceptor base, one of hundreds of similar vehicles now scattered around Ukraine. It’s also part of something much bigger: a set of technological advances that have changed the war with Russia, and maybe all wars, forever.

 

On one of the laptops, a soldier showed me a bird’s-eye view of a part of the Ukrainian countryside more than 100 miles away. His job is to identify the objects flying above it, to distinguish birds and bats from lethal Russian drones. When he sees the latter, the soldier on the laptop beside him can then direct an interceptor—a small drone that looks like a miniature rocket ship—to track and destroy the incoming Russian aerial vehicles before they hit their targets.

 

At first glance, the images on the screens look simple, like a video game. But this is not a low-tech operation. The AI-powered drone interceptors are made possible by a complicated network of radar systems, acoustic sensors, and other tools that hundreds of large and small Ukrainian tech companies are creating and updating every day, using data they get directly from soldiers like the ones I met. Almost none of these companies existed four years ago. They have emerged from a tech-literate civil society whose members changed their professions or their focus to help defend their country. I have met Ukrainian defense-company CEOs who come from financial services, architecture, politics. I met another one last weekend who had returned just that day from the front line. He told me he finds it useful to learn how soldiers are using his products, and how they might be improved.

 

Other kinds of teams across the country are connected to this constantly improving information system too, and not just in vans. Last year I was in an underground room in Ukraine where dozens of people were monitoring hundreds of miles of the front line on a series of screens. The Ukrainian defense analyst Andriy Zagorodnyuk calls this system of drones, monitors, AI-powered navigation, battle-tested robots, and interconnected soldiers “networked situational awareness,” and it explains why perceptions of this war have suddenly changed.

 

Ukrainian military technology has been evolving rapidly since the first years of the war. But only now are outsiders—in Europe, the United States, the Persian Gulf, and of course Russia—beginning to understand what that evolution means. Since 2022, many public arguments about the war, even in Europe and the U.S., have adopted the narrative put out by Russian propaganda, tacitly assuming that Ukraine, outmanned and outgunned, would eventually lose. Helping Ukraine was a way to stave off disaster, nothing more. When the Trump administration stopped sending military and financial aid to Kyiv in 2025, some in Washington expected (and maybe wanted) the end to come quickly.

 

Instead, Europeans have provided money. Ukrainian society produced networked situational awareness. And when Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky toured the Gulf states in late March and signed a series of security agreements, something changed in the international narrative. The leaders of Qatar, the United Arab Emirates, and Saudi Arabia were talking to Ukraine, not because they felt sorry for a war victim, but because they wanted to acquire drone interceptors like the ones I saw in action last weekend. Iranians use the same drone technology as the Russians, and the Ukrainians know better than anyone how to fight it.

 

The Gulf leaders are not alone: Suddenly, many people have understood that the Russian narrative is wrong: The Ukrainians are not losing. The Russians are not winning, and more important, they don’t know how to win. Ukrainians and outside analysts have described this dynamic in three main theaters of the war.

 

The ground war. If the story of the past two years was one of slow, grinding forward progress for Russia,the story of this year is very different. Since early spring, at the start of its annual offensive, Russia has lost more territory in Ukraine than it has gained. Right now, it is hard to see how the Russian army can move forward, because the front line is not a line at all, but rather a broad no-go zone, some 20 miles wide. Everything inside this zone is visible to drones, which means that any Russian truck, tank, or infantryman seeking to attack new territory is instantly identified and can easily be hit. Because the Russian commanders keep attacking anyway, the Ukrainians are killing and wounding thousands of enemy soldiers, perhaps as many as 30,000, every month. They say their goal is to remove more Russians from the battlefield than can be recruited to replace them, and they may be close to succeeding.

 

The long-range war. Although they are unable to move the front line, Russians can still use drones and missiles to kill civilians and destroy civilian infrastructure in Ukrainian cities, as they did once again this week. Indeed, Russian President Vladimir Putin’s appetite for this kind of attack is escalating, as he has no other practical way to damage Ukraine. He also knows that the Ukrainians don’t have enough air defense to stop ballistic missiles, even if they can now stop the majority of drones. Ukraine still relies heavily on air-defense equipment from the United States, especially ammunition for Patriot batteries. A European fund was set up to purchase these interceptor missiles, although some observers fear that there are simply not enough to buy. According to Zelensky, more Patriots were used during the first three days of the U.S.-Iran conflict than have been used during the entire Russia-Ukraine war.

 

What Putin doesn’t acknowledge is that his side is running out of air defense, too. That has helped Ukraine’s long-range drones more reliably target Russian oil and gas infrastructure, producing spectacular explosions and reducing Russian refining capacity by at least 20 percent. Almost all major oil refineries in central Russia ‌have halted or scaled back production, and some have been hit more than once.

 

With equal regularity, a new crop of Ukrainian drones with a range of 100 miles can target arms depots, logistical centers, and supply chains far behind the front line in Russian-occupied territories. These strikes are less spectacular than ones deep inside Russia, but they have already created crucial fuel shortages on the Crimean peninsula, and they are making it difficult for the Russians to supply their troops fighting in the East and the South.

 

The psychological war. For the past four years, the Kremlin has repeatedly told the Russian public that the war is going well, that Ukraine isn’t a real country, that victory is certain. But that’s hard to square with the panic that took hold of Moscow last month, when an annual military parade was shortened for fear it would be interrupted by Ukrainian drones. Nor does it square with the spectacular columns of black smoke that were billowing into the air on Wednesday morning, after Ukrainian drones hit a local refinery on the opening day of the Kremlin’s annual St. Petersburg economic forum. Kyrill Budanov, the former defense-intelligence chief who is now head of the Ukrainian president’s office, told me there is a lot of evidence that Russians are now finally facing the up to the falsehood of state propaganda: “They cannot understand why they have to keep fighting and why they are getting hit now, because they were told they were going to win and Ukraine is nothing.”

 

***

 

Not everybody thinks this means the war will end soon. One young woman, a Ukrainian civil servant, told me last weekend that she and her friends have already given up on the idea that they will ever live in a “normal” country again, because the war will last forever. She reminisced about a flight she and some friends took to Barcelona, before the war: “That beautiful life will never return.”

 

But there are signs that some in Moscow, at least, are preparing for the war to end. Recently, a set of slides leaked from the office of Sergei Kiryienko, a former Russian prime minister and now a senior official in Putin’s administration. They describe a plan to sell the end of the war to the country: declare victory, describe the Russian army as “the most combat-ready in the world,” portray small territorial gains as a huge success, claim that Europe suffered a huge economic blow, from which it will not recover, and that Ukraine will soon fall apart. Budanov believes that the Kremlin’s decision to cut off Telegram, the social-media platform most widely used in Russia, was a preemptive move, designed to prepare for this kind of narrative change, “so that when the time comes, they have only one official position and nothing else but that.”

 

Budanov also continues to believe that the negotiations started by the Trump administration could produce a cease-fire, along the current front line, as early as this year. “And then we will start resolving the other issues we have.” On Thursday, Zelensky wrote a letter directly to Putin proposing exactly that: an immediate cease-fire, accompanied by face-to-face negotiations between the two leaders. Putin publicly dismissed the idea, saying he sees “no point” in a meeting.

 

Russia still has other options. The Russian president, who has never acknowledged that Ukraine is a legitimate country, or that Zelensky is its legitimate president, could continue to bomb Ukrainian cities, hoping to destroy the electrical grid and make the country unlivable. He could call for mass mobilization, and continue trying to overwhelm Ukraine’s defenses, sacrificing thousands of lives. Some fear he could use this moment to widen the conflict and to attack a NATO country, possibly to test American willingness to defend allies. A Latvian general this week said that even if Russian drones can’t win in Ukraine, they have an advantage over NATO defenses that have yet to catch up with the fast-evolving technology.

 

Even without negotiations, Russia and Ukraine may be heading toward a new status quo. The transparent frontline zone may now be 20 miles wide, but as drone technology improves, it could soon be 30 or even 40 miles wide. At some point the front line will become not just a no-man’s-land but a de facto demilitarized zone, similar to the one that separates North and South Korea, regularly patrolled and maintained by drones.

 

After that, it could become a border—a temporary border, one that will not be recognized by either side—but a border nevertheless: no different from a river or mountain range, impossible to move, difficult to cross. This would not be a clear victory for Ukraine, but it would be a major defeat for Putin, whose central goal—the destruction of all of Ukraine, the removal of Ukraine from the map—would never be realized.

The Threat of Jean-Luc Melenchon

By Seth Mandel

Thursday, June 04, 2026

 

European leaders are making a bad habit of echoing the violent rhetoric of the anti-Zionist activist class. Back in September, it was Spain’s Pedro Sanchez who lamented that “Spain, as you know, doesn’t have nuclear bombs, nor aircraft carriers, nor large oil reserves. We alone can’t stop the Israeli offensive, but that doesn’t mean we won’t stop trying, because there are causes worth fighting for even if it’s not in our sole power to win them.”

 

This casual violence from a European president was a notable escalation, but it would not be the last.

 

Jean-Luc Melenchon, the powerful leader of the French left and prospective presidential candidate in the next national elections, has a history of voicing his inner anti-Semitic thoughts. He blamed Jews for killing Jesus in an interview, for example, and defended notorious British anti-Semite Jeremy Corbin.

 

French elections often pit the right wing against a coalition of left and center parties, with those votes coalescing around a centrist candidate to win in the runoff round. But next year, Politico Europe notes, the candidate with the votes to make the second round against the right wing may very well be the far-left Melenchon instead of a centrist.

 

While there will no doubt be concern about the opportunity that would open for a nationalist right-wing president, Melenchon isn’t less extreme in his own politics. Here’s what he said about Israel and Lebanon this week on social media, flagged by the Algemeiner:

 

Israel is invading and annexing all of southern Lebanon. Netanyahu has raised his flag over Beaufort Castle. This French name should remind us of the thousand-year history that binds us to Lebanon. We owe the Lebanese people aid, solidarity, and support in the face of genocidal forces.

 

He added: “The aircraft carrier would serve as a more useful symbol in the Mediterranean than in the Strait of Hormuz, to remind Netanyahu that his interference in our elections and his invasions of our allies’ territories are viewed as threats by the French. The UN Security Council must condemn Israel and organize the withdrawal of its forces from the occupied territory.”

 

So Melenchon believes Lebanon is still a French colony, essentially—that Israel’s seizing of the castle is an act of war against France. Then he accuses Netanyahu of interfering in French elections, suggesting that too is an act of war.

 

But the last part may be the most deranged. Israel took South Lebanon from Hezbollah, not the Lebanese army. Hezbollah is an Iranian occupation force. Why isn’t Iran’s occupation of South Lebanon viewed as a threat to France? Because when he talks about “invasions of our allies’ territory,” the ally is apparently imperial Iran.

 

If it sounds crazy to think Melenchon sees Iran as an ally against Israel, it shouldn’t. The Western left has been marching for three years explicitly cheering Hezbollah and Iran. In fact, it’s been cheering loudest for Hamas, the Iranian satrapy that carried out the savage murder spree of October 7, 2023. Hamas recorded its exploits on that day, and admitted to some of the worst of the crimes not caught on camera. If Melenchon’s ideological base can celebrate the Iranian militia carrying out a massive campaign of sexual torture and child murder, why wouldn’t Melenchon also see Iran as the good guy in this fight?

 

This is something the West needs to grapple with before it gets completely out of hand. It is not that the European left, along with its acolytes in the U.S., want the end of war in the Middle East. It’s that they want a different war—one that pits Western militaries against Israel and fights alongside Iran.

 

That obviously won’t happen—now. But the desire to reorganize the alliance around Iran and its associated “resistance” movements is there. And it should be a five-alarm fire in any corner of Europe that has retained its sanity.

Saturday, June 6, 2026

Is the American Experiment Legitimate?

By Yuval Levin

Friday, June 05, 2026

 

Is our government legitimate?

 

Although we rarely ask that question quite so bluntly, it actually lies at the bottom of many of our deepest disputes. Those disagreements that really cut to the core of our politics tend to be less about the direction of public policy in one arena or another than about who should have power in our government, by what right, in what way, through what means, and to what ends.

 

These questions were at the very heart of the American Revolution, which took itself to be responding to an abdication of governmental legitimacy. And they were then crucial to the effort to frame a legitimate constitutional system in the revolution’s wake.

 

Some of the most fundamental political debates we have today are about whether that effort succeeded. There have long been critics of the U.S. Constitution who argue that the system lacks legitimacy. Some of them now teach in America’s leading law schools and occasionally populate the upper reaches of government. But even at their most intellectually serious, such critics too rarely engage with what our Constitution is really trying to achieve when it comes to legitimacy, and why.

 

So in this 250th year of our republic, as we reflect on our history and also look forward, it is worth asking some basic questions: What did the American founders think a legitimate form of government needed to look like? Does their test of legitimacy still make sense? And does the form of government we inherited from them pass that test?

 

***

 

We might as well start with the Declaration of Independence, which is after all what we are celebrating when we treat this year as the 250th anniversary of the American founding.

 

The Declaration clearly addressed itself to a legitimacy crisis. And at first glance, it seems to offer a straightforward answer to the question of what form a legitimate government would need to take. Governments properly formed to secure the rights of the people, it tells us, “derive their just powers from the consent of the governed.” Consent requires accountability, and presumably that means it requires some set of democratic (or, in the parlance of the founders, republican) institutions, and especially elective offices.

 

But the Declaration doesn’t actually make that plausible leap from the necessity of consent to the necessity of democratic forms. In fact, it declares itself to be indifferent to specific forms of government. And it does so in the same sentence in which it insists that governments derive their just powers from the consent of the governed.

 

Here is the great and famous second paragraph of the Declaration of Independence, which amounts to a set of criteria for governmental legitimacy:

 

We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness.—That to secure these rights, Governments are instituted among Men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed,—That whenever any Form of Government becomes destructive of these ends, it is the Right of the People to alter or to abolish it, and to institute new Government, laying its foundation on such principles and organizing its powers in such form, as to them shall seem most likely to effect their Safety and Happiness.

 

On its face, what we see here is a functional rather than a formal definition of political legitimacy. Human beings are all equal, and so endowed with equal rights; governments exist to secure these rights; and when our government fails to secure them, we may overturn that government and replace it with another of whatever form we judge best suited to secure them and to make us safe and happy. 

 

To us today, the notion that governments derive their just powers from the consent of the governed suggests that governments have to be elected, or that there can’t really be a legitimate monarchy. There were certainly people in the late 18th century who thought that too. Thomas Paine made that argument in Common Sense, for instance. But the Declaration of Independence did not. It did not suggest that there can’t be a legitimate monarchy. It did not argue that the King of England couldn’t rightfully rule in England. It didn’t even argue that he couldn’t rightfully rule in America.

 

In fact, if you follow the logic of the grievances laid out later in the Declaration, you’d have to conclude that the Americans did live under a legitimate monarchy that did secure their rights until not all that long before the Declaration was written. That government rendered itself illegitimate not because it wasn’t elected by the people but because it stopped securing their rights and started undermining and threatening those rights. Not its form but its function was the problem.

 

So at least at first glance, the Declaration seems to say that legitimacy is not a consequence of form but of function. When we find ourselves needing to arrange a government, we can do so in any form that seems likely to serve the proper function of government—that is, the protection of our rights.

 

But who is this “we”? Who makes this decision, and how? That, after all, is what the question of forms of government is really about: who makes decisions, and how. Is the Declaration of Independence really indifferent to the answers to those questions?

 

As a practical matter, and even as a logical matter, it couldn’t be indifferent to them. Those are questions that have to be answered somehow, and the answer would have to be rooted in the premises laid out in that very same second paragraph of the Declaration quoted above. That answer, moreover, would have to matter not only when we form a new government but also in its continuing work.

 

If we are all equal, and have equal rights, and government requires our consent, there can’t be an infinite number of ways to obtain that consent, or to achieve legitimacy. Abraham Lincoln, for example, thought there could really be only one. Gesturing toward that same paragraph in the Declaration, Lincoln argued that it must point to majority rule. In his First Inaugural Address, he said:

 

Unanimity is impossible. The rule of a minority, as a permanent arrangement, is wholly inadmissible; so that, rejecting the majority principle, anarchy or despotism in some form is all that is left.

 

If we believe the Declaration’s self-evident truths are true, and we want to avoid anarchy or despotism, then majority rule would seem to be the only possible route to legitimacy in government. And majority rule obviously has some implications for the forms that a government can take.

 

Once we see this point, the Declaration’s ambivalence about forms of government quickly comes to seem less like genuine agnosticism and more like a carefully couched case for popular sovereignty.

 

Consider again, for example, the grievances that make up most of the document. They do suggest that a king can be a legitimate sovereign but that the particular British monarch of that moment had acted in ways that nullified his legitimacy. But just what were those ways?

 

Here are the first five grievances listed in the Declaration:

 

He has refused his Assent to Laws, the most wholesome and necessary for the public good.

 

He has forbidden his Governors to pass Laws of immediate and pressing importance, unless suspended in their operation till his Assent should be obtained; and when so suspended, he has utterly neglected to attend to them.

 

He has refused to pass other Laws for the accommodation of large districts of people, unless those people would relinquish the right of Representation in the Legislature, a right inestimable to them and formidable to tyrants only.

 

He has called together legislative bodies at places unusual, uncomfortable, and distant from the depository of their public Records, for the sole purpose of fatiguing them into compliance with his measures.

 

He has dissolved Representative Houses repeatedly, for opposing with manly firmness his invasions on the rights of the people.

 

All of these are in fact complaints about the king’s obstruction of the operation of representative legislatures, which work by some form of majority rule to make laws for the community.

 

The other two dozen or so grievances in the document can then be readily divided into two other categories: complaints about the king’s obstruction of the operation of the judiciary, and complaints about abuses of the king’s own powers as an executive. George III is accused of things like making “judges dependent on his Will alone,” corrupting the administration of justice, and intentionally failing to protect the people from external threats. 

 

So while the Declaration says it is indifferent to forms of government, its complaints about the failure of the British government to secure the rights of the people are in fact complaints about its failure to function as a government that governs through representative legislative assemblies, a responsible executive, and an independent judiciary.

 

And the core principled complaint offered up by the colonists both before and after the Declaration focused on the necessity of representation as a precondition for legitimacy—or in other words, on majority rule. “No taxation without representation” is not a line of argument that is agnostic about forms of government.

 

And yet, the Declaration’s emphasis on function over form still matters enormously. It suggests criteria of legitimacy for government that go well beyond majority rule, and in fact it points in the direction of an enormous challenge to the legitimacy of majority rule.

 

The logic of the Declaration implies that the people’s rights cannot be effectively secured in the long run without some form of majority rule. But that does not mean that any form of it will do, or that the more thoroughly democratic a regime becomes, the more protective it is of the rights of the people.

 

That, in fact, is plainly not the case, and for a simple reason. A majority is composed of a part of society, not the whole. Ideally, the majority will have the interest of the whole of society at heart. But realistically, majorities will often pursue the interests that their members share in common, and they always run the risk of doing so at the expense of the rights of minorities, or of individuals who aren’t part of the majority.

 

This tension is pretty much the oldest and most familiar problem with democracy. Majorities can tyrannize minorities. You can’t look for very long at the history of democracy—or at the history of the United States—without seeing just how horrendously oppressive majorities can sometimes be.

 

So majority rule is an essential principle of legitimacy, but it can also become a principle of despotism. There is no alternative to it if you want a legitimate government, but there are huge risks to it as the organizing principle of a legitimate government.

 

The Declaration of Independence doesn’t tell us how to form a government that accounts for this problem. But it does put forward a demanding set of criteria for whatever forms might be proposed.

 

In other words, the Declaration tells us that majority rule is an essential means of legitimacy, but that the end—the very definition of what legitimacy really is in government—is securing the rights of the people in light of the equality, and therefore the universality, of their rights. A government that doesn’t secure the rights of all is not a legitimate government, even if it is accountable to the majority. Majority rule is a starting point for deciding on forms of government, but it is not all that matters.

 

This is a very demanding test of legitimacy, and a very grave challenge to any prospective American law-giver. And it is exactly the challenge that the United States Constitution eventually rose to meet. The Declaration of Independence outlined the criteria that an American regime would need to satisfy, and the Constitution set about satisfying them.

 

***

 

But the Constitution spoke to the challenge of legitimate majority rule not only because the Declaration had laid out that challenge. It did so above all because of the circumstances of the intervening years.

 

The Constitution, like the Declaration, came together in the summer, in Philadelphia, in what we now call Independence Hall. The two documents were debated and approved in the same room, but 11 years apart. And the experience of those 11 years confirmed the difficulty of the challenge that the Declaration had sketched out.

 

They were seven years of war and four years of peace. The war was fought for self-government, and against abuses of power by a government that was not sufficiently accountable to the people it governed. The revolution came to be understood, at least by the end of the war, as what we might call a struggle for democracy. And the forms of government established in the states during and after the war tended to be radically democratic: Strong legislatures kept close to the people, in several cases through annual elections, and a kind of thoroughgoing majority rule.

 

There was general agreement in America that these republican forms were necessary, and in some respects that they were key to what the war was about. But by the end of the war, and especially in those first years of peace, it also became increasingly clear that these modes of government were not working well. They didn’t govern effectively, nor did they protect the rights of the people effectively. The populist governance of those years regularly devolved into mob rule, which led to widespread instability, governmental dysfunction, and in some cases, outright political violence.

 

Both of these worries, about the ineffectiveness and the injustice of how America was governing itself, led to the pursuit of a new Constitution. And both worries were very much on the minds of the people who drafted and negotiated that Constitution.

 

They were above all on the mind of James Madison. In Federalist 10, when Madison described what had made a new Constitution necessary, he focused on precisely the dangers of reckless majority power. He described that problem this way:

 

Complaints are everywhere heard from our most considerate and virtuous citizens, equally the friends of public and private faith, and of public and personal liberty, that our governments are too unstable, that the public good is disregarded in the conflicts of rival parties, and that measures are too often decided, not according to the rules of justice and the rights of the minor party, but by the superior force of an interested and overbearing majority.

 

This danger of majority power is of course a particular risk for governments rooted in majority rule, and Madison took it to be the source of the deepest problems such governments had always faced throughout history. As he put it: “The instability, injustice, and confusion, introduced into the public councils have, in truth, been the mortal diseases under which popular governments have every where perished.”

 

And yet, Madison was absolutely committed to the principle of majority rule. And the Constitution, unlike the Declaration of Independence, did not pretend to be ambivalent about forms of government. It was, after all, itself a proposed form of government, and so couldn’t feign agnosticism. The republican principle, the principle of majority rule through representation, was the implicit and often also explicit premise of every discussion held at the Constitutional Convention, and every argument made in favor of the Constitution. The government the founders were designing was going to be a republic.

 

But it was also designed with a keen awareness that forms of government were means and not ends, and that the end to be pursued, in the Constitution just as in the Declaration, was a government geared to securing the rights of the people. How the two could be balanced—how majority rule and minority rights might be secured simultaneously—was the great question for Madison, and he took it to be the great challenge to republican government everywhere and always.

 

This is the very subject of Federalist 10, Madison’s most profound contribution to the tradition of political thought. We tend to describe that essay as being about the problem of faction. And we have a good excuse for describing it that way: That is what Madison says it is about. But if you actually read it, you find that Madison is not primarily focused on factionalism in the sense of fragmentation or the proliferation of interests and views in society. He’s focused on the risks of majority rule. Here is the paragraph that lays out the core problem Madison thinks the Constitution needed to address:

 

If a faction consists of less than a majority, relief is supplied by the republican principle, which enables the majority to defeat its sinister views by regular vote. It may clog the administration, it may convulse the society; but it will be unable to execute and mask its violence under the forms of the Constitution. When a majority is included in a faction, the form of popular government, on the other hand, enables it to sacrifice to its ruling passion or interest both the public good and the rights of other citizens. To secure the public good and private rights against the danger of such a faction, and at the same time to preserve the spirit and the form of popular government, is then the great object to which our inquiries are directed. Let me add that it is the great desideratum by which this form of government can be rescued from the opprobrium under which it has so long labored, and be recommended to the esteem and adoption of mankind.

 

This is the core challenge for Madison. The Constitution has to secure the public good and private rights—first and foremost. But at the same time it has to preserve the spirit and the form of popular government.

 

Those two goals, in that order, are how the Declaration of Independence saw things too. But while the Declaration limited itself to laying out these goals and showing that they had not been met in Britain’s treatment of America, Madison and his fellow framers of the Constitution had to actually figure out how to achieve these two frequently contradictory goals simultaneously.

 

And they did.

 

***

 

The tension between majority rule and minority rights is behind a lot of what is most peculiar and frustrating about the American Constitution. Above all, it is behind the system’s insistence on impeding narrow majorities and forcing them to grow before they can wield real power.

 

By separating the branches of government and setting them in each other’s way, by dividing Congress into two houses chosen by different electorates and formulas of representation, by empowering sovereign states and the national government simultaneously, and more generally by sustaining multiple competing centers of power, the Constitution compels narrow majorities to expand themselves and build broader coalitions before they can act. All of these mechanisms are means of requiring and facilitating negotiation. And the politics envisioned by the Constitution is from every angle a politics of negotiation.

 

The Constitution embraces the essential justice, indeed the inescapable necessity, of majority rule. But it also works to create the conditions for negotiated accommodations, so that majority rule might on the whole be protective of minorities too, and might produce stable, durable, effective government. Small, ephemeral majorities are restrained and frustrated in the service of empowering a more considered and therefore effective majority rule.

 

The aim is precisely to meet the two often conflicting goals set out in the Declaration of Independence. The great political philosopher Harry Jaffa once described the matter this way, in the Declaration’s own terms: 

 

Because men are by nature equal; because, that is, no man is by nature the ruler of another, government derives its just powers from consent—that is, from the opinion of the governed. But government based upon the consent of all must operate upon the only practicable approach to unanimity, namely, the rule of the majority however defined; and majorities can take shape or form only in and through the process of discussion. It is for this reason that discussion is indispensable to the democratic process; but the principle of discussion can never be separated from the principle of majority rule; nor can the principle of majority rule be separated from the principle of the natural equality of political rights of all men.

 

This kind of restrained majority rule means that majorities are constantly shifting and transforming themselves, making it more likely that every American will sometimes be in the majority and sometimes in the minority.

 

This was Lincoln’s view of how majority rule could be legitimate, too. In the very same paragraph of his First Inaugural cited above, where he insisted there could be no alternative to majority rule, Lincoln also noted that such rule cannot be pure if it is to be legitimate, arguing that “a majority held in restraint by constitutional checks and limitations, and always changing easily with deliberate changes of popular opinions and sentiments, is the only true sovereign of a free people.”

 

This impurity of our system’s majoritarianism is now often held up by critics as proof of its illegitimacy. That the Constitution doesn’t simply empower one majority to govern unimpeded, however narrow or ephemeral it might be, and that it instead forms governing majorities in different institutions by different modes of representation and sets them against each other, is said to be evidence of its undemocratic character. But this critique mistakes means for ends, and so would purify democracy at the expense of legitimacy and not in its service. What it treats as the problem is actually the solution. In effect, the imperative for “discussion,” in Jaffa’s terms, operates as a constitutional restraint that better enables majority rule to coexist with minority rights.

 

Such discussion, and the negotiated politics it makes possible, must happen in Congress above all. And the Constitution clearly envisions the Congress—its first and foremost branch of government—as an arena for bargaining and accommodation. The institution is built to be representative of key constituencies in American society but also to refine and elevate the wishes of those constituencies through negotiations among representatives. A functional Congress is essential to a functioning American constitutionalism, and congressional dysfunction is at the heart of our system’s broader problems now.

 

But the other branches play key parts in balancing the competing goods of majority rule and the securing of everyone’s rights. The president has some independence from Congress but ultimately has to act within the legal frameworks negotiated by and with Congress, and so can exercise some judgment that stands apart from the will of momentary majorities but is nonetheless subject and accountable to voters. And the courts are granted extraordinary independence from both the public and the other branches—judges serve for life, their pay can’t be cut, and they never have to face voters—so that they can protect the rights of all even as they secure the application of the laws enacted by majorities.

 

All of this makes for a system that plainly prioritizes legitimacy, even above efficiency. This is a common frustration with the American system of government, especially in comparison with some other forms of democracy. Our system is slow and cumbersome. It’s hard to make policy, and the process required to do so often deforms clean and technically appealing schemes into messy, clumsy muddles. And all of this happens through adversarial bargaining. It always feels like conflict, and pretty much no one ever gets quite what they want.

 

All of those critiques are true. But they describe a price we pay for a system of government that has managed for nearly two and a half centuries now to allow our society to navigate extremely treacherous waters while generally, and increasingly, meeting the very challenging criteria of legitimacy set out in the Declaration of Independence—balancing majority rule and minority rights.

 

***

 

We often take that achievement for granted. But this year, as we celebrate the 250th anniversary of the American founding, is a time to appreciate it—and to reflect on what has made it possible.

 

It was not by any means obvious that our system could last this long. On August 8, 1787, the Constitutional Convention took up the question of the formula for representation in the House of Representatives. In his notes from that day, James Madison recorded that, while he himself was making a mundane point about how one proposed approach might play out over many decades, Massachusetts delegate Nathaniel Gorham rose to object that thinking so far ahead was a waste of time.

 

“It is not to be supposed that the government will last so long as to produce this effect,” Gorham said. “Can it be supposed that this vast country, including the Western territory, will 150 years hence remain one nation?”

 

It was a reasonable question. And Madison makes no mention in his notes of offering any answer to Gorham. But the Constitution that the convention ended up producing was itself an affirmative answer. The system of government it created could last, and it has lasted, with amendments and adaptations, far longer than even a century and a half. 

 

There are people in our society who take that to be a bad thing, and consider our Constitution an embarrassingly ancient relic. But the durability of our politics is not a mark against it. Our politics is durable because it is adaptable. It is adaptable because it was built to sustain a dynamic balance. And it was built to sustain a dynamic balance because it was constructed with a keen awareness of the permanent tension between the two essential preconditions for the legitimacy of a government in a free society: majority rule and equal rights.

 

Our Constitution demonstrates how both can be secured at once. And in that respect, it is an answer to a question posed by the Declaration of Independence 250 years ago this year. A politics built to never stop asking that question is a politics that can endure, regardless of how much the world might change.

 

When we take our system of government for granted, we tend to see only what it prevents us from doing and to ignore what it enables us to do. We see the bad but not the good. And that is precisely because of how extraordinarily effective our system has been at securing the good. Its success has led us to forget why it is necessary.

 

But if our form of government is going to last another 250 years, we will have to grasp just how successful it has been and therefore also just how necessary it remains. The greatest challenge we will face is the challenge we have faced from the start: the challenge of legitimacy. The political inheritance that we are privileged to enjoy as Americans offers us the resources to meet that challenge. But we can only do that if we are prepared to understand and use them.

 

So the question we confront in this anniversary year is not whether the Declaration of Independence and the Constitution are up to meeting the challenges of the next 250 years, but whether we are up to meeting those challenges—and whether we can prepare those who will follow us to meet them too.