
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or
Checks and balances are at the absolute core of our governmental workings.
The framers designed a system that was directly opposed to one person or one group of people having all the power, and we see that through the myriad ways Congress can check the president. So what are those checks? How have they waned over the last few decades? And finally, why would Congress opt to use (or not use) them?
Joining us today is Eric Schickler, professor of Political Science at UC Berkeley and author of Investigating the President: Congressional Checks on Presidential Power.
Referenced in this episode:
Our Starter Kit series.
Our episode on impeachment from 2019.
4.2
24832,483 ratings
Checks and balances are at the absolute core of our governmental workings.
The framers designed a system that was directly opposed to one person or one group of people having all the power, and we see that through the myriad ways Congress can check the president. So what are those checks? How have they waned over the last few decades? And finally, why would Congress opt to use (or not use) them?
Joining us today is Eric Schickler, professor of Political Science at UC Berkeley and author of Investigating the President: Congressional Checks on Presidential Power.
Referenced in this episode:
Our Starter Kit series.
Our episode on impeachment from 2019.
5,021 Listeners
9,131 Listeners
1,108 Listeners
3,900 Listeners
8,501 Listeners
8,246 Listeners
3,506 Listeners
119 Listeners
25,859 Listeners
137 Listeners
1,457 Listeners
1,524 Listeners
4,615 Listeners
15,085 Listeners
2,412 Listeners
16,034 Listeners
809 Listeners
5,683 Listeners
1,353 Listeners
327 Listeners
6,062 Listeners
6 Listeners
962 Listeners
5 Listeners
2 Listeners
270 Listeners
1,535 Listeners
32 Listeners
127 Listeners