Share The unPundit Podcast
Share to email
Share to Facebook
Share to X
By Chris Gober
5
1717 ratings
The podcast currently has 6 episodes available.
Host Chris Gober interviews Boston University Professor of Health Law George Annas. George argues that our nation’s efforts to control the spread of COVID-19 should be nationalized, how increased information sharing and credibility will encourage volunteerism among American companies, and where our personal freedoms lie within new COVID-19 legal confines.
In episode 5 of The unPundit Podcast, Chris speaks with Wendy Parmet, Professor of Law and Director for the Center of Health Policy & Law at Northeastern University. They discuss her expertise in quarantine law and constitutional issues impacted by federal, state and local governments in controlling the spread of COVID-19.
On this episode of The Unpundit Podcast, Chris welcomes American journalist, Joseph Lindsley. Joeseph shares stories from his career as a reporter, as well as insights on how the media works, how it has changed over time and how more niche media formats like The Unpundit Podcast have become a necessity in today's world.
Chris wraps up an in-depth look at impeachment by transitioning from a focus on the House of Representatives to a focus on the ins and outs of the Senate trial. Historian Donald Ritchie and Professor Daniel Freeman return to share their expertise and personal experiences, discussing the potential penalties upon conviction as well as a few possible but controversial hypothetical scenarios that might result from impeachment.
In the second of a three-part series on impeachment, join host Chris Gober and guests Donald Ritchie and Professor Daniel Freeman as they look beyond the politics to develop a more solid understanding of the impeachment process. Episode two takes a deeper dive into the rules and legal standards in the U.S. House, such as what does and does not constitute an impeachable offense, what power the House has to subpoena witnesses and which impeachment rules are interpreted from, versus dictated by, the U.S. Constitution.
Host Chris Gober kicks off the Unpundit Podcast with a three-part series on how impeachment really works. Expert guests include Donald Ritchie, historian emeritus for the U.S. Senate who served as the Senate historian during the Clinton impeachment, and Daniel M. Freeman, J.D., fellow at the American University Center for Congressional and Presidential Studies. Daniel was counsel and parliamentarian for the House Judiciary Committee under three separate chairmen, both Democrat and Republican, and the only staff lawyer in history to have worked on four impeachments. Episode 1 focuses on the overall impeachment process from a historical, constitutional perspective, featuring anecdotes from Dan and Don about their real-life impeachment experiences.
The podcast currently has 6 episodes available.