The Liberalism.org Show

Liberalism.org

Interviews with Liberalism.org contributors.

Episodes

  1. 5d ago

    Tariffs, Emergency Powers, and the Limits of the Presidency (with Ilya Somin)

    It started with a blog post. When the Trump administration invoked emergency powers to impose sweeping tariffs, law professor Ilya Somin suggested in passing that someone ought to challenge it in court — and then found himself co-counsel in the case that reached the Supreme Court. In this episode, Aaron Ross Powell talks with Somin, professor of law at George Mason University's Antonin Scalia Law School and the Kenneth Simon Chair in Constitutional Studies at the Cato Institute, about how V.O.S. Selections v. Trump came together, why the Court held that the IEEPA doesn't authorize tariffs at all, and what the major questions and nondelegation doctrines mean for presidential power. They also explore what should count as a genuine "emergency," why the courts alone can't restrain executive overreach, and how litigation and ordinary politics have to work together to keep power in check. Further Reading Liberty Justice Center and I File Lawsuit Challenging Trump's "Liberation Day" Tariffs — Ilya Somin, The Volokh ConspiracyIlya Somin Wins Major Victory Over Unconstitutional Tariffs — Institute for Humane StudiesDemocracy and Political Ignorance: Why Smaller Government Is Smarter — Ilya Somin, Stanford University Press More from Liberalism.org Liberalism's Uneasy Relationship with Democracy — Ilya SominFederal Courts, Local Wrongs: Growing Federal Power Means Less Accountability — Radley Balko

    27 min
  2. Jun 4

    The Future and Its Enemies, Revisited (with Virginia Postrel)

    Recorded at Flourishing House, the Institute for Humane Studies' gathering at SXSW exploring what people and societies need to thrive, this episode finds host Aaron Ross Powell in conversation with Virginia Postrel — journalist, former Reason editor, and author of The Future and Its Enemies and The Fabric of Civilization. The 1990s now look like a golden age of optimism about the future — but at the time, critics were smashing computers on stage and running "Smash the Internet" cover stories. Powell and Postrel revisit her enduring distinction between dynamism and stasis nearly three decades on: why today's backlash against openness is less about pocketbook economics than discomfort with a diverse, experimental society; why every solution breeds fresh discontents, and why that's a feature rather than a bug; and how liberals can keep making the case for abundance through concrete, everyday stories — from YIMBY housing reform to the surprisingly contentious history of the toothbrush. Further Reading The Future and Its Enemies: The Growing Conflict Over Creativity, Enterprise, and Progress — Virginia Postrel, Free PressThe Fabric of Civilization: How Textiles Made the World — Virginia Postrel, Basic BooksAbundance — Ezra Klein & Derek Thompson, Avid Reader PressVirginia Postrel's website — home for her columns and books; her new Everyday Abundance podcast with Charles C. Mann is forthcoming (June 2026)More from Liberalism.org "The Enemy Is Power, Wherever You Find It" — Matt Zwolinski

    30 min

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Interviews with Liberalism.org contributors.

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