81 episodes

Former Assistant U.S. Attorney Harry Sandick along with Jon Hatch and colleagues at Patterson Belknap revisit the hottest topics from each week in the Constitutional Convention of 1787, tracking their current place in our legal and political landscape.

How to Build a Nation in 15 Weeks Patterson Belknap Webb & Tyler LLP

    • Education
    • 4.8 • 32 Ratings

Former Assistant U.S. Attorney Harry Sandick along with Jon Hatch and colleagues at Patterson Belknap revisit the hottest topics from each week in the Constitutional Convention of 1787, tracking their current place in our legal and political landscape.

    Series Conclusion

    Series Conclusion

    After four seasons, more than 70 hours, and 75 episodes, Harry and Jon share some parting thoughts on the Constitution, the problems and struggles of interpretation, the role of politics and compromise, and some constitutional near misses. Rejecting the idea of finished products, we nonetheless say goodbye for now. (Editor's Note: Harry and John, you are both most welcome and thank you for letting me a part of this.)

    • 56 min
    The Presidency: the 22nd and 25th Amendments

    The Presidency: the 22nd and 25th Amendments

     Despite the constitutional convention’s tentative rejection of term limits, early presidents establish a custom of two terms (each for their own reasons). After a few presidents flirt with a third (nonconsecutive) term, FDR goes for four, leading Congress to make custom binding. John Tyler takes over for Harrison and starts a custom of his own, but president succession remains unsettled. A later amendment fixes some problems but leaves room for mischief. (Editors Note: The primary recorder failed for this episode and the audio came from the microphones built into the computer. I am so sorry.)

    • 2 hr 2 min
    Elections: the 20th Amendment

    Elections: the 20th Amendment

    Poor initial planning leaves Congressional terms and Congressional sessions badly out of sync, and 130 years’ worth of long and short sessions. A dispute over shipping subsidies rebalances the sessions, but leaves a short lame duck period. Tweaks to the presidential election process solve one problem, permits Congress to solve another (if it ever gets around to it), but leave a number of issues unaddressed.

    • 39 min
    Democracy, Part 2: the 24th and 26th Amendments

    Democracy, Part 2: the 24th and 26th Amendments

    The 24th Amendment goes halfway toward removing poll taxes—one of the many historical practices used to suppress voting on the basis of race and class—before the Supreme Court expands the scope of the 14th Amendment to go all the way. Earlier voting rights successes, lowering the military draft age to 18, student organizing, and a mediocre pop song lead to a change in the Voting Rights Act, and then to the 26th Amendment.

    • 55 min
    Democracy, Part 1: the 17th, 23rd, and DC Voting Rights Amendments

    Democracy, Part 1: the 17th, 23rd, and DC Voting Rights Amendments

    120 years of corruption and deadlocks finally allow reformers to achieve direct election of Senators, with the hope of a more responsive and functional Senate. (Points for trying, we suppose.) An absent-minded decision by the Federalists strips DC residents of the right to vote, and a legacy of racism leads to continued disenfranchisement. The 23rd Amendment restores the right to vote in Presidential elections, but further reforms are blocked.

    • 1 hr 24 min
    The Child Labor Amendment

    The Child Labor Amendment

    Popular opinion rises against child labor, and the Supreme Court shrugs. Congress tries again, but the Court is unmoved. Congress passes an amendment, ratification stalls, we take a detour through Kansas, and questions about the ratification process are raised but not settled. Eight years of the Great Depression and court-packing threats cause a change in constitutional thinking, and the Court shifts away from property rights as the fundamental guarantees of liberty.

    • 52 min

Customer Reviews

4.8 out of 5
32 Ratings

32 Ratings

Classicrocklover238 ,

Legit

I love this podcast! The conversations are in depth!

mitch in md ,

Great information!

I always enjoy this podcast. Practicing attorneys take the time to tell about our country’s founding documents and the details in getting them completed and ratified. Thanks for taking the time to produce it and I hope you’ll continue this great service

yakgirl52 ,

Thanks!

Just began listening to this podcast, and I'm enjoying it. I appreciate your interest in history and your desire to communicate this important part of our American story. Now would be a great time for many more Americans to listen to this, and I wish there were a good way to make that happen. Thank you for this podcast.

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