Feeds:
Posts
Comments

Posts Tagged ‘politics’

To the Citizen Who Expects Better,

Few failures stain a republic more deeply than the failure to protect its children.

The crimes associated with Jeffrey Epstein were not abstractions. They involved exploitation, coercion, and the destruction of young lives. Those facts are not in dispute. What remains in dispute is whether accountability will extend fully and impartially to every participant in that wrongdoing.

Recent testimony from Attorney General Pam Bondi has raised troubling questions regarding the scope and pace of investigation. Reports that key witnesses have not been interviewed, and that individuals named in public court filings have not faced formal charges, invite scrutiny. If those reports are inaccurate, they should be clarified. If they are accurate, they demand explanation.

In matters of this magnitude, hesitation breeds distrust.

The principle at stake is not partisan. It is foundational: equal justice under law. The Constitution promises due process to the accused and protection to the innocent. It does not promise insulation to the powerful.

Wealth is not immunity. Office is not absolution. Influence is not exoneration.

If individuals committed crimes, they must be charged and prosecuted according to law. If evidence is insufficient, the public deserves transparent explanation. Silence is corrosive. Delay, without visible cause, erodes confidence.

A republic cannot tolerate a two-tiered system of justice — one for the connected and another for the ordinary citizen. The mere perception of such disparity weakens the legitimacy of every institution tasked with enforcement.

Other nations have demonstrated that status does not preclude prosecution. The United States should not lag in that standard. We have long claimed leadership in the rule of law. Leadership requires consistency.

Justice is not vengeance. It is process. But process must be visible and principled.

If innocent children were exploited — and the record shows that they were — then the full architecture of accountability must follow. Not selectively. Not strategically. Fully.

Failure to act decisively where evidence warrants action will not fade quietly into history. It will endure as a mark against our seriousness as a nation governed by law.

Equal protection is not symbolic. It is binding.

I remain,
Your Humble Servant,


Prudence C. Wilder

Read Full Post »

On Federal Power and Convenient Federalism

To the Citizen Who Expects Better,

The American constitutional system was not designed to abolish conflict between federal and state authority, but to confine it. Federal power is enumerated; state power is reserved; and where valid federal law speaks, it is supreme. This architecture is not decorative. It is the machinery of restraint.

And yet, one notices that “federalism” is often treated less as machinery and more as a costume—worn when useful, discarded when inconvenient.

In Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization, the Court declared: “The Constitution does not prohibit the citizens of each State from regulating or prohibiting abortion,” and said it was “return[ing] that authority to the people and their elected representatives.” (supremecourt.gov)
Many state officials greeted this as a restoration of state authority. Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton, for example, celebrated the end of what he called an “unconstitutional and unconscionable national ‘right’ to abortion,” and insisted, “Today, the question of abortion returns to the states.” (Texas Attorney General)

But almost immediately, federal supremacy re-entered the stage—not as a hypothetical, but as a governing argument.

In 2022, the U.S. Department of Justice sued Idaho, arguing that the state’s abortion ban was preempted by EMTALA in emergencies. Attorney General Merrick Garland said plainly that “a state law that attempts to prevent a hospital from fulfilling its obligations under EMTALA violates federal law and the Supremacy Clause of the U.S. Constitution.” (Department of Justice)
HHS Secretary Xavier Becerra was even less ambiguous: “Under the law, no matter where you live, women have the right to emergency care — including abortion care… federal law preempts state abortion bans when needed for emergency care.” (Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services)

So, in one arena, state authority is praised as constitutional virtue; in another, federal supremacy is asserted as constitutional necessity. One may agree with either policy outcome. The structural point is sharper: the doctrine changes costume depending on the desired result.

And the reversals do not run in only one direction.

In 2025, CMS announced it was rescinding 2022 EMTALA guidance and said that guidance “do[es] not reflect the policy of this Administration,” adding that CMS would “work to rectify any perceived legal confusion and instability created by the former administration’s actions.” (Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services)
At the state level, Idaho Attorney General Raúl Labrador welcomed the Trump administration’s change in posture, calling the prior federal action “meddlesome DOJ litigation” and expressing gratitude that it would “no longer be an obstacle to Idaho enforcing its laws.” (Idaho Office of Attorney General)

What is one to conclude from this alternating theology?

That many leaders do not hold federalism as a principle; they hold it as a lever.

This same pattern appears far beyond abortion. Consider how quickly states invoke state sovereignty when challenging federal agency rules. In litigation against EPA carbon-emissions rules, West Virginia Attorney General Patrick Morrisey argued the regulations “exceed the EPA’s authority under the Clean Air Act” and would transform the nation’s energy grid “without explicit congressional permission.” (Reuters)
Here, the language is limitation, restraint, and separation of powers—the very music of federalism.

So the public is told, in one season, that national authority must override state action for the public good; and in another, that national authority must be restrained to preserve liberty and lawful government. Often, it is the same constitutional vocabulary, spoken with entirely different intent.

This is not constitutional fidelity. It is constitutional opportunism.

A republic cannot remain coherent if foundational doctrines are treated as interchangeable tools. Federalism is not a slogan. It is a boundary. If boundaries are negotiated on the basis of who controls Washington, then constitutional argument becomes merely the velvet glove on raw power.

And power—left to its own habits—rarely restrains itself out of courtesy.

Constitutional principle cannot be seasonal. When federalism becomes a tactic, the Constitution becomes a prop.

I remain,
Your Humble Servant,


Prudence C. Wilder

Read Full Post »

To Those Who Understand That Office Carries Obligation

Sir,

The presidency is not an ordinary platform. It is a constitutional office entrusted with executing the laws of the United States. Its occupant wields not only policy authority, but symbolic authority. Words issued from that office carry institutional consequence.

When racially charged material is circulated by a President, the matter is not reducible to taste or provocation. It implicates constitutional principle.

The Fourteenth Amendment guarantees equal protection of the laws. That guarantee does not fluctuate with political preference. It rests on the premise that the state may not assign dignity, protection, or suspicion on the basis of race. Public authority derives legitimacy from that commitment.

Presidential speech does not, by itself, enact policy. But it does frame public expectation. It signals priorities. It shapes the tone of governance. When racial hostility or demeaning implication is amplified from the executive office, the signal sent is not neutral.

The concern is structural.

An executive sworn to “preserve, protect, and defend the Constitution” bears responsibility not only for enforcement of law, but for maintenance of constitutional order. Racialized rhetoric undermines the equal standing upon which that order depends. It risks normalizing division in a role designed to execute law impartially.

Some will argue that political speech is inherently sharp. That is true. But there is a distinction between vigorous disagreement and racial denigration. The former contests ideas. The latter contests belonging.

A Republic can withstand policy dispute. It cannot long sustain leadership that signals unequal regard.

This is not a partisan observation. It is a constitutional one.

Public officials retain the right to speak. They do not retain exemption from the consequences of that speech upon institutional trust. When rhetoric departs from the principle of equal protection, it erodes the moral authority necessary to govern.

Office magnifies words.

Equality under law is not symbolic. It is structural.

I remain, Sir,
Your Humble Servant,


Prudence C. Wilder

Read Full Post »

« Newer Posts