Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Acton Line podcast: Supreme Disorder and SCOTUS politics with Ilya Shapiro
Acton Line podcast: Supreme Disorder and SCOTUS politics with Ilya Shapiro
Jan 26, 2026 8:29 PM

The untimely death of Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia in February of 2016 amplified questions about the Supreme Court in the 2016 election to new highs. Republican Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell’s high wire act in denying a hearing and vote on President Barack Obama’s nominee to fill that seat, Judge Merrick Garland, ultimately paid off for him: President Donald Trump nominated Judge Neil Gorsuch, who was then confirmed by the Republican-controlled Senate.

A year later, the political world was rocked again by the retirement of Justice Anthony Kennedy and President Trump’s nomination of Brett Kavanaugh to the bench. Following one of the most contentions confirmation hearings in modern American political history, Kavanaugh was also confirmed.

Now, the passing of Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg has created another election year vacancy on the nation’s highest court. President Trump has nominated Judge Amy Coney Barrett to fill the seat. The political temperature has again risen.

In his new book, “Supreme Disorder: Judicial Nominations and the Politics of America’s Highest Court,” Cato’s Ilya Shapiro examines the history of the judicial confirmation hearings, how politics has invaded the Supreme Court itself, and how appointments to the Court have e one of the most explosive features of our system of government.

In this episode, Ilya Shapiro discusses his new book, how our politics of the judiciary got this way, how that politics affecting us as a nation, and what, if anything, can be done about it.

Ilya Shapiro at the Cato Institute

Supreme Disorder: Judicial Nominations and the Politics of America’s Highest Court – Ilya Shapiro

Term Limits Won’t Fix the Court – Ilya Shapiro

Roberts Rules – Ilya Shapiro

Everything you need to know about Amy Coney Barrett – Rev. Ben Johnson

‘A different kind of lawyer’: Amy Coney Barrett on Christian vocation – Joseph Sunde

High Court, high stakes: Replacing Ruth Bader Ginsburg – Trey Dimsdale

Religious liberty at the Supreme Court – Acton Line

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
Next Digital headquarters raided by Hong Kong government
pany Next Digital has had its financial records seized in Hong Kong’s latest move to stifle an independent press and pro-democracy activism Read More… Clement Chan Kam-wing, an inspector appointed by the Hong Kong government, raided the headquarters of Next Digital pany in a search and seizure of financial records on Sept. 28 as part of an investigation into pany. The raid came a day after the Hong Kong Eastern Magistrate authorized a search warrant of Next Digital on suspicion...
Hong Kong court limits Jimmy Lai’s Next Digital voting rights, citing “national security”
The National Security Law is being used again to punish the pro-democracy Lai, but fear that Next Digital’s forfeitable assets could be diminished appear to be what’s driving this latest attack on basic property rights. Read More… On Sept. 17, a Hong Kong high court ruled that the Security Bureau maintains the power to restrict jailed media tycoon Jimmy Lai’s voting rights as the major shareholder of his pany, Next Digital. The high court did not specify whether Lai was...
Cardinal Urosa: Venezuelan freedom fighter loses final battle against COVID-19
Even though Cardinal Urosa lost his final battle against a disease that only further crippled his nation, he leaves behind a generation he inspired to fight the good fight until the very end. Read More… On Sept. 24, the Archdiocese of Caracas announced the passing Cardinal Jorge Urosa Savino of Venezuela. The Sept. 24 press release stated he was “one of the most influential people” in a majority Roman Catholic nation ravished by a Marxist political economy, widespread military corruption,...
Six former Next Digital employees to be tried in Hong Kong High Court to face possible life sentences
Moving the cases of six senior Next Digital employees to the High Court is another signal that the Hong Kong government will seek ultimate punishment for any journalist or business it deems in violation of its extreme, anti-freedom National Security Law. Read More… The deliberate shredding of Hong Kong’s democratic ideals continues as the case against six former employees of Next Digital and its subsidiary Apple Daily is to be transferred to the Hong Kong High Court, where guilty verdicts...
God doesn’t need your good works (but your neighbor does)
What can the “great theologian of vocation” teach us about the meaning of calling in an individualistic age? Read More… In modern America, our view of vocation has e increasingly narrow and individualistic, focused only on economic action and our own preferred paths to self-actualization. As David Brooks explains in his book The Road to Character, vocation is now mostly imagined as a journey of self-discovery and wish fulfillment, a way to satisfy inner longings so we can put up...
Free trade with China is still good for us all
Despite pushback from both left and right, free markets should always be supported, because they free people to live out their potential—even in despotic regimes like China’s. Read More… Doug Irwin in his seminal book Free Trade Under Fire points out that Democrats and Republicans have historically vacillated on free trade. The Democratic Party of the late 19th century up until World War II was the party of trade liberalization when Republicans consistently voted for high tariffs. From the 1950s...
For religion to be national, it must first be personal
As vibrant personal faith in a Christian creed has been replaced by a vague spirituality or “harmless” universal ethic, the American public square has e more divided and self-obsessed, not less. Do we need a Third Great Awakening? Read More… What does it mean for a nation to be Christian? Does the United States of America fit the description? At its founding, the United States was undoubtedly a Christian nation. To foster a society of religious freedom and pluralism, the...
For nature and neighbor: A Christian vision of work and the economy
We are routinely told that work is just a tool for our survival – that if purpose is to be found, it’s in personal provision and personal success. Thankfully, the Christian vision is far richer than this. Read More… Abounding in freedom and plenty, Americans continue to grapple peting forms of workism and careerism, struggling to find meaning and identity in an increasingly secular age. In response, many Christians have rightly taken a renewed interest in vocation and calling, reflecting...
Hong Kong government petitions to dissolve Next Digital Media Group
The dissolution of Next Digital is a devastating blow to freedom of the press and pro-democracy activism in Hong Kong Read More… On Sept. 29, the Hong Kong government, led by financial secretary Paul Chan Mo-po, petitioned the court of First Instance to push for the folding of Next Digital Media Group. Although the power to liquidate the 40-year-old firm is already granted by the Companies Ordinance, Chan argued that shutting the doors of the pany is also in the...
Books offer stability, renewal of American ideals
The written word serves as a landmark set by our forefathers. Being in the presence of books both old and rare has a way of making us look at them with fresh eyes. Read More… Long after we’ve all passed on, how will future generations remember us? One answer: books. Certainlythere will be landmarks and buildings and other memorabilia that help our descendants understand our society as it exists today, along with the people who helped shape it. But there...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved