Something a little different this week. This is a Village Squarecast episode, shared here in full, and you'll hear Corey host the top before turning it over to Liz Joyner, founder and president of The Village Square. Steve Seibert moderates.
The guest is Dr. Yuval Levin, director of social, cultural, and constitutional studies at the American Enterprise Institute, founder and editor of National Affairs, and author of American Covenant: How the Constitution Unified Our Nation and Could Again. He has been on TP&R before. And we just loved hearing him with our good friends at the Village Square.
The argument that makes this worth your ninety minutes: we don't disagree too much in this country. We disagree too little. We spend our days talking about each other instead of to each other, and the Constitution was built less to make us agree than to help us act together when we don't.
In this conversation:
✅ Why the left and right at their best are both telling part of the truth, one a politics of formation, the other a politics of liberation
✅ Why unity was never meant to mean thinking alike
✅ How a system built to be slow and frustrating trades speed for legitimacy
✅ The case for growing the House by 150 members, and why it would only take a law
✅ Why term limits for Congress would hand the institution to lobbyists
✅ Martin Van Buren, party systems, and a tip of the cap to nobody's favorite president
About the guest
Yuval Levin serves as a senior editor at The New Atlantis and a contributing editor at National Review. He served on the White House domestic policy staff under President George W. Bush. He holds a master's and a PhD from the University of Chicago and is the author of seven books.
More from The Village Square
This conversation closes out UNUM: Democracy Reignited, The Village Square's series with Florida Humanities marking America at 250. Subscribe to Village Squarecast wherever you listen, and support their work at villagesquare.us/donate.
Talkin' Politics & Religion Without Killin' Each Other
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Clarity, charity, and conviction can live in the same room. Yes, really.
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