JD Vance moved from Cincinnati to Washington, D.C., when he became vice president. See his new house as it looked when past VPs lived there.
I interviewed the vice president last year, and he didn’t mince words about wanting to provoke a constitutional crisis against the Supreme Court.
13don MSNOpinion
The political consequences of these misplaced legal arguments have to be taken seriously. But the legal arguments underpinning them are shamefully unserious.
When the U.S. Supreme Court handed down its ruling in the 1832 case Worcester v. Georgia, so the story goes, President Andrew Jackson responded by
Republican Senator Josh Hawley of Missouri broke with Vice President JD Vance on Tuesday after Vance's earlier remarks about the Supreme Court resurfaced.
Alexander Hamilton saw it coming. In the Federalist Papers, he described the judiciary as a feeble branch of government, easily “overpowered, awed or influenced” by Congress and the president. Lacking the means to enforce their rulings, judges, he wrote, would need an “uncommon portion of fortitude.”
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