PODCAST · education
The Democratic Constitution Podcast
by Lucas De Hart and Luke Pickrell
The United States is not a democracy. We need a democratic constitution! A media wing of the Democratic Constitution Blog.
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Ep. 77: Gil Schaeffer on the Declaration of Independence, Tom Paine, Lenin, and Reconstruction
“America is not a democracy, which means we’re being ruled by a small elite. That is just unacceptable. I think that’s the fundamental basis of a political movement in this country. Everyone knows how much power corporations have. They are the elite, and they keep their power by force. They have the power of laws and the police. Well, democracy says someone else is going to control those laws and police.” “People have been fighting for democracy for a long time. And so the Paine quote—if you don’t have an equal vote, you are a political slave—you are under the domination of a minority. You don’t have equal freedom. Now that was a powerful idea, and it’s still a powerful idea.” “Lenin’s theory of political agitation is central. He had a theory of mass psychology. You expose the unjust treatment in any part of society and demand that the government not be autocratic, that it be democratic. That’s the message.”In this episode, I talk with Gil Schaeffer, the author of many blog articles, including “The Declaration of Independence and Finishing Reconstruction.” We talk about Marx’s claim of an intrinsic connection between individual liberty and private property, and why, in fact, the tie between liberty and private property in the Rights of Man was only contingent; what’s lost by failing to embrace rights talk; the importance of Tom Paine’s Dissertation on the Principle of Government; the difference between fighting for the Principle of a democratic republic and establishing and securing a democratic republic; Lenin’s theory of political agitation; and where DSA and Marxist Unity Group fits into the conversation. Gil mentioned two articles by Mike Macnair—“Modern ancient constitutions” and “For a minimum program!”—as well as the Equal Human and Political Rights and Democratic Republicanism reader and his article in Cosmonaut about Lenin’s class point of view. He also mentioned Richard N. Hunt’s introduction to Marx and Engels and the July 4 Mobilization Against Genocide. I read from MUG’s Points of Unity and mentioned a recent blog article about the Black Panther Party’s constitutional convention in 1970.
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Ep. 76: August Nimtz on Frederick Douglass, Karl Marx, and the American Civil War
In this episode, I talk with August Nimtz, the author of several books, including Marx and Engels: Their Contribution to the Democratic Breakthrough, The Ballot, The Street—Or Both?, and The Communist and the Revolutionary Liberal in the Second American Revolution: Comparing Karl Marx and Frederick Douglass in Real-Time. August covers a wide range of topics, including Karl Marx, Friedrich Engels, and Frederick Douglass’s connections to the British Chartist movement; Douglass as a revolutionary liberal during the Civil War and where his thinking intersected with and diverged from Marx and Engels; the relevance of Martin Luther King Jr.; the distinction between bourgeois and democratic republics; and the demand for a democratic constitution in the United States.
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Ep. 75: Beau J. Baumann on Russell Vought, the Unitary Executive, and the LPE Project
In this episode, I talk with Beau J. Baumann, a legal scholar and the author of the recent article “What Would a Russell Vought of the Left Look Like?” Beau dives into the article, discussing Russell Vought’s influence within the Trump administration and his executive-focused constitutional vision. He also discusses the legacy of the New Deal in the US political imagination, the limits of the Democratic Party, the relevance of the Reconstruction period, and the conversations taking place within (along with the value of) the Labor and Political Economy (LPE) Project. We also bring in Beau’s recent blog post, “The Aftermath.”
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Ep. 74: Oliver Larkin on Running for Congress and Fighting for Democracy
In this episode, I talk with Oliver Larkin, an activist, union organizer, and Democratic Socialist running for Congress in Florida’s 23rd District against Jared Moskowitz. Oliver’s campaign website is here.Oliver and I discuss the details of his campaign, including what it means to run as a proud Democratic Socialist and member of Democratic Socialists of America (DSA). We also talk about Florida’s “democracy crisis” and how it mirrors nationwide issues connected to the undemocratic Constitution, the history of Reconstruction and other struggles for universal and equal rights, the 250th anniversary of the Declaration of Independence (and Tom Paine’s Common Sense), and standing true to one’s principles and convictions when the going gets tough.
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Ep. 73: Clyde Barrow on C. Wright Mills, Nicos Poulantzas, and the Undemocratic State
In this episode, I talk with Clyde Barrow, a professor of political science and the author of several works, including a recent Jacobin article, “Reading C. Wright Mills in the Age of Trump.” I wanted to talk with Clyde about Mills, including his biography and works, his theory of democracy and a democratic state, and his impact on the New Left, including on Tom Hayden and Students for a Democratic Society (SDS). We also touch on the work of Nicos Poulantzas, Charles Beard, J. Allen Smith, Gaetano Mosca, and other historians and sociologists. Finally, we discuss why the US Constitution matters to all of these discussions.Several books and articles are mentioned in the conversation, including Thorstein Veblen’s The Higher Learning in America'; Mills’s The Power Elite, Listen, Yankee!, White Collar, The Sociological Imagination, The Marxists, and “Letter to the New Left”; J. Allen Smith’s The Spirit of American Government; and Barrow’s More than a Historian: The Political and Economic Thought of Charles A. Beard.
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Ep. 72: Corey Brooks on the Liberty Party and Antislavery Third Parties
In this episode, I talk with Corey Brooks, a professor of history at York College of Pennsylvania and chairperson of the Department of History and Political Science. Corey is the author of Liberty Power: Antislavery Third Parties and the Transformation of American Politics. We discuss the antecedents of the abolitionist third-party movement and what led to the conclusion that abolition couldn’t be realized through the Whig and Democratic duopoly. Political abolitionists used a variety of tactics to amplify their voice and bring their agitation to the national stage. They succeeded in electing several abolitionist Senators, including Charles Sumner, and were instrumental in creating the Republican Party. I particularly wanted to ask Corey about the relevance of this history to the development of a Democratic Constitution Party. David Waldstreicher’s interview on the place of slavery in the original Constitution is mentioned.
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Ep. 71: Terry Bouton on America Monarchism and the Thermidorian Reaction to 1776
This is part two of a two-part conversation. Here, Terry continues the conversation on resistance to tax collection and property concentration after the revolution. He covers the elitist reaction to the 1776 Pennsylvania Constitution, including the 1787 federal Constitution and its ratification, and the imposition of a new Pennsylvania Constitution in 1790. The conversation ends with the anti-Federalists and their strikingly relevant critique of executive power. Woody Holton’s work is mentioned. I recently spoke with Jason Maloy about the Paine-Adams debate and the 1776 Pennsylvania Constitution’s unicameral structure and expanded suffrage base.
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Ep. 70: Terry Bouton on the People, the Founders, and the Troubled Ending of the American Revolution
In this episode, Luke talks with Terry Bouton, author of Taming Democracy: “The People,” the Founders, and the Troubled Ending of the American Revolution. His forthcoming book is The American Monarchists: The Founders who Betrayed the Revolution. This is part one of a two-part conversation. Here, Terry introduces the conflicts that developed between the British metropole and colonists in the Americas, the conflicts between propertied and propertyless colonists, and how the 1776 Pennsylvania Constitution did and didn’t change the nature of social struggles and political participation. Terry argues that for various reasons, many contemporary historians of the 18th-century U.S. haven’t sufficiently grappled with the economic and monarchical interests at play. Woody Holton’s work is mentioned. I recently spoke with Jason Maloy about the Paine-Adams debate and the 1776 Pennsylvania Constitution’s unicameral structure and expanded suffrage base.
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Ep. 69: Patrick Rael on the Abolitionist Struggle and the Long Death of Slavery
In this episode, Luke talks with Patrick Rael, a professor of history at Bowdoin College and the author of several books, including Black Identity and Black Protest in the Antebellum North and Eighty-Eight Years: The Long Death of Slavery in the United States, 1777-1865.The discussion covers a wide range of topics, including how colonists invoked ideas of slavery before the revolution to “perform powerful rhetorical work”; how slavery factors into the Framers’ 1787 Constitution, and why northern delegates conceded the three-fifths clause in the face of threats from the South to leave the union; why the plantation regime in the U.S. South so powerful; how revolutionary ideas flowed across borders; how we should understand Reconstruction, both in the context of the United States and in the context of international abolitionism; and the 250th anniversary of the Declaration of Independence. Patrick also mentions Edmund Morgan’s “Slavery and Freedom” during the conversation.
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Ep. 68: José Luis Granados Ceja on Venezuela, Mexico, and the Struggle for Democracy
In this episode, Luke talks with José Luis Granado Ceja, a journalist based in Mexico City. José Luis covers Latin America for Dropsite News and is a co-host of Soberanía and Sin Muros. José Luis talks about the history of Venezuela, including changes to the oil industry in the 1970s, the Caracazo uprising, and the rise of Chavismo; how Chavismo changed and what remained the same after Maduro came to power; the kidnapping of Maduro and his wife, and why it’s not useful to think of the attack as a palace coup; continued threats against Cuba made by the United States; and reforms to Mexico’s judiciary.Correction: During the episode, Luke says that José Luis and Kurt Hackbarth were last on the show in mid-2025. In fact, they last appeared in mid-2024 to discuss the election of Claudia Sheinbaum.
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Ep. 67: Jason Maloy on the Paine-Adams Debate and Its Seventeenth-Century Antecedents
In this episode, Luke talks with Jason Maloy, author of several works, including “The Paine-Adams Debate and Its Seventeenth-Century Antecedents,” presented at a conference on Paine hosted by San Jose State University in 2007. Jason writes that for Paine, “nothing else but a single sovereign assembly can be truly representative of the nation, and nothing else can be accountable to the people of the nation; therefore, nothing else can be either legitimate or safe.” Many influential people disagreed, including John Adams, who countered Paine’s unicameralism with arguments for a multicameral legislature and “mixed” Constitution. Jason also discusses the antecedents of the debate, including in the English Civil War and the Levellers versus Oliver Cromwell, as well as in political struggles in the Massachusetts Bay Colony; the differences between democratic republicans and aristocratic republicans, and unicameral versus bicameral division as a line that split republicanism; and the contemporary importance of reading Paine and understanding this history. Luke cited Jason’s work in a recent article commemorating the 250th anniversary of the publication of Paine’s Common Sense, and has also written about the importance of the Levellers. We’ve spoken with many people about the relevance of Paine’s work, including Gregory Claeys, Harvey J. Kaye, Matt McManus, and Gary Berton.
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Ep. 66: Woody Holton on Unruly Americans and the Origins of the Constitution
In this episode, Luke talks with Woody Holton, author of Forced Founders: Indians, Debtors, Slaves, and the Making of the American Revolution in Virginia and Unruly Americans and the Origins of the Constitution. The conversation touches on many topics, including constitutional myths, what motivated the creation of a federal political system, how the new Constitution differed from the (often more representative) state constitutions, and conflicts between creditors and debtors following the Revolutionary War.
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Ep. 65: Gerald Horne on the Constitution, (Counter-)Revolutions, and Internationalism
In this episode, Luke talks with Dr. Gerald Horne, the author of many books, including The Counter-Revolution of 1776, Confronting Black Jacobins, and The Capital of Slavery: Washington, D.C., 1800-1865. Dr. Horne has also written several articles, including a trio for The Nation on W.E.B. Du Bois, C.L.R. James, and Eric Williams. The conversation covers a wide range of topics, including the role of the Constitution in past and present debates, colonialism in the United States and the oppression of Indigenous peoples, the 1787 Constitution as a counter-revolution, U.S. imperialism in Latin America, and the Declaration of Independence.
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Ep. 64: Tad Stoermer on Public History, Political Myths, and an Alternative History of the Declaration of Independence
In this episode, Lucas and Luke talk with Tad Stoermer, author of the forthcoming book, A Resistance History of the United States. Tad also posts on his blog and has a prolific TikTok and YouTube presence. The conversation touches on many topics, including the role of public historians in the United States; the Patriot Myth that emerged during World War II, the distortion of history to serve specific ends, and why a younger generation of Americans is challenging the status quo, including constitutional reverence; the importance of Reconstruction and struggles for universal and equal rights; and the need for a “counter-anniversary” to mark the enactment of the Declaration of Independence and recognize the importance of Tom Paine and the significance of Common Sense. Find more on the Democratic Constitution Blog.
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Ep. 63: Michael Fox on Venezuela and the US's Long Shadow over Latin America
In this episode, Luke talks with Michael Fox, a long-time journalist based in Latin America. Michael's work includes the podcasts Under the Shadow, Brazil on Fire, and Stories of Resistance. He’s also the co-director of the documentary Beyond Elections. Michael touches on many topics, including the failures of most mainstream reporting on Latin America, the Monroe Doctrine, the brutal U.S. invasion of Panama in 1989, common myths about Venezuela, the reasons why the U.S. is focusing so heavily on the Western Hemisphere, and various left-wing experiments with democracy across the region. Mike explains that Venezuela has been the most vocal critic of the U.S. empire in Latin America and a consistent supporter of left-wing projects for the last 20 years.
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Audio Article: Toward A New American Founding
The Original article is here.
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Ep. 62: David Waldstreicher on Slavery's Constitution
In this episode, Luke talks with David Waldstreicher, the author of many books, including Slavery’s Constitution: From Revolution to Ratification. David discusses a range of topics, including the place of slavery in the lead-up to 1776, debates over slavery at the Constitutional Convention, and how the issue of slavery was never explicitly recognized in the text of the Constitution. He also examines the struggle for ratification in a climate in which “critics of the Constitution quickly perceived the compromises of 1787,” the extent to which the Constitution helps explain the Fugitive Slave Acts, the Dred Scott decision, and the Civil War, the staying power of the Constitution’s “hard-wired” provisions, and much more.David’s book was mentioned by Van Gosse in his recent interview about the political activity of black Americans during the Antebellum period
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Audio Article: The Year in Review
The original article is here.
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Upcoming Reading Group on the Undemocratic Constitution
East Bay DSA will be hosting a reading group on the Constitution and the anti-democratic aspects of the US political system. We will use Robert Dahl’s How Democratic is the American Constitution? as a framework, along with other articles and presentations from Robert Ovetz, Aziz Rana, Daniel Lazare, Gil Schaeffer, and Steven R., all of whom have appeared on the Democratic Constitution Podcast. All the information, including links to register for the sessions, is here. I hope everyone can join us.
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Ep. 61: Don Doyle on the International History of the American Civil War
In this episode, Luke talks with Don Doyle, the author of many books, including The Cause of All Nations: An International History of the American Civil War. The conversation touches on many topics, including how the North and South sold their story of the battle to the rest of the world; the smörgåsbord of Union soldiers from across the globe; the Civil War as a tectonic struggle between republicanism and monarchismin in the context of the failed European revolutions of 1848; free labor versus enslaved labor, and what Karl Marx said about the Civil War; the return of former colonial powers to Latin America and the republican struggle in Mexico; and the global impact of the North’s victory against the southern slaveocracy. I plan to speak with Don again about his latest book, The Age of Reconstruction: How Lincoln’s New Birth of Freedom Remade the World, described as a sequel to The Cause of all Nations.
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Ep. 60: Gary Dorrien on Morality, Rights, and American Democratic Socialism
In this episode, Luke talks with Gary Dorrien, the author of many books, including The Neoconservative Mind: Politics, Culture, and the War of Ideology (1993), Breaking White Supremacy: Martin Luther King Jr. and the Black Social Gospel (2019), and American Democratic Socialism: History, Politics, Religion, and Theory (2021), which Gary discussed in DSA’s Democratic Left. His forthcoming book is Subjects of Justice: Christian Social Ethics, Anti-Domination, Usable Pasts, and Social Democracy.Gary touches on many topics, including the democratic socialist vision of a society in which “the economy and government are democratically self-determined, no group dominates any other, and every citizen is free, equal, and included”; the importance of the demand for a universal and equal vote; the role of ethics and “rights talk” within socialism; neoconservatism and liberation theology as “polar-opposite reactions to the tumult and trauma of the 1960s”; Bernie Sanders and Martin Luther King Jr; and the upcoming 250th anniversary of the Declaration of Independence.
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Ep. 59: Gregory Downs on the Civil War, Reconstruction, and the Collapse of Republican Dreams
In this episode, Luke talks with Gregory Downs, the author of several books, including The Second American Revolution: The Civil War-Era Struggle over Cuba and the Rebirth of the American Republic (2019) and After Appomattox: Military Occupation and the Ends of War (2015). He’s also co-author with Kate Masur of the article “Civil War Sesquicentennial: Reconstruction: Retrospect and Prospects.” Greg touches on many topics, including how he became interested in the Civil War and Reconstruction, historical memory and tragedy, why we should embrace the “radicality” or “unsettledness” of the Civil War, what to do when “no one is riding in to save us from the collapse of republican dreams and liberal rights,” and the significance of the 250th anniversary of the Declaration of Independence.
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Audio Article: Cease Being Autocratic
Cease Being Autocratic. By Luke Pickrell. The original article is here. The Democratic Constitution Blog is here.Our YouTube channel is here. Our podcast on Apple Podcasts is here. Thank you to our listeners, blog subscribers, and donors.
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Ep. 58: Van Gosse on the First Reconstruction, Antebellum Historiography, and the New Left
In this episode, Luke talks with Van Gosse, the author of several books, including Where the Boys Are: Cuba, Cold War America, and the Making of a New Left (1993), Rethinking the New Left: An Interpretive History (2005), and The First Reconstruction: Black Politics in America, From the Revolution to the Civil War (2021). The wide-ranging conversation touches on the extensive political participation of black Americans in the Antebellum period, how historians have written about the pre-war era, the absence of a constitutional critique in the New Left, and why few people are talking about the 250th anniversary of the Declaration of Independence. Van’s blog, In the Red, is here. Historians for Peace and Democracy can be found here. Van mentions several books, including Jeremy Varon’s Our Grief is Not a Cry for War, James Brewer Stewart’s Holy Warriors, Winthrop Jordan’s White Over Black, and David Waldstreicher’s Slavery’s Constitution. Luke mentions Van’s two-part series explaining why America isn’t a democracy (here and here), C. Vann Woodward’s The Strange Career of Jim Crow, and a recent conversation with Bruce Levine.
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Audio Article: The Wheels Are Falling Off
The Wheels Are Falling Off. By Luke Pickrell. The original article is here. The Democratic Constitution Blog is here.Our YouTube channel is here. Our podcast on Apple Podcasts is here. Thank you to our listeners, blog subscribers, and donors.
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Ep. 57: Robert Tsai on America's Forgotten Constitutions
In this episode, Luke talks with Robert Tsai, author of America’s Fogotten Constitutions. The conversation covers the similarities and differences between various constitutional projects — including John Brown’s abolitionist constitution, the Confederate Constitution, the founding documents of the Icarian Nation and the Republic of New Afrika, and others — what it means to look at the Constitution through a cultural lens, and how discussions of the Constitution have changed over the last decade. The Democratic Constitution Blog is here.Our YouTube channel is here. Thank you to our listeners, blog subscribers, and donors.
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Audio Article: Terror Tuesday Redux
Terror Tuesday Redux. By Luke Pickrell. The original article is here. The Democratic Constitution Blog is here.Our YouTube channel is here. Our podcast on Apple Podcasts is here. Thank you to our listeners, blog subscribers, and donors.
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Audio Article: Proposition 50: A Race to the Bottom
Proposition 50: A Race to the Bottom. By Luke Pickrell. The original article is here. The Democratic Constitution Blog is here.Our YouTube channel is here. Our podcast on Apple Podcasts is here. Thank you to our listeners, blog subscribers, and donors.
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Ep 56: Alec Karakatsanis on Copaganda and America's Punishment Bureaucracies
In this episode, Luke talks with Alec Karakatsanis, Founder and Executive Director of Civil Rights Corps and author of Copaganda: How Police and the Media Manipulate Our News. The conversation touches on George Floyd’s murder and subsequent protests; the illusion of police reforms as presented through body cameras and the George Floyd Justice in Policing Act; the undemocratic Constitution and obstructionist Senate; and resisting copaganda and the role of civil rights advocacy in our current moment.During the conversation, Luke mentioned a blog article that attempts to link police violence and legal unaccountability to our undemocratic political system.
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Ep. 55: Greg and John on Constitutional Education and Move to Amend
Luke talks with Greg Coleridge and John Fioretta from Move to Amend. Topics include Move to Amend’s origins and current projects, various approaches to discussing the Constitution with people, the challenges of passing constitutional amendments, the need to reform campaign finance, and what to make of the 250th anniversary of the Declaration of Independence. The Move to Amend petition is available here. Move to Amend’s Corporate Constitutional Rights Resources database is available here.
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Ep. 54: Manisha Sinha on the Rise and Fall of the Second American Republic
Luke talks with Manisha Sinha about her latest book, The Rise and Fall of the Second American Republic. Topics include Amy Circuit, a freedwoman in South Carolina who was murdered by two white men in early 1868; the reactionary role of the Supreme Court during Reconstruction; the ripple effects caused by struggles for freedom and political rights; what to make of the call for a new constitution; and how we should approach the 250th anniversary of the Declaration of Independence. Manisha is also the author of The Slave’s Cause.
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Ep. 53: Jonathan Eig on the Life and Times of Martin Luther King
Luke talks with Jonathan Eig, author of the Politzer Prize-winning King: A Life. Jonathan discusses King’s life leading up to the Montgomery Bus Boycott, his opinion of the 1965 Voting Rights Act, his stance on the Vietnam War, his relationship with other activists like Stokely Carmichael and Muhammad Ali, and King’s final book, Where Do We Go From Here: Chaos of Community?, in which he says that the Civil Rights Movement has “left the realm of constitutional rights.”
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Ep. 52: Matthew Stewart on Religion, Abolitionism, and the Making of America
Luke speaks with Matthew Stewart about his latest book, An Emancipation of the Mind. Conversation topics include revolutionary and counterrevolutionary movements in 18th- and 19th-century U.S. history, the role of religion in the abolitionist and anti-abolitionist movements, the influence of Tom Paine on revolutionary thought, European immigrants and veterans of the 1848 revolutions such as Karl Heinzen and Ottilie Assing, and the 250th anniversary of the Declaration of Independence.
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Ep. 51: Jalil Muntaqim on the Spirit of Mandela Coalition and the Mobilization Against Genocide
Luke talks with Jalil Muntaqim about the Spirit of Mandela Coalition’s call for a national rally on July 4, 2026, to protest the genocide in Gaza. The conversation also covers the Spirit of Mandela Coalition’s People's Senate, the 250th anniversary of the Declaration of Independence, the Constitution, decolonization and memory, and the Black Panther Party. Jalil’s latest book is We Are Our Own Liberators.
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Audio Article: A Heavy Heritage
A Heavy Heritage. By Luke Pickrell. Published on August 20, 2025. Original article: https://democraticconstitutionblog.substack.com/p/a-heavy-heritageTad's video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mi2YTUtgjlQ&t=6sOur YouTube channel: https://youtube.com/@demconpod?si=KvA2PfAxlFr0tGZXApple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-democratic-constitution-podcast/id1777552669
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Ep. 50: Bruce Levine on Thaddeus Stevens and the Relevance of History
Luke talks with Bruce Levine about his book, Thaddeus Stevens: Civil War Revolutionary, Fighter for Racial Justice. The conversation covers several topics, including Bruce’s political development, the history of Vermont and the state’s influence on Stevens, the Civil War and Stevens’s ceaseless struggle during Reconstruction, and what Stevens, the Civil War, and Reconstruction can teach the Left.
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Audio Article: An Inescapable Network of Mutuality
An Inescapable Network of Mutuality. By Luke Pickrell. Published on July 28, 2025. Original article: https://democraticconstitutionblog.substack.com/p/the-military-eventYouTube channel: https://youtube.com/@demconpod?si=KvA2PfAxlFr0tGZXApple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-democratic-constitution-podcast/id1777552669
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Audio Article: Houston, We Have a Problem
Houston, We Have a Problem. By Luke Pickrell. Published on July 29, 2025. Original article: https://democraticconstitutionblog.substack.com/p/cheating?utm_source=publication-searchYouTube channel: https://youtube.com/@demconpod?si=KvA2PfAxlFr0tGZXApple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-democratic-constitution-podcast/id1777552669
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Audio Article: Zohran Mamdani is Wrong About Democracy
Zohran Mamdani is Wrong About Democracy. By Luke Pickrell. Published on August 16, 2025. Original Article: https://democraticconstitutionblog.substack.com/p/zohran-mamdani-is-wrong-about-democracyYouTube channel: https://youtube.com/@demconpod?si=KvA2PfAxlFr0tGZXApple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-democratic-constitution-podcast/id1777552669
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Ep 49: Kermit Roosevelt on Reconstructing America's Story
Luke talks with Professor Kermit Roosevelt about his latest book, The Nation That Never Was: Reconstructing America’s Story. The conversation covers several topics, including problems with the American “triumphalist narrative," Reconstruction and Lincoln’s Gettysburg Address as alternative foundations for American identity, shifting views of the Declaration of Independence, Martin Luther King and the Civil Rights Movement, how the Constitution changed and didn’t change after the Civil War, and the need for a Third Reconstruction.
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Audio Article: DC Deserves Statehood
This is a recording of Luke’s recent Jacobin article, “DC Deserves Statehood.” Donald Trump’s takeover of Washington’s police force this week is adding insult to the injury of the United States’ long denial of equal political standing to the capital’s residents. But the demand for equal rights in DC needs to be part of a larger voting rights struggle that goes beyond our nation’s capital. It means a movement for a democratic constitution — one that abolishes the Senate, establishes equal suffrage and proportional representation, reins in the executive and judiciary, and grants full political rights to all US territories, from Puerto Rico to American Samoa.
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Ep. 48: Leah Downey on Monetary Policy as if Democracy Matters
Luke talks with Dr. Leah Downey about her latest book, Our Money: Monetary Policy as if Democracy Matters. Topics include an overview of the U.S. Federal Reserve System, issues with separating monetary policy from the legislative branch and broader oversight, current dissatisfaction with bureaucracies and our elected officials, and how a country might manage money creation if democracy truly mattered.
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Audio Article: To Protect Voting Rights, We Need a Democratic Constitution
Sixty years ago, the Voting Rights Act was signed into law. Its protections have been rolled back in recent years — and our fundamentally undemocratic Constitution is to blame. This is a recording of Luke’s recent Jacobin article, “To Protect Voting Rights, We Need a Democratic Constitution.”
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Ep. 47: Rogers Smith on America’s New Racial Battle Lines
Luke talks with Rogers Smith, co-author with Desmond King of America’s New Racial Battle Lines: Protect Versus Repair. Rogers describes the two sides — “protect” versus “repair” — of America’s current political landscape, the Constitution’s role in shaping America’s political arena and impeding the repair agenda, Trump as the embodiment of the protect agenda, and the significance of the Declaration of Independence’s semiquincentennial.
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Ep. 46: Osita Nwanevu on Democracy and the Case for a New American Founding
Luke talks with Osita Nwanevu about his forthcoming book, The Right of the People: Democracy and the Case for a New American Founding. Luke and Osita discuss the impetus for The Right of the People book, definitions of political democracy, the place of economic democracy, the 250th anniversary of the Declaration of Independence, a possible Democratic Constitution Conference, and gerrymandering in Texas.
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Ep. 45: Zaakir Tameez on Charles Sumner and the Reconstructed Constitution
Luke talks with Zaakir Tameez about his recent book, Charles Sumner: Conscience of a Nation. Zaakir discusses the origins of Sumner’s abolitionist spirit, his relationship to the Constitution and Declaration of Independence, the extent to which Reconstruction changed the federal Constitution, and what it means to call for a Third Reconstruction.
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Ep. 44: Douglas Egerton on Reconstruction and Thomas Wentworth Higginson
Luke talks with Douglas Egerton about Abolitionism, Reconstruction, and the life and times of the abolitionist and social activist Thomas Wentworth Higginson. According to John Brown’s biographer, David Reynolds, Higginson carried forward Brown’s “Abolitionist spirit” more than anyone else. Doug is Professor of History at LeMoyne College. His books include The Wars of Reconstruction: The Brief, Violent History of America's Most Progressive Era and A Man on Fire: The Worlds of Thomas Wentworth Higginson.
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Ep. 43: Gil Schaeffer on Lenin, King, and the Legacy of the Civil Rights Movement
Luke talks with Gil Schaeffer about his recent article, “The Legacy of the Civil Rights Movement,” including debates between the Revolutionary Union (RU) and Communist League (CL), Lenin’s theory of political consciousness and leadership, and the importance of Martin Luther King Jr.Gil has written several articles for the blog, including “Marxism Is Democratic Republicanism: The History of the Struggle for Equal Human and Political Rights From the Inside Out” and “The Democratic Constitution Strategy Is the Blueprint for a New Party; That Means Voting for Democrats in 2024, Even Biden.” He also played a large role in creating a new reader, “Recovering the Struggle for Equal Rights and Democracy,” and wrote a long work on Students for a Democratic Society (SDS), “You Can’t Use Weatherman To Show Which Way The Wind Blew.” I spoke with Gil about
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Ep. 42: Daniel Lazare on Where Things Stand
Luke talks with Daniel Lazare about Trump’s foreign policy, the Supreme Court’s liberal opposition to Trump v. CASA, No Kings protests, resistance to ICE raids, and why we need a constituent assembly. Dan is the author of The Frozen Republic, The Velvet Coup, and America’s Undeclared War. He has written several articles for the Democratic Constitution Blog and Permanent Revolution. Lucas and Luke previously talked with Dan in July and November of 2024 and February of this year.
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Ep. 41: Dan Farbman on Abolitionism and Resistance Lawyering
Luke talks with Dan Farbman about parallels between current events and America in the 1850s, the abolitionist movement and resistance lawyering, working within “the master’s house,” and protests in Los Angeles. Dan teaches classes on constitutional law, local government law, movement lawyering, inequality, and legal realism at the Boston College Law School. His work includes “A Commons in the Master's House,” “Resistance Lawyering,” and “Outrage and Resistance: Abolitionist Lessons for the Present Crisis.”
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ABOUT THIS SHOW
The United States is not a democracy. We need a democratic constitution! A media wing of the Democratic Constitution Blog.
HOSTED BY
Lucas De Hart and Luke Pickrell
CATEGORIES
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