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Governance & Power

How democratic institutions actually work—and for whom. We investigate Supreme Court doctrine, voting rights litigation, municipal rebellion, particip...

How democratic institutions actually work—and for whom. We investigate Supreme Court doctrine, voting rights litigation, municipal rebellion, participatory budgeting, judicial activism, executive immunity, and the administrative state. From Chevron deference to bilingual governance, legal architecture shapes daily life.

37 articles

Flow diagram of nonprofit entities and administrative processes
governance

The Shadow Budget: Donor-Advised Funds, Dark Money, and the Administrative Map of Power

The shadow budget is not crime; it is design—a way of cooling taxes while heating influence, upgrading donor optionality into campaign durability. From DAFs to c(4)s to administrative calendars, this is the atlas of a gradient most cities cannot see but all cities feel.

August 19, 2025
Corridor of doors with different locks symbolizing labor market barriers
governance

The Movement Tax: Noncompetes Cage Workers

Thirty million workers bound by noncompetes; one quarter licensed with credentials that won't cross state lines. These are not guardrails—they are tollgates. A Friction Index maps the cost of movement; a Mobility Atlas charts the reform.

August 17, 2025
Waterfall diagram flowing through apartment building silhouette
governance

The Landlord Leviathan: REITs, Private Equity, and the Price of Shelter

The landlord is no longer the woman downstairs with keys—it is a spreadsheet that lives in Delaware and dreams in waterfalls. When REITs and private equity own the marginal stock, rent becomes the solution to a covenant, not a neighborly bargain. A systems anatomy of financialized housing.

August 9, 2025
Industrial facility fading into financial charts and rising EPS ratios
governance

Shrink to Grow: The Buyback Paradox That Hollowed American Industry

Rule 10b-18 created a safe harbor for buybacks in 1982. What followed was not theft but diversion—each dollar buying back shares cannot build factories, train workers, or seed the future. A patient anatomy of the machine and the futures it withheld.

August 2, 2025
A multilingual street scene with public signage in English and Spanish, showing civic engagement and community interaction
governance

The Shadow Official Language: Spanish in Court

Why a bilingual republic is good law, good engineering, and the cheapest reform we haven't finished. Walk the United States with your ears open and you'll hear what the Census writes in ledgers: nearly one in five people speaks a language other than English at home—Spanish by far the most.

July 24, 2025
Traditional acequia irrigation ditch winding through a mountain valley with forest and traditional adobe buildings in the background
governance

Reclaiming the Commons: Public Space as Power

Land grants, acequias, and the quiet path to Spanish-American co-stewardship. Every country carries an official fiction about who first drew the lines. In the American Southwest, the neatest fiction says the United States arrived to find a blank ledger, then wrote order into wilderness.

July 21, 2025
Highway interchange with multiple exit ramps symbolizing labor market mobility
governance

The Price of Roots: Licensing Immobility

Thirty million Americans are bound by noncompete clauses; one in four workers faces licensing barriers. These restraints suppress wages, block entrepreneurship, and turn exit into a debt event. The fix: ban broad restraints, price the narrow ones, port credentials.

July 20, 2025
Stock ticker with buyback announcement flowing across trading floor screens
governance

The Buyback Standard: How Rule 10b-18 Turned Markets Into One-Way ATMs

A 1982 SEC safe harbor made buybacks routine. Today they move hundreds of billions quarterly, driven by EPS targets and executive comp—with thin disclosure and lopsided gains. The tool isn't the problem; the incentives and opacity are.

July 19, 2025
Historic Spanish colonial plaza with civil law documents and modern American legal books layered in the composition
governance

The Shadow Constitution: Administrative Law

How Spain and France still shape American rights—if you know where to look. Every legal system keeps a diary and a dream. Ours files the diary under 'common law' and the dream under 'the Constitution.' But across the South and West there is a third ledger—stamped in Spanish and French—that still.

July 17, 2025
Supreme Court building with constitutional documents and modern legal briefs layered in the composition, showing the evolution of jurisprudence
governance

Six Votes: The Supreme Court Revolution

The Roberts Court before and after 2020—how a jurisprudence of 'tradition' remapped power, rights, and the administrative state. Historians will draw a clean fold in the timeline of the Roberts Court. On one side (2005–2019): incrementalism with sharp elbows.

July 14, 2025