In this episode of Unwritten Law, Mark Chenoweth and John Vecchione dig into a major new essay by R.J. Pestritto, Senior Fellow at the Claremont Institute, titled “Government by the Unelected: How It Happened and How It Might Be Tamed.”
https://dc.claremont.org/government-by-the-unelected-how-it-happened-and-how-it-might-be-tamed/
The discussion traces the intellectual and legal origins of the modern administrative state — from Progressive-era theory and Woodrow Wilson, through the New Deal, the rise of Chevron deference, and decades of judicial decisions that insulated federal agencies from democratic control. Mark and John explain how ideas developed in academia slowly reshaped constitutional doctrine, allowing unelected bureaucrats to accumulate legislative, executive, and judicial power.
The episode also examines how recent Supreme Court decisions — including Loper Bright, Corner Post, Jarkesy, and ongoing removal-power cases — may signal a turning point. Together, these cases suggest a rebalancing of constitutional authority: less deference to agencies, greater accountability to the President, and renewed pressure on Congress to legislate rather than delegate.
This conversation offers a clear, accessible explanation of how we got here, why the administrative state became untethered from the Constitution, and what it will take to restore democratic accountability.