Hancock: The Constitution isn’t broken—it’s working as designed
By Michael A. Hancock | Commentary, Substack
When the Supreme Court ruled on Friday to restrict the use of nationwide injunctions—limiting the power of lower federal courts to block federal policies across all 50 states—the headlines screamed “judicial power grab.” Civil rights groups warned the ruling is a “crisis for civil liberties”, while pundits cautioned that it is another step in America’s ongoing executive aggrandizement.
The reaction was loud, dire, and—to anyone who understands the Constitution—deeply misleading.
Despite the shrieking headlines and partisan outrage, what we’re witnessing isn’t a constitutional failure. It’s a constitutional function. The system is not broken. It’s working. Slowly, awkwardly, and often frustratingly—but working.
This deliberate slownes...