Wickard v. Filburn: The Supreme Court Case That Gave the Federal Government Nearly Unlimited Power
Wickard v. Filburn: The Supreme Court Case That Gave the Federal Government Nearly Unlimited Power Antony Davies FEBRUARY 7, 2020 By Antony Davies and James R. Harrigan Every presidential election in the United States follows a clear formula. First, many people with absolutely no chance of winning the presidency declare their candidacies. Those who get washed out of the race late in the game see their fortunes rise, which was their goal from the first. Second, candidates with even a chance at winning their party’s nomination drift to the outer fringe of their party’s ideology. For Democrats this year, that means appealing to the most progressive of the progressive wing of their party. Finally, when the race is set with two candidates, each of them will converge in the middle, eschewing the ideological members of their own parties. This is so common that every politically observant American is fully aware of what is happening. But this dyed-in-the-wool process obscures