Public Forum: The Reshaping of U.S. Democracy and the Role of the Courts

Public Forum: The Reshaping of U.S. Democracy and the Role of the Courts

U.S. Supreme Court and demonstrators

Location

Blacksburg Town Council Chambers
300 S Main St
Blacksburg Virginia 24060
Virginia US
Wednesday, October 1, 2025 - 6:30pm
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The Trump administration has moved fast and aggressively to reshape our government. Congress has little will to assert its responsibilities. Many on both sides of the political divide believe that the courts are politicized. While judges and lower courts have ruled some Executive Orders as unconstitutional, the fate of these judgments as they move to higher courts is unknown. Still, the courts have a major role to play in maintaining the balance of power among the three branches of government and the rule of law.

What are the prospects for the shape of our democracy in the months and years ahead? How have and can the three branches of government work together even as priorities and values shift? How far will the courts be willing to go to uphold the Constitution? What can citizens do to assert their will?

Two experts who have studied our government and Constitution will help us explore these questions and others.

Max Stephenson is Professor of Public and International Affairs and Director of the Virginia Tech Institute for Policy and Governance. His research interests include nonprofit/NGO governance, leadership, management and civil society; public policy; peacebuilding, international development, and democratization.

Brandy Faulkner is Professor of Political Science and the Gloria D. Smith Professor of Black Studies at Virginia Tech. Her research focuses on constitutional and administrative law, race and public policy, and critical organization theory. She is the Virginia Tech.

This public forum is offered in collaboration with the League of Women Voters of Montgomery County, Virginia, the Lifelong Learning Institute at Virginia Tech, and the Montgomery County-Radford City-Floyd County branch of the NAACP.

Issues referenced by this event: