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Americans often hear that the United States is a constitutional republic rather than a direct democracy. That’s true—but many people miss the implications.

A republic depends on citizens electing representatives to govern on their behalf. Those representatives negotiate, compromise, and make countless decisions outside direct public observation. The public cannot sit in every committee meeting, attend every negotiation, or monitor every conversation.

That reality makes character indispensable.

In this episode, I explain why integrity in public office is not merely a moral concern. It is a structural requirement of representative government. If citizens cannot trust the people making decisions behind closed doors, eventually they stop trusting the government itself.

The modern Republican Party’s embrace of the idea that character doesn’t matter is not merely hypocritical. It is fundamentally incompatible with the constitutional system the party claims to defend.

A constitutional republic depends on trust. If character in public office doesn’t matter, representative government itself begins to break down. Here’s why integrity is a structural requirement of self-government.



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