Checks? Balances? Where?

We, the People, like our system of government. At least in the abstract.
We like its checks and balances. We like its oversight. We like how the Founding Fathers created a system to prevent any one branch of government from wielding too much power.
But we’ve never had a president who wanted to be a dictator and who has convinced Congress and the Supreme Court to give him carte blanche to carry out an extreme right-wing agenda.
The results of four recent polls illustrate how Americans feel about the state of our three branches of government and the theory of checks and balances right now. (Links to the polls are at the end of this article.)
Voters overwhelmingly support our system of checks and balances. Large majorities of voters feel that democracy is strengthened by congressional oversight (78%), judicial review (70%), and congressional power of the purse (68%).

But when the congressional majority votes in lockstep with the president’s dictates and enables his extralegal agenda without a whimper, that’s not oversight.
When the ultraright Supreme Court majority ignores precedent and crafts twisted, illogical arguments to reward the president’s illegal behavior, that’s not review.
And when Congress allows the president to illegally impound allocated funds without a peep, much less a fight, that’s not using the power of the purse as a check or a balance.
Most Americans feel that Donald Trump has exceeded his authority as president (63%).

Most voters would prefer that the next Congress be in Democratic hands, to act as a check on Trump (56%).

With its ruling in 2024 that presidents have absolute criminal immunity for “official actions,” and the recent inscrutable shadow docket decisions in Trump’s favor, the Supreme Court has not acted as a check against presidential power. Americans have not had a favorable view of the Supreme Court since Roe v. Wade was overturned by the Dobbs decision in 2022.

Most Americans do not think the Supreme Court is politically neutral (59%). The Court’s pandering to Trump is evident to Americans of all political parties.

But the reality is that Trump is governing with intense opposition from nearly half the country, according to G. Elliott Morris in his Strength in Numbers Substack.
According to the most recent YouGov/Economist poll (Sept. 12-15, 2025), Trump’s overall approval number has slipped to 39%.
Twice as many Americans strongly disapprove of Trump’s job performance (48%) than strongly approve (24%). This indicates how soft his support is. The 15% who somewhat approve can easily move to somewhat disapprove, depending on the scandals of the week.

Our path to restoring effective checks on the president and this administration lies in electing enough Democrats to both houses of Congress such that there is a solid Democratic majority. With GOP efforts to tip the scales through disenfranchising voters this will not be easy. But there is no hope for oversight by the Supreme Court, so our only chance is to legislatively combat this corrupt administration.
Washington Post/Ipsos, Sept. 2025
YouGov/Economist, Sept. 12-15, 2025
Jan Plotczyk spent 25 years as a survey and education statistician with the federal government, at the Census Bureau and the National Center for Education Statistics. She retired to Rock Hall.
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