• Episode 7: Barriers, Bombs, and the Internet
    Mar 22 2026

    A federal appeals court allows a controversial deportation policy to move forward, a new supreme leader in Iran signals a more aggressive and possibly nuclear path in an escalating conflict, and lawmakers revisit the law that built the modern internet. One key question remains: who actually holds power in today’s legal system?

    In this episode of Wahl on Law, Jonas breaks down a major immigration case involving third-country deportations, the global and nuclear implications of Iran’s new leadership and the expanding conflict in the region, and the growing debate over Section 230, including its connection to a landmark social media addiction trial against Meta and Google. Together, these stories highlight how courts, global power shifts, and government institutions are reshaping law and policy in real time.

    Show more Show less
    15 mins
  • Episode 6: Justice, Immigrants, and Algorithms
    Mar 15 2026

    A new public defender office, a Supreme Court fight over immigration protections, and a landmark social media trial all raise the same question: how does the legal system adapt when the stakes are this high?

    In this episode of Wahl on Law, Jonas breaks down the creation of a new Supreme Court advocacy office for public defenders, the Trump administration’s request for the Supreme Court to allow the termination of Haitian Temporary Protected Status, and an ongoing lawsuit against Instagram and YouTube alleging that their platforms contributed to harming youth’s mental health. Together, these stories highlight how courts, technology companies, and government institutions are shaping the future of law in the United States.

    Show more Show less
    16 mins
  • Episode 5: Authority, Borders, and War
    Mar 8 2026

    A cabinet firing, a federal immigration ruling, and a Senate vote on war powers all raise the same question: who controls government power – and where does the Constitution draw the line?

    In this episode of Wahl on Law, Jonas breaks down President Trump’s decision to fire Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem and what it reveals about presidential authority over the executive branch, a federal judge’s decision blocking deportations of migrants to third countries, and Congress’s failed attempt to limit President Trump’s military strikes against Iran. Together, these stories reveal how courts, Congress, and the president continue to battle over the limits of power in American government.

    Show more Show less
    16 mins
  • Episode 4: Speech, Trade, and Tension
    Mar 1 2026

    A presidential speech, a sweeping tariff policy, and a Supreme Court ruling all raise the same question: how far can executive power go — and who steps in when it crosses the line?

    In this episode of Wahl on Law, Jonas breaks down President Trump’s State of the Union, the administration’s pivot to Section 122 tariffs after the Court limited earlier trade authority, and what this evolving legal battle means for separation of powers, economic policy, and everyday prices.

    Show more Show less
    23 mins
  • Episode 3: Proof, Process, and Presidential Power
    Feb 22 2026

    A voting bill in Congress, a federal agency update, and a Supreme Court ruling all raise the same question: who has the power to interpret the law, and who gets held accountable when that power is pushed too far?

    In this episode of Wahl on Law, Jonas breaks down the SAVE America Act, a TSA terminology shift, and a major Supreme Court decision limiting presidential tariff power, and what all three mean for everyday Americans.

    Show more Show less
    26 mins
  • Episode 2: Risk, Rights, and Responsibility
    Feb 15 2026

    A quiet bill in Congress and three Supreme Court cases raised a shared question: when the law is unclear, who carries the risk?

    In this episode of Wahl on Law, Jonas breaks down proposed changes to toxic chemical regulation, a challenge to police use of cellphone location data, a case testing the stability of green card protections, and a major consumer safety lawsuit. Together, these legal battles reveal how uncertainty in the law can shift consequences onto everyday people, and why paying attention now matters.

    Show more Show less
    18 mins
  • Episode 1: Power, Protection, and the Courts
    Feb 8 2026

    A few lines on a map. One federal judge’s ruling. In this debut episode of Wahl on Law, Jonas explores how recent legal decisions are shaping who holds power in Washington—and who gets to stay in the country they call home. From California’s redistricting battle at the Supreme Court to a federal court order protecting Haitian immigrants with Temporary Protected Status, this episode breaks down what these rulings mean and why they matter for everyday people.

    Show more Show less
    17 mins