The Stack: Who Holds Power in America?

Illustration of the U.S. Constitution, scales of justice, and Capitol dome symbolizing limited government and the balance of power in America.

America was built on a radical idea: government does not grant rights — it receives limited authority from the people. In this episode of The Todd Huff Show, Todd Huff explores the concept of power, where it comes from, and why understanding it is essential to preserving liberty.

Todd explains that power always exists somewhere in society. The real question is who holds it, how much they have, and how it is restrained. America’s Founders rejected the traditional model of replacing one ruling class with another. Instead, they created a system built on the consent of the governed, where authority flows from the people and is limited by law.

But modern politics often replaces thoughtful discussion with emotional slogans and manipulated narratives. From media framing to activist journalism, the debate around power is increasingly driven by feelings rather than principles.

Understanding the story behind conservatism — not just the headlines — is essential if we want to persuade others and preserve the ideas that made America exceptional.

🎧 Listen to Today’s Episode

📝 Transcript: Who Holds Power in America?

The Todd Huff Show – March 12 , 2026

Host: Todd Huff

Todd Huff: Well, that is right, my friends. You have ever so wisely tuned in to America's home for conservative, not bitter talk and education. I might add, it is my distinct honor and privilege to be here with you today. You know, yesterday, if you would have listened, which I'm sure you did, if you listened, you would have known that we did something a little bit different. We more or less—I'm trying to give you the Cliff's Notes version here—but basically what we decided to do was I just started having a moment of thinking about what's going on in the country today, what we're dealing with, just the tensions and the turmoil and all that sort of stuff. You know, we can scream until we're blue in the face, but until we give people a framework through which to view politics and explain it and articulate it—not just demand that they follow it, but explain it—we're going to have problems in this country.

Todd Huff: I started to say this—I don't know if I finished it in the first episode, which was yesterday—but this nation is founded upon ideas. And if we deviate from those ideas, if we change those ideas, those ideas are what made this nation a wonderful place. By embracing them and putting those key ideas into our system, our government structure, that's what created the America that we know. If the ideas made us great, which I contend that they did—I think that's undeniable—then it stands to reason that if we deviate from those ideas, if we abandon those ideas, eventually America's greatness will come to a screeching halt. And that's where we find ourselves today, my friends.

Todd Huff: And that's why, to me, it's so important that we figure out how to persuade people. Figure out how to persuade people. I told some stories last episode. I might tell a couple today that I think bring some of this stuff to light. But we all have our own stories, and if we don't, we can all get out there and live life in such a way to create the story. I don't mean make them up and lie about it, but create the story based upon engaging our culture, our community for truth. And so we talked about some principles yesterday, and I stopped—I didn't get through everything I wanted to get through, which is not surprising because that happens on a regular basis.

Todd Huff: Yesterday we talked about truth and how people framework—have a framework, I should say—to apply what they think is true to the rest of life and what matters. What's our worldview? How that shapes our politics. We talked about—we sometimes say culture is upstream from politics, and it is—but a lot of things are. How we view truth. How we view human nature. How we view power. Where we think we came from. Why we think we're here. All those things shape the lens through which we look to determine how we live this side of heaven, my friends. And so I want to pick up there.

Todd Huff: We talked a little bit about propaganda yesterday, and I left off before we got to the issue of power. So I want to talk about power today, my friends.

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Todd Huff: All right. I should tell you, too, that I'm battling a cold. I'm fine, but I am battling a cold. So I may or may not—but definitely am—using the cough button here to shield your ears from the occasional tickle I get in my throat. But I can assure you I am feeling A-OK. All right, so let's pick up here. What is power? What is power, my friends? Power is authority over people. Power is authority over institutions. Power always exists somewhere. It has to exist somewhere because there are people who are responsible for calling the shots. The question is who holds it, how much they hold, how they manage it, and how they're held accountable for how they hold that power. So I've shared before—I've shared before—that when God made humanity, like it or not, God instituted government. There were a couple of institutions that God created to help with life this side of heaven. Government, marriage come to mind immediately. And He establishes power. We're supposed to, for those of us who are Christians, we're supposed to submit to the authority that government has. And my friends, in this country, the government has authority in certain areas.

Todd Huff: Now, what's interesting about this country—and I've explained this a lot on this program, and many of you know this and understand this. Some of you may not, and that's again okay. We don't judge here. Listen, I want people to move toward truth. The mission of this program each and every day is to help people hear and receive truth, and I want to continue to move us all, myself included, closer to understanding and fully accepting truth. Now, this nation—when we went through the American Revolution, not in 1923 as some man-on-the-street interview guests think that it was—and no, we didn't fight for our independence against Portugal. We fought against the King of England. And we were British colonies. And we've given in the Declaration of Independence—what was it? Twenty-seven examples of how we tried and were basically smacked down by the abusive King of England and his government. And so when we decided to say we're no longer part of this, we're not going to live our lives this way, when we decided and made that decision, we had a war—the American Revolution. We had a war. And when we won that war, typically what happens is that the people who win that war basically remove the people who were in charge of the previous government, and they insert themselves as the new leaders in charge of the new government.

Todd Huff: Our Founding Fathers didn't do that. Now, some of them ran for office and all that. But what I'm saying to you is a very important detail that may seem like nuance or whatever, but it's a very critical fact. They didn't establish themselves as the new ruling class, the new tyrannical dictators and kings and so forth. What they did was, instead of saying the government is going to tell you what to do—which is typically what's happened throughout history—they said, listen, your rights, your liberties come from Almighty God. And you need to create some form of order in your society, and that's your government. And the best way to do that is for you colonists to tell that government what you give it permission to do, not the other way around. The government can't come into town and say, listen, we're the new folks in charge, here's how it's going to be. You can do this, this, and this. You can't do this and that. That's not how it works. Instead, you give to the government what they called the consent of the governed. You give them your consent to have responsibility over certain aspects of society, culture, your nation. And that is power. That is delegated power.

Todd Huff: So when we answer these questions as Americans and we say, what is power? We know that power is authority over people or institutions. And power always exists. Power has to exist within order. The problem isn't that somebody has power. The problem is when people abuse that power. And we'll get to that as we continue to get through this long conversation that's going to take place over the course of several of these Toddcasts. But again, the question isn't whether or not power exists. Power is always somewhere. The question is who holds it, how much do they have, how is it monitored, how are they held accountable, how is it balanced out so that they don't get too much—all those sorts of questions. That's what matters. And that's what our founders did. Now again, I see the world through a biblical framework, a Christian framework. And I believe it's not just that that's my preference, like I like chocolate ice cream. This is what I believe to be absolutely, objectively true. God gives individuals authority over their own lives. You are the ultimate decision maker in your life. We all have autonomy as human beings. God granted us that right. God allows us to seek to reconcile with Him or to seek to live apart from Him. Now that's ultimately our choice, and God respects that.

Todd Huff: God also is a God of order. If you read any of the Scriptures, you can see that quickly. You can read lots of places where you see God is a God of order. When you look at the Old Testament and how God instructed them to build the tabernacle or the temple, when you looked at the level of detail that God gave in the genealogies of the Old Testament, when He gave the Levitical law and when things were determined to be clean and unclean and all that—the level of detail that was given so that people had direction—God is a God of detail. He's a God of order. And He instituted government. Now that's not a blank slate to say that all government is good. God also ordained marriage. That doesn't mean that God condones the behavior of every husband and every wife. There are people who have physically, emotionally harmed their spouse. There are people who have been unfaithful to their spouse. All sorts of things, my friends. Just because God institutes marriage doesn't mean that all husbands and wives are pleasing in their behavior to their spouse in the eyes of God.

Todd Huff: And likewise, just because God ordains the concept of there to be a government, it doesn't mean that He approves of all of the behaviors that governments institute or that governments have carried out throughout the history of this world. In fact—in fact—you've heard this said before on this program and other places: in the twentieth century alone—and just in case I've got a leftist tuned in, by the way, if you're a leftist and tuned in here, I'm not trying to run you off. I welcome you. I'm going to have a little fun with you every once in a while. I'm going to tease with you. But as I tell my kids when they think I've teased them too hard, I tease you because I like you. Right? I like you leftists, I do. But if a leftist is tuned in here today, just hang in there. We'll keep things, as my friend J says, I put the cookies on the bottom shelf. I'll make sure that we put those there. But in the twentieth century—that's the 1900s, just for the leftists out there who tuned in—I'm kidding. Just take it easy. There were over one hundred million people murdered by their own governments.

Todd Huff: That is not something that is commendable or approved by God. That is governments behaving badly. That's an example of governments behaving satan-like—way evil, my friends. But government is instituted by God as a means by which order can be carried out here this side of heaven. So the proper way to view government is that it has power, but that power is not limitless. It's limited. Just as in a relationship, the husband has certain—biblically speaking—the husband has certain responsibilities. But he's not—the wife, for example, biblically, is to follow, submit to her husband, but she's not supposed to follow him blindly, especially when he's telling her things that are against the commands of God. The same is true with children. Children, obey your parents. There's a promise given along that they'll have a long life if they do. But they're not expected to follow the instruction of their parents where that instruction is evil.

Todd Huff: And on down the line, my friends, that doesn't mean that power is unlimited just because there is some power, some authority that is given to different people, circumstances, all that sort of stuff. So God did not transfer—boy, this one needs to be repeated—not probably to you, but to the left out there today. God did not transfer all of His authority to government. That is how people live today. Well, the government says this, so I've got to do it. Why? Do we think that the Bible tells us to submit to governing rulers, but remember we have rules for our government. In fact, I would go so far as to say our allegiance here in this country in the United States is to the rule of law, not to any particular politician. We don't have a king. We don't say long live the president. We have elected officials who are held accountable by us that we can vote in or out of office. We are to be subjected to the law. That's how it's supposed to work. Power, my friends, must be restrained. Power must be divided. Power must be checked. The founders understood this, and I don't know, my friends, if the average person out there today—especially the average person voting for Democrats—understands this.

Todd Huff: Government has authority over some things, but not over everything. Government has authority over some things, but not authority over everything. And so in modern politics today we have this emotional reaction. And the media knows this. Politicians know this. That's why they use phrases like a threat to democracy. Trump's trying to overthrow the democracy. That's why they say things like my body, my choice. Because obviously we should have choice over what happens to our body. I agree with that. But that's not what's really happening in the case of abortion. And so it's driven by emotional reactions. Right? When you have people who are being deported for being illegally here in this country, let's say that it's an adult, and at the time that they were arrested, for example, if a child was with them, the media will say things like the child was separated from their parents, and that sounds terrible. Why would you separate a child from the parents? Well, I'm glad you asked. Because when you're arrested, you go to grown-up jail, or in the case of immigration, grown-up illegal alien detention centers. And you don't put the children with the adults who have been arrested and detained.

Todd Huff: You have them separately, which means you have to separate them from the parents. And see, once you explain it that way, it takes off a lot of the edge. But they want the edge because they think we can't have our government just going around and taking children away from their parents for no reason. Everyone agrees with that. But that's not what happens, my friends. Headlines are designed to trigger feelings. Policy debates are reduced to instinct. Protective instinct. I heard someone saying this recently, and I think they're onto something, and I've got to get better candidly of taking notes as to who said these things so I can credit them. But it wasn't me, I can promise you that. Someone said that the modern white female liberal, because of feminism—I think that there's a lot of truth in this. There's God created in women certain instincts. Motherly instincts. And some people get upset when you say that, but nurturing, motherly instincts. Just like in men in general, God gave us a sense of protection.

Todd Huff: And certainly there are examples that are bad of both sides. You could have women who've been terrible to children. You can have men who've been abusive. All that stuff, I understand. But in nature, when God had a man in mind, He had that sort of thing in mind. When God had a female in mind, that's what He had in mind. Of course, we're all individuals, and sometimes our traits—it's on a spectrum. And sometimes the spectrum can even be very different. But in general, this is what it means—masculine versus feminine and all this sort of stuff. I don't know why you can't say that in today's world. But because feminism has gone extreme and has basically caused a lot of women to hate men—and listen, there's men out there that women shouldn't like and they should steer clear of, candidly—and there's plenty of problems with men too. So I'm not harping on women. But you get women who never were married or never had children. And listen, you don't have to have children. That's not my point. But in general, women have children, men provide for their families.

Todd Huff: It doesn't mean that everybody fits into that particular circumstance because there's a bazillion factors in life. But that's when God had families in mind. That's what He had in mind, right? I mean it's obvious. It's obvious because that's the way it works. But these women today, they've rejected marriage, they've rejected traditional femininity, but yet they still have this instinct to be motherly and nurturing. And so they'll find these causes and go out in the streets and stand up for these people that they've been manipulated to think that they're being abused or whatever else by the media and so forth. And we have this problem that we have today. I've got to take a break here as time is running short.

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Todd Huff: I've got to take a break. Quick timeout. Back here in just a minute.

Todd Huff: Welcome back, my friends. Talking here about how politics in the modern era—and it's not just the modern era—but it has become a real problem here in the modern era. In fact, it's interesting with all the information. You've heard me say this—it’s been a while—but we have information at our fingertips, right? We can look up anything. We've got Google, we've got AI, we've got online courses, we've got books in print form, digital form. We've got all sorts of things. We've got experts in everything because we've been so prosperous in this country that people can be experts in really specific areas.

Todd Huff: Because the economy is such an amazing thing here that you can find people to take care of everything else so you can go focus on your very specific area of expertise and so forth. But we have this information at our fingertips, but we're totally empty of reason and logic and wisdom. Wisdom is the application of knowledge. It's knowing when to use this lesson and when to use that lesson. Part of—it’s been said—part of being an adult is knowing when you can behave in a certain way. It doesn't mean adults... listen, there's time. I'm the biggest kid that you can possibly imagine, and I love it.

Todd Huff: But you just can't do that all the time, right? There's a time I've got to be the dad to my kids. There's a time when I'm running a practice when I've got to basically say, all right, it's time to get things in order over here. Enough of the screwing around. Let's get serious because we've got to do X, Y, and Z, and those things are true. But I tell you, I think that wisdom is so lacking in this country. People have all this information, but they don't know what to do with it. Man, oh man, I think that rings true. I'm going to say that again. People have all this information—whether it's in their head or, more than likely, in their cell phones through Google, through ChatGPT or AI, whatever. They have all this information, but they don't know what to do with it. And so there's this feeling of I should know, it's too embarrassing to ask. And so you just have this emotionally charged situation, and there's a factor of pride in there where people don't want to say I don't know or I don't understand. And suddenly you've got this mess, right?

Todd Huff: And so it's reduced to emotions many times. For example, it's clear that I would say on here war is bad. War is hell, right? You've heard people say this. You've seen—you've read the horror stories. Some of you have served. You've served in the armed forces, and I thank you for your service. And I've only read the stories, heard the stories, that sort of thing. And I've seen some absolutely unbelievable stories—not unbelievable in the sense that they're made up—but just what people have had to deal with. We have a friend of our family who I think was pronounced dead twice in military operations. Still with us. He got a transplant, and I see him at the park occasionally and we go on walks. But war is hell. I'm not going to pretend to know anything more than that because I've not been there. But I can agree that war is a terrible thing. But refusing to resist evil, my friends, is horrible as well. And if evil wins, then you have the same set of circumstances except for there's nobody fighting back against it.

Todd Huff: And I don't want to go as far as to say it's worse because I haven't been in war. But my goodness, you can certainly see why at some level if the absolute evil tyrants have won and no one's fighting back, then that situation's at least as bad, isn't it, as having to fight it with still the hope of hanging on to your freedom and liberty? Tyranny by nature—it grows when evil is not confronted. And that's what we see. We see this on the world stage today. We've talked about the war in Iran, and I've explained that part of the reason we're facing this problem today is that it's been ignored. The can has been kicked down the road for decades. Tyranny and evil have to be confronted. When they are not confronted, it doesn't mean that every time there's any hint of evil that you drop bombs. But there is a point when you have to ask those questions. You have to ask those questions.

Todd Huff: And in the case of Iran, if they're about to acquire nuclear weapons and they're promising death and destruction to the United States of America and to Israel, what options do you have? Complex moral problems cannot be solved with emotional slogans. Turns out you can't just have a hashtag on X that solves the problem. It certainly sounds good. It's certainly memorable to the people out there who are communicating about these complex issues. But more times than not, these complex issues require a degree of understanding and communication about what's really going on.

Todd Huff: In fact, that's one of the things I say about conservatism. Conservatism is a story. And liberalism or modern leftism is a headline. It's a one-liner. It sounds good. It gets the mindless masses clapping and laughing and applauding their approval. But there's nothing there. It's an inch deep and a mile wide, but there's nothing substantive there. Conservatism requires an explanation because you have to explain why it's better. For example, to give a man a fish—excuse me—it's better to teach a man to fish than it is to give a man a fish. Because if you say don't give a man a fish, that sounds at first instinct—first time you hear it—that doesn't sound right. Why wouldn't you give the guy a fish? Because if my choices are to give it to him or to teach him how to get his own, I'm going to choose the latter.

Todd Huff: I remember when I was in Washington, D.C., 1999, at American University. We used to—the church I was in, which I just learned actually a couple of days ago the name of the church has changed—but the name of the church was Temple Baptist Church when I was there. Spring of '99. And I'm not embarrassed that I did it, but it's laughable when you think about my music skills. I actually led the worship at that small church. The guy who did it, who had done it, he was asking for a break. He needed some time away. It was a small church. No one volunteered, and so I did it. And it was funny because it was this old voice up there at 21 years old with a concert pianist. That was the combination. It did not make any sense. That guy could play the most beautiful sounds from the keyboard, and then this voice chimed in. Fortunately, God prefers the sound of a joyful heart more than the sound of a beautiful voice, because I certainly didn't have that. But look, I remember at that church feeding—we would feed the homeless at Lafayette Park. If you're not familiar where Lafayette Park is, it's directly across from the White House. There's this big park in Washington, D.C., and we would go there.

Todd Huff: I think it was monthly. I'm not entirely sure how frequently. I think it was about once a month. And we used to feed the homeless, and they were required to listen to one of the pastors give literally maybe a five-minute message—maybe more like three minutes—and then they could get the food. And it was interesting. Some listened. Some looked off into the sky and ignored it completely. But I remember that church telling me—I remember the pastor's wife, who was such a sweet soul—I remember her telling me if you encounter a homeless person, don't give them money.

Todd Huff: And I thought, well my goodness, that sounds awfully cold-hearted. She said, listen, they're just going to go and statistically buy drugs or alcohol. You're so much better off to say, if you're hungry, come with me and I'll go buy you a sandwich. And so I started doing that. And the point is that it takes an explanation for that to make sense versus a headline that says Preacher's Wife tells congregants not to feed homeless people, right? Or not to give them money or whatever. Anyway, it requires a story, my friends—an explanation. Feelings cannot become the governing philosophy of how we live our lives, how we run our nation. We shouldn't just say, oh that sounds compassionate, let's do it. Oh that sounds unfair, let's make a law against that. Oh I don't like that. That's perhaps the worst thing. I don't like this, let's make a law against that. Well we have to balance freedom with order—the role of the government, what can and cannot be made illegal, what our liberties give us the right to—all of those sorts of things. But that's what it's been reduced to, my friends. I've got to take a break here. Quick timeout. If you're serious and you're curious about Kratom or just trying to figure out who to trust, let me introduce you to Christopher's Organic Botanicals. You've heard me talk about them for some time on here. Family-run company. They offer natural, lab-tested Kratom. It's not the synthetic stuff that's giving Kratom a bad name. Kratom that is responsibly sourced and tested for purity is what you should look for, and that's what Christopher's is all about.

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Todd Huff: Timeout for me, my friends. Back in just a minute.

Todd Huff: Well, I hope you're enjoying this as much as I am enjoying this. And let me tell you, if you want the receipts, if you want to dig deeper, you want to see some of the articles we link to, if you want to see some of this in writing so that you can read it, wrap your head around it and just dig a little bit deeper, the best way to do that is to subscribe to our free email. I call it a newsletter. It's called the Inner Circle. All you have to do is text truth to 317-785-1030. Again, text the word truth to 317-785-1030 and you'll get subscribed to the email newsletter, the Inner Circle, and you can dig deeper into the discussion, the topics and so forth. Friends, let's face it, there are a lot of companies out there that do not share your Christian values. The good news is that you do not have to invest in them. At 4:8 Financial, they specialize in biblically responsible investing. They'll screen out companies that go against your faith, that go against your values. They'll create a plan that's tailored to your goals, and they'll handle all that heavy lifting for you so that you can focus on what really matters.

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Todd Huff: Now I looked here and saw media and narrative control is what I want to talk about here as we wrap up. There's been a consolidation of media institutions. And it's interesting, right? Originally in this country we had ABC, CBS, and NBC. And then of course you had your newspapers: The New York Times, The Washington Post, The Los Angeles Times, all these left-of-center—in many cases far-left—outlets, I should say. Then you have the invention, I guess, of cable news. And along came CNN and that sort of thing. It wasn't until there was one bright beacon, massive, massive bright beacon—an army of one, as he used to call himself—Rush Limbaugh, who started his program in 1988 and was instrumental in shaping me and this program. It was basically him against the opposition until Fox News came along, I think in 1996. I could be wrong on that, but that's the year I graduated high school and I'm fairly sure Fox News was founded that year anyway.

Todd Huff: But there's been media conglomerations. But even if they're owned by different entities, they certainly consolidate around the same ideas, and they repeat the same narrative across outlets incessantly, insidiously. You hear the same message time and time again, the same way of explaining things. I remember the best example of this that I can recall is back in 2000 when George W. Bush was looking for a running mate. He tapped Dick Cheney to actually go find him a running mate. And when it was all said and done, the Bush team said, well we want you, Mr. Cheney, to be vice president, to be our vice presidential running mate. And so that's what ended up happening. And I remember—I remember a term that I've only heard, in fact if you ever go on to Google and it'll show you the popularity of a term, you'll see when terms were used and so forth. But there's a term—gravitas.

Todd Huff: I remember every single news outlet—I'm talking every single one—Rush used to play the montage of people saying it. "Gravitas. I don't think this ticket has enough gravitas. Gravitas. Gravitas. Gravitas." It went on and on and on. Definition, by the way: dignity, seriousness, or solemnity of manner. So basically it says it's a joke, they're not serious, that doesn't have enough seriousness to be on the ballot, and everybody was using it. Everybody. That's what media has become. Now you've got social media amplifying the message, resharing. In fact you've got maybe even more disingenuous and distrustful folks that are pushing the narrative in social media. And journalism has become outright activism now. I mean look at Don Lemon. Don Lemon in the city's church in St. Paul, Minnesota. Right? He became an insurgent there, allegedly, for storming that church. Not acting as a journalist, allegedly, but acting as one who was there to interfere with services.

Todd Huff: You've got a growing distrust of the media. The media polls so low nobody trusts anything that they hear. People know something is wrong. They can't always put their finger on it. And yet here we find ourselves. But many people lack the framework to properly explain it. They just don't have it. They don't. And so because of that propaganda becomes easier when people stop questioning the narratives. Language shapes our interpretation. The terminology that's used influences the perception. Look at how they've used misinformation, or equity, or gender-affirming care, border encounters, and everything else.

Todd Huff: I'm out of time though, my friends. Gotta wrap up. Thanks for listening, my friends. SDG.

Todd Huff

Todd Huff is the host of The Todd Huff Show, a nationally recognized conservative talk show and podcast — better known to loyal listeners as the Toddcast — reaching more than 250,000 people each week.

With intelligence, wit, and unapologetic common sense, Todd cuts through the noise of politics and culture to focus on what actually matters: faith, family, freedom, and the future of this great nation. No shouting. No theatrics. Just meaningful conversations that respect the audience’s intelligence.

Off the air, Todd’s priorities are simple. Faith. Family. Time well spent. You’ll find him traveling with his family, playing sports with his kids, and making memories that matter far more than the latest headline.

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The Stack: Truth, Power, and Propaganda Shaping the Way We See Politics