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Power, personality, and constitutional guardrails collide as we unpack Andrew Jackson’s two most consequential vetoes: the Maysville Road and the Second Bank of the United States. We trace how a single-state infrastructure bill became a proving ground for what “truly national” means, and why Jackson insisted that federal spending must connect to clear enumerated powers rather than local priorities. Then we step into the bank war, where private influence over public policy, a high-wire recharter gambit from Clay, Webster, and Biddle, and a surprisingly popular veto message reshaped the political map. With Dr. Sean Beidenberg, we dig into Jackson’s core claim that a president’s oath runs to the Constitution itself, not to the Supreme Court’s interpretations. That stance—neither court supremacy nor nullification—frames a lasting debate over departmentalism and separation of powers. We explore how the Bank’s governance structure gave disproportionate sway to private shareholders, why Jackson could accept a bank in theory but not this bank, and how a campaign stunt backfired when voters embraced his arguments about accountability and capture. The story isn’t clean. Jackson’s later removal of federal deposits into state banks tests statutory boundaries and fuels charges of executive overreach, adding grit to a legacy too often flattened into hero or villain. Along the way, we spotlight the human drama—Clay’s ambitions, Webster’s rhetoric, Biddle’s miscalculation, Calhoun’s maneuvers—because the clash of ideas and the clash of egos are inseparable. If you care about constitutional interpretation, infrastructure policy, central banking, and the balance between public power and private influence, you’ll find lessons here that still guide debates today. If this deep dive sharpened your civic lens, follow the show, share it with a friend, and leave a review to help more listeners find thoughtful history with real-world stakes. Check Out the Civic Literacy Curriculum (https://civics.asu.edu/civic-literacy...) ! School of Civic and Economic Thought and Leadership (https://scetl.asu.edu/) Center for American Civics (https://civics.asu.edu/)