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The King's Ransom: Executive Bargain Echoes Founding Fears

The White House is reportedly close to a $20 billion agreement with Iran, trading frozen funds for enriched uranium, sparking debate on executive authority and national security.

Apr 18, 2026 - Politics & Policy

The King's Ransom: Executive Bargain Echoes Founding Fears

Author By Miles Corbin

The White House is reportedly close to a $20 billion agreement with Iran, trading frozen funds for enriched uranium, sparking debate on executive authority and national security.

Why it matters: This negotiation, presented as pragmatic, resurrects foundational questions about executive power. A chief executive bargaining over national security and global finance, largely outside legislative scrutiny, echoes grievances of the American Revolution. 'There are two other considerations, relating to this head, that deserve the most serious attention,' as John Dickinson wrote, concerning our constitutional architecture. The potential for a single authority to unilaterally commit vast sums and redefine national security without robust checks risks normalizing a monarchical impulse. Executive authority bypassing oversight for geopolitical expediency is a stark reminder of the fragile balance between efficiency and liberty our founders fought to secure.

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