The Anti-Federalist Papers: The Forgotten Warnings That Predicted the Rise of Federal Power

October 28, 2025

The Anti-Federalist Papers (1787–1788) collect the powerful, often prophetic arguments of those who opposed ratifying the U.S. Constitution, writing under pseudonyms like Brutus, Cato, Federal Farmer, and Sentinel. They warned that the new system was not truly federal but national, granting Congress near-limitless power through the Necessary and Proper Clause and Supremacy Clause, which would enable the federal government to override state laws, tax individuals directly, and gradually absorb state sovereignty. They feared an expansive federal judiciary with lifetime tenure would interpret the Constitution’s “spirit” to expand national power, undermine trial by jury, and place justice beyond the reach of ordinary citizens due to distance and cost. A standing army, justified by perpetual external threats, would threaten liberty from within, while taxation would require intrusive bureaucracies that violated privacy and dignity. They argued the sheer scale of the republic would erode civic virtue, local attachments, and genuine representation, replacing them with remote, aristocratic rule disconnected from the people. Though they lost the ratification battle, their critiques of consolidation, judicial activism, militarization, and the fragility of liberty in large republics feel strikingly relevant today. This episode challenges listeners: have we heeded their call for vigilance, or has the “Grand Continental vortex” they feared swallowed the balanced federalism they defended?

The Anti-Federalist Papers: The Forgotten Warnings That Predicted the Rise of Federal Power

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