Every patriot who watches Greg Kelly knows he isn’t interested in soft-peddling the truth about how our branches of government have drifted from the framers’ design; his program has repeatedly interrogated the judiciary’s growing activism and Congress’s unwillingness to check it, holding power to account on behalf of everyday Americans.
The courts too often act like a policymaking body rather than an interpreter of the law, and on Greg Kelly’s show high-profile guests have bluntly described decisions and verdicts that look more political than legal — a reality conservatives have warned about for years.
Meanwhile, the legislative branch has largely abdicated its duty to legislate and to rein in unelected bureaucrats and rogue prosecutors, leaving a yawning void that activist judges and an emboldened administrative state happily fill.
The fix is not complicated: Congress must rediscover its spine, pass clear limits on administrative overreach, and insist on confirming judges who interpret the Constitution rather than rewrite it from the bench; America needs principled jurists and accountable lawmaking, not judicial legislating.
Greg Kelly’s show has given a platform to those who’ve faced a system that appears prejudged, and that reportage should be a wake-up call — conservatives must demand reform, support originalist judges, and pressure elected lawmakers to do their jobs or be voted out.

