There’s something uniquely American about a public disagreement carried out in full view—two people, both invoking the Constitution, both convinced they are defending it.
That’s where this begins.
Anna Shah, writing as an elected official, attorney, mother, and daughter of immigrants, issued an open letter in response to my criticism of local officials protesting federal immigration enforcement. Her argument is clear and firmly stated: protest is not contradiction—it is courage. Silence, she warns, is complicity. And the oath of office is not a command to defer, but a duty to resist when government exceeds constitutional bounds.
It’s a powerful position. And it resonates, especially in a country where protest has often served as the conscience of the republic.
But here’s where the conversation turns—and where it must.
Because the real question isn’t whether protest is protected. It is.
The real question is what happens when the protester is no longer just a citizen—but an elected official entrusted with power.
That’s the line we’re dancing around.
Shah frames this as a rejection of blind compliance. Fair enough. No one is arguing for obedience without question. The Constitution itself demands scrutiny of power. But what she presents as courage risks becoming something else entirely when viewed through the lens of governance: the substitution of performance for responsibility.
Because once you take the oath, something changes.
You are no longer simply expressing dissent—you are expected to exercise authority.
And that raises a harder, more uncomfortable question—one her letter never quite addresses:
Does she fully understand the scope of her responsibility as a locally elected official engaging in protest over national policy?
Because that scope matters.
Local officials are not powerless—but they are bounded. Their authority is defined not by national debates, but by local obligations: budgets, services, public safety, infrastructure, schools, and the day-to-day realities of the people who elected them.
When a local legislator steps into the arena of national protest, particularly on issues governed by federal law, there is a risk—not of speaking out—but of misplacing focus.
Because time, attention, and political capital are not unlimited resources.
And the people of Dutchess County did not elect their representatives to symbolize resistance to Washington. They elected them to govern locally, effectively, and responsibly.
This is where the modern confusion deepens.
We have begun to treat visibility as effectiveness. We mistake presence in the street for progress in the system. We elevate the optics of resistance while neglecting the harder, quieter work of governing.
Protest can spotlight a problem.
But it does not solve one.
If federal enforcement is unconstitutional, there are courts equipped to say so. If laws are unjust, legislatures exist to change them. If agencies overstep, oversight exists to check them. These are not secondary tools. They are the foundation of constitutional order.
And yet, increasingly, we see elected officials bypassing those tools in favor of public demonstration—standing not as stewards of the system, but as participants in the outrage surrounding it.
That’s not what the Founders envisioned.
They built a system to channel dissent, not replace governance with it.
Shah argues that protest is sometimes a responsibility. Perhaps it is. But governing always is.
And that responsibility is not abstract—it is local, specific, and immediate.
Potholes don’t get filled by press releases. Budgets don’t balance through protest. Public safety isn’t secured through slogans.
Those are the obligations of office.
This is not a call for silence. It’s a call for alignment.
Speak if you must. Protest if you believe it necessary. But do not confuse that with fulfilling the oath.
The Constitution is not defended by how loudly we object.
It is defended by what we do with the authority we’ve been given—and whether we understand the limits of that authority in the first place.
Because in the end, leadership is not about joining the loudest moment.
It’s about meeting the responsibilities you were actually elected to carry.

