TED Talks Daily
What really won the trillion-dollar Supreme Court case | Neal Kumar Katyal
07 May 2026
Transcript generated automatically by AI and may contain errors.
Chapter 1: What is the main topic discussed in this episode?
You're listening to TED Talks Daily, where we bring you new ideas to spark your curiosity every day. I'm your host, Elise Hu. Neil Kumar Kutyal has argued 52 cases before the U.S. Supreme Court, but his recent one may matter most. He took on global tariffs.
I was hired to do what no lawyer had done in 237 years.
But he didn't just assemble a legal team to prepare for this case. He tapped into unlikely teachers to explore all sides of winning against the odds.
I get to defend the Constitution of the United States. I get to, the son of immigrants, remind the country of what it's about. I get to defend my parents' vision of America.
In this talk, Neil takes us behind the scenes of what some have called the most important Supreme Court decision in a century and makes the case that in an age of extraordinary technology, the skill that matters most is the oldest one we have. That's coming up right after a short break.
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Chapter 2: What significant Supreme Court case did Neal Kumar Katyal argue?
T's and C's apply.
And now, our TED Talk of the day.
There's a mahogany podium at the Supreme Court of the United States. One person died there, mid-argument, the stroke. Another collapsed there, dying soon thereafter. That's the podium. It also happens to be where I practice law, the most powerful court on earth. Nine minds ready to attack, and you stand 10 feet away from them. There are no prepared speeches in this court.
Instead, 50 questions thrown at you in 30 minutes. I'm making hundreds of decisions in real time. Every argument I choose to make or not make Every word, every pause, every tone. There are no rewinds. Flinch, and the justices pounce. That's my courtroom, but each of you has something like that, a place in which words matter. The right words can win, and the wrong words a huge difference.
Five months ago, I stood before that podium asking the Supreme Court to do something it had never done in its history, declare a president's $4 trillion signature initiative unconstitutional. And I had a secret. April 2nd, 2025, the president dusts off a 1977 law and imposes tariffs on virtually every country on earth. No congressional vote, nothing like that whatsoever, just his word.
And here's what's at stake. If the president can command the global economy by yelling emergency, what can't he do? Checks and balances don't just bend, they break. I was hired to kill it. Legal scholars, commentators, my own colleagues said it was impossible. They said the president has nominated three of the justices on the court and three others were appointed by Republican presidents.
They're not going to go against their president, they said. I thought that was wrong. But the real problem was that the Supreme Court never in its history, in 237 years, has declared a signature initiative of the president unconstitutional. I was hired to do what no lawyer had done in 237 years. My first thought? Hell yes! My second thought, what in the world is wrong with me?
People have died at that podium, and I'm about to tell the world's most powerful man he can't do what he just did? I had the self-preservation instincts of a moth near a bug zapper. So for months, I prepared for the argument of my life. Three weeks before that argument, one of my own teammates decided to try and take me down so that he could argue the case.
He campaigned, he lobbied, he made calls. Just a few days before the argument, about two weeks,
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Chapter 3: How did Katyal prepare for the unprecedented legal challenge?
The Washington Post runs an editorial somehow, and I'm going to read this to you word for word. Strategic mistake. I read it over breakfast. Look, I don't begrudge the guy. I mean, whatever. I had more important things to do because I wasn't replaced. Up I walked to that mahogany podium, and I won. The president's tariffs declared unconstitutional. Okay, look, I know how this sounds.
Lawyer wins big case, gets a fancy TED Talk invitation, talks for 14 minutes about how great he is. I've seen that guy at dinner parties. Nobody stays for dessert. So that's not what this is. This is the behind-the-scenes story of four teachers that helped me connect. And it's also about one secret that I've never told anyone about when I walked out of that courtroom.
First connection I needed was with myself. I was terrified of blowing the case, and that Washington Post editorial didn't help matters. A month before the argument, I met Ben. Ben coaches sports legends, Andre Agassi, Olympians and the like. His whole thing is about game day, that moment when everything you've been preparing for either shows up or it doesn't. Ben's first question to me
What are you afraid of? Now, look, at that point, I argued 52 cases. I'd saved the Voting Rights Act. I'd struck down the Guantanamo military tribunals. But Ben forced me to admit a truth I'd buried from myself. Every time I walked into the court, I looked at those portraits on the walls and thought, they don't look like me. I don't belong here.
Imposter syndrome doesn't care about how many cases you won. It cares about only your doubts. Ben didn't dismiss this. He worked with it. He had me write down five adjectives and visualize them every day before a pretend court. About 18 hours before the argument, Ben says to me, he calls and says, how are you feeling? And I say, honestly, I'm terrified. I've got to do a great job.
I've got to remember 500 things. I've got to deliver an argument for history. Ben says, you know, change the vowel. Use an E instead of an O.
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Chapter 4: What unique coaching strategies did Katyal employ?
He says, what do you get to do? And instantly, it pours out of me. I get to defend the Constitution of the United States. I get to, the son of immigrants, remind the country of what it's about. I get to defend my parents' vision of America. One letter, the terror didn't disappear, but it transformed into joy. So was Ben the secret, an elite sports coach who teaches people about mindset? No.
But he got me ready. The second thing I needed was connection to information at scale. I assembled the most relentless legal team in the country. They stress-tested every argument until only the best one survived. But I needed more. I needed someone who is absolutely relentless. I found Harvey. Harvey reads the 200th tariff case the same way as he reads the first.
You know, a month before the argument, Harvey told me that I should expect a question from Justice Barrett about license fees, and it's almost verbatim what Harvey told me to predict and what Justice Barrett actually said at the argument.
So Harvey taught me peripheral vision, the idea of if you read a lot, you can see patterns and come up with stuff and anticipate the angles of attack before it arrives. So was this secret a team of relentless lawyers who never slept, who pressure-tested everything? Closer, but that's not it either.
The third thing I needed was the hardest, and it's something we've been talking about today, connection. Here I needed to connect with nine very skeptical legal minds, and to do so in real time. Enter Liz, my improv coach. What does improv have to do with the Supreme Court of the United States? Everything. Liz's secret. Neil, you need to actually listen. actually listen.
She taught me to quiet my own thoughts and to trust myself to come up with the words after the other person had spoken. That's the essence of yes and. Absorb the question and then build on it. When the justices attacked, I validated their concerns and then bridged back. The interrogation became a dialogue. The room's energy flipped.
This power, as Justice Gorsuch said, as Justice Barrett said, is going to be stuck with us forever. Justice Alito, I think you've said many times the purpose isn't what you look at. You look to actually what the government is doing. Thank you, Justice Kavanaugh. So five answers on the Nixon precedent.
Tariffs are constitutionally special because our founders feared revenue raising unlike embargoes. There was no Boston Embargo Party, but there was certainly a Boston Tea Party. Oh, Justice Otamira, I wish I had an hour to talk about this with you, because this argument by the government is wrong every which way.
I wonder if you ever thought that your legacy as a constitutional advocate would be the man who revived the non-delegation argument.
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Chapter 5: How did Katyal's personal experiences influence his courtroom performance?
Now, I want to be precise about something. I'm a lawyer. Precision really matters. What we were doing was not some trick. We weren't pulling some fast one over on the court when we predicted these things. Because predictability is what we want, especially in courts. A justice who returns to the same principles, case after case, year after year, is a justice with character.
Predictability is just consistency made visible. It is in every sense a compliment. What Harvey found in these justices was not weakness. It was integrity. But if I had just parroted Harvey's output, I would have lost the case 10-0, and there aren't even 10 justices. Because AI has a shadow side. When a tool is powerful, When a tool is powerful, you've all seen it, people stop thinking.
The computer says so. Four words, human judgment ends, then people just fold like a cheap lawn chair. The machine thinks, the human just nods, and in that nod, somewhere we disappear. My legal team never nodded. Harvey was not some god. It was our sparring partner. Brilliant, tireless, occasionally insufferable, but not a god. Harvey asked the questions, we found the answer.
Now, this is bigger than just law. It's about all of us. For centuries, the expert was the person who read the most, who remembered the most, who'd seen the most. The seasoned doctor, the experienced lawyer, their edge was accumulated knowledge. AI is making that edge nearly worthless.
Not because humans no longer matter, but because that particular advantage, pattern recognition across vast data and breadth of knowledge, is now available to anyone. AI can analyze. AI can predict. But the one thing AI can't do is the thing that actually won that argument, connect. That's the last irreplaceable human skill.
Persuade one person to change their mind by appealing to something beneath the surface. Adjust not just the argument, but the delivery, the pause, the tone, the look that says, I hear you, and here is my answer. You know, at one moment in the argument, Justice Barrett asked a question that Harvey hadn't predicted.
And I remember it felt like she and I were the only two people in that marble and mahogany room. And in the half second before I answered, I did something no algorithm can do. I looked at her. I really looked. I wanted to understand her worry. And I answered the worry. That lesson is true for all of us.
You don't just got to do it, you get to do it in an interview, in a negotiation, in a conversation that could save a marriage or end one, any place in which you need to reach another human and actually connect. The question AI poses to every one of us is not, will you be replaced? The question is, what is the irreducibly human thing that you do? Go deeper into it.
Not to survive AI, but to come home to yourself. That's where your edge lives. So Ben taught me to refrain. Harvey gave me foresight. Liz taught me to listen. And Bob taught me stillness. Four teachers, four connections, one argument. an argument that some have called the most important decision the Supreme Court has made in a century.
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