This comment to Sanford Levinson\u27s Brandeis lecture at Pepperdine focuses on the role and types of compromises made during several stages of constitutional processes, formative and constitutive, interpretive and on-going, as negotiated by Constitutional meaning makers (drafters and Supreme Court \u27deciders\u27), and post hoc justifications. This essay discusses recent work on compromise as institutional design, pragmatic or principled, and regime defining and sustaining. Both the pejorative (compromise is unprincipled) and more positive (compromise accounts for the \u27reality\u27 and moral existence of different sides of an issue or polity) understandings of compromise are reviewed, in light of Professor Levinson\u27s scholarship on c...