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U.S. Constitution

The U.S. Constitution

Archival records, profiles, and educational resources since 1995.

House Rules Committee Explained

House Rules Committee Explained

The House of Representatives looks like a freewheeling arena on C-SPAN, but most of what you see on the floor has already been negotiated and engineered off the floor. One of the main committees that makes that possible is the House Rules Committee. For most major bills, it proposes how the House...

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The Senate Parliamentarian Explained

The Senate Parliamentarian Explained

When a headline says “the parliamentarian ruled,” it can sound like a judge has spoken. In reality, the Senate parliamentarian is not a justice, not an elected official, and not the final word on what the Senate can do. The parliamentarian is closer to an in-house rules librarian with a...

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Inspectors General Explained

Inspectors General Explained

When a scandal hits Washington, you will hear the same three letters invoked like a spell: IG. An Inspector General is not a prosecutor. Not a legislator. Not a judge. An IG is a statutory watchdog placed inside an executive branch agency to uncover waste, fraud, abuse, and serious misconduct, then...

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What the U.S. Attorney General Does

What the U.S. Attorney General Does

The Attorney General is often introduced in headlines as “the nation’s top law enforcement officer.” That phrase is helpful, but it is also incomplete. The U.S. Attorney General is a cabinet-level official who runs the Department of Justice, oversees federal litigation and prosecution...

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Provisional Ballots

Provisional Ballots

You show up to vote. Your name is not in the poll book. The worker looks at you like you just wandered into the wrong wedding reception. Then comes the phrase that triggers panic headlines every election cycle: provisional ballot . To many voters, “provisional” sounds like “maybe your vote...

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National Popular Vote Interstate Compact

National Popular Vote Interstate Compact

Americans argue about the Electoral College the way they argue about the weather. Everyone has an opinion, most people think they understand it, and the part that actually controls the outcome tends to be the part nobody sees coming. The National Popular Vote Interstate Compact, usually shortened...

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Authorizations vs Appropriations

Authorizations vs Appropriations

People talk about “Congress funding” something as if it is one vote, one bill, one clean yes or no. But in Washington, the power of the purse usually works like a two-key system. One key says, “This program may exist.” The other says, “This program may spend money.” If you only have one...

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Ranked-Choice Voting

Ranked-Choice Voting

Ranked-choice voting sounds like a simple promise: instead of choosing one candidate and hoping your vote “counts,” you rank candidates in the order you prefer them. If your first choice cannot win, your ballot can still help decide between the remaining options. That is the sales pitch. The...

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President Pro Tempore of the Senate Explained

President Pro Tempore of the Senate Explained

The President pro tempore of the Senate is one of those constitutional offices that most Americans only hear about when something goes wrong: a vacancy, a sudden succession question, or a moment when Senate procedure becomes national news. But in ordinary times, it is a quiet position with a...

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How the Speaker of the House Is Elected and What Powers They Have

How the Speaker of the House Is Elected and What Powers They Have

The Speaker of the House is one of those offices Americans hear about most often during a crisis: a shutdown fight, a leadership revolt, a razor-thin majority, a sudden vacancy. But the Speaker is not a cable news invention. It is a constitutional officer chosen by the House, governed by a mix of...

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527 Organizations Explained

527 Organizations Explained

You are watching a mid-October football game, and a grim voice tells you a candidate “voted to cut benefits” or “raised your taxes.” The group paying for the ad has a forgettable name, a Washington mailing address, and a required line at the end: “Paid for by….” Sometimes the sponsor...

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Traditional PACs vs Super PACs

Traditional PACs vs Super PACs

“PAC” is one of those political acronyms that sounds simple until you look at the rulebook. In everyday conversation, people use PAC to mean any political committee that spends money to influence elections. Under federal campaign finance law, that casual definition hides a big legal split:...

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The Senate Nuclear Option

The Senate Nuclear Option

The “nuclear option” sounds like a constitutional crisis in a trench coat. In reality, it is a Senate procedure that lets a simple majority change how the Senate applies its own rules, without going through the formal (and usually filibusterable) process of amending those rules. It matters...

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Melania Trump, Epstein, and the Public’s Right to Know

Melania Trump, Epstein, and the Public’s Right to Know

When powerful people get mentioned in the orbit of a notorious criminal, the public instinct is simple: Tell us everything. But the American system was not designed to satisfy curiosity. It was designed to allocate power, constrain government, and protect individual rights, including the rights of...

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When Schools Punish Off-Campus Snapchat Speech

When Schools Punish Off-Campus Snapchat Speech

Public schools have real responsibilities: keeping students safe, maintaining order, and protecting learning time. But the First Amendment still matters, especially when a student’s speech happens off campus, in a private message, or otherwise outside school programs. A recent federal case out of...

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ICE, Graphite Spyware, and the Fourth Amendment

ICE, Graphite Spyware, and the Fourth Amendment

Americans like to tell ourselves a comforting story about modern surveillance. If your message is encrypted, it is safe. If the government wants what is on your phone, it needs a warrant. If an agency crosses the line, the Constitution snaps back like a rubber band. That story is getting harder to...

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What Melania Trump’s Epstein Statement Really Demands

What Melania Trump’s Epstein Statement Really Demands

When powerful people get named anywhere near the Jeffrey Epstein story, the public reflex is predictable: someone is hiding something . That reflex is understandable. It is also dangerous. In a constitutional republic, outrage is not evidence, and vibes are not due process. That is why First Lady...

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Can the President Ignore Presidential Records Rules?

Can the President Ignore Presidential Records Rules?

Most of us only notice federal recordkeeping when something has gone wrong. A missing email. A deleted text. A phone call no one seems able to document. But records are not a minor administrative detail. They are the evidence that oversight and later review depend on. Without them, subpoenas,...

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Border Arrests and Real Warrants

Border Arrests and Real Warrants

The border is where Americans often assume the rules change. In some ways, they do. The government has broader authority at and near the nation’s entry points, especially for searches tied to immigration and customs enforcement. But border power still has edges. A legal question that can get lost...

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Should You Have to Pay to Read the Law?

Should You Have to Pay to Read the Law?

We talk about “the rule of law” the way people talk about gravity. Like it is a force of nature. Always there. Always working. Not something you have to maintain. But law is not gravity. Law is text. It is language. It is a set of instructions written by humans, enforced by humans, and...

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