Logo
U.S. Constitution

The U.S. Constitution

Archival records, profiles, and educational resources since 1995.

Lindsey Graham, Ukraine, and the Drone Factory Strike: What the Viral Death Rumors Are Really About

Lindsey Graham, Ukraine, and the Drone Factory Strike: What the Viral Death Rumors Are Really About

The Constitution does not protect us from rumors. It protects our right to speak, to publish, and to argue about public events. And sometimes that freedom produces a uniquely modern civic problem: a high-speed narrative that feels like a revelation before it becomes a fact. That is what happened on...

Read more →
Nancy Mace and the Graham Seat: The Special Election, the Appointment, and the House Math

Nancy Mace and the Graham Seat: The Special Election, the Appointment, and the House Math

When a U.S. Senate seat suddenly opens, the story people think they are following is usually a personality story: who wants it, who can win it, who is trending on social media. The story they are actually following is a constitutional one. A Senate vacancy is where the lofty machinery of federalism...

Read more →
Why John McCain Is Trending Again

Why John McCain Is Trending Again

John McCain is trending again, and no, it is not because he suddenly reentered American politics from the beyond. McCain is trending because he has become a prop in a much newer fight: a fresh wave of anger at Senator Lindsey Graham that hit X on July 12, 2026 and used McCain as the moral measuring...

Read more →
South Carolina Trend: Lindsey Graham Death Reports and the Senate Vacancy Fight

South Carolina Trend: Lindsey Graham Death Reports and the Senate Vacancy Fight

South Carolina is trending for a reason that hits the American system right where it’s most sensitive: legitimacy. When the public cannot tell whether a sitting U.S. senator is alive, hospitalized, or deceased, the questions that follow are not just personal. They are constitutional, procedural,...

Read more →
Why a Judge Ended the Proud Boys Jan. 6 Case, Constitutionally

Why a Judge Ended the Proud Boys Jan. 6 Case, Constitutionally

The short version is straightforward, and it is procedural, not mystical: when presidential clemency documents are filed in a federal criminal case after conviction, the court can enter an order implementing them . That kind of order requires the court to stop enforcing whatever parts of the...

Read more →
Can a Senator Serve While Seriously Ill?

Can a Senator Serve While Seriously Ill?

A U.S. senator can be seriously ill, miss weeks or months of Senate business, and still remain a senator. That is not a loophole. It is a design choice rooted in two ideas that sit in tension with each other: the Senate is empowered to govern its own membership, and the public is expected to supply...

Read more →
Who Pays to Fix the White House?

Who Pays to Fix the White House?

The White House is one of the few places in America that is simultaneously a private residence, a high-security workplace, a museum, a ceremonial stage, and a federal asset maintained through formal government channels. That mix is why today’s viral claims about “fixing” or “restoring”...

Read more →
Can the President Order Military Strikes Without Congress?

Can the President Order Military Strikes Without Congress?

When a president publicly signals that military strikes are prepared, it triggers a very American question: can the President actually order military force without Congress? The Constitution splits war powers on purpose. Article II makes the president commander in chief. Article I gives Congress...

Read more →
Campaign Spending, Bribery, and Foreign Influence: What Federal Election Law Allows

Campaign Spending, Bribery, and Foreign Influence: What Federal Election Law Allows

Every election cycle, someone calls a big outside spending blitz “legalized bribery.” The phrase is emotionally satisfying because it captures a real discomfort: money can buy access, attention, and time. But in U.S. law, bribery is a narrow crime, campaign spending is a heavily regulated...

Read more →
What’s in Trump-Backed Housing Bill?

What’s in Trump-Backed Housing Bill?

There are two ways a bill becomes a national argument. The first is the normal way: people fight about what the bill does. The second is the civics-nerd way: people suddenly realize they are watching the machinery of lawmaking operate in real time. The current spike in interest around the...

Read more →
Why Rubio Is Trending: Green Cards, Pardons, and Who Controls Immigration

Why Rubio Is Trending: Green Cards, Pardons, and Who Controls Immigration

When a politician trends, it is rarely because the public suddenly discovered a love for statutory citations. “Secretary Rubio” surged on X because two immigration-enforcement storylines hit the algorithm on the same day, and both were framed as a simple morality play: remove the...

Read more →
Trump’s Housing-Bill Standoff, Explained

Trump’s Housing-Bill Standoff, Explained

When a bill “passes Congress,” most Americans assume the hard part is over. The cameras move on, the headlines declare victory, and the president signs the thing like a ceremonial notary. President Donald Trump is reminding everyone that the last step is not a formality. On July 10, 2026, he...

Read more →
Can the Senate Be Abolished?

Can the Senate Be Abolished?

Every few years, a proposal resurfaces that sounds like the ultimate political shortcut: get rid of the U.S. Senate, streamline Congress into a single democratic body, and make government “work” again. This time, the idea is not just a think-tank hypothetical. In the Democratic Socialists of...

Read more →
Do You Know Where Your Birth Certificate Is?

Do You Know Where Your Birth Certificate Is?

You can feel a quiet shift happening in American elections. It is not always announced with a dramatic speech or a sweeping constitutional amendment. Sometimes it arrives as a form you cannot complete, a deadline you did not know existed, or a document you cannot find. Ari Berman, a longtime voting...

Read more →
When Officials Obstruct ICE: What Accountability Looks Like

When Officials Obstruct ICE: What Accountability Looks Like

Courthouses are supposed to be boring in the best way: rules, routines, and predictability. That is why this case has landed with such force. A Wisconsin judge was convicted in federal court of felony obstruction after prosecutors said she deliberately interfered with federal immigration officers...

Read more →
What Is the SAVE Act? Voter ID, the Filibuster, and the Constitution

What Is the SAVE Act? Voter ID, the Filibuster, and the Constitution

The SAVE Act is one of those bills that sounds simple in headlines and gets complicated the moment you ask a constitutional question: Who gets to set the rules for federal elections? Right now, the news hook is procedural and political. The bill’s prospects shift when individual senators are...

Read more →
How DOJ Lawsuits Try to Knock Out State Gun Laws

How DOJ Lawsuits Try to Knock Out State Gun Laws

When most people picture a Second Amendment fight, they picture a gun owner suing a state. But gun-law litigation can also run the other direction: the federal government, through the Department of Justice, asking federal courts to block a state restriction it believes violates the U.S....

Read more →
SAVE Voter Verification: What It Is and Who Can Vote

SAVE Voter Verification: What It Is and Who Can Vote

The headline makes it sound like a single switch got flipped: a federal judge ordered the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) to restore voter verification features tied to the SAVE system. But the story underneath is older and more structural. It is about what the federal government can provide,...

Read more →
Most Patriotic States in 2026

Most Patriotic States in 2026

Patriotism is one of those words Americans use like everyone already agrees on what it means. Love of country. Pride in the flag. A lump in your throat at the anthem. But in a constitutional republic, patriotism is not just an emotion. It is a set of habits. The boring, sturdy kind. Showing up....

Read more →
Budget Reconciliation and the SAVE AMERICA Act: What Congress Can Do Under the Constitution

Budget Reconciliation and the SAVE AMERICA Act: What Congress Can Do Under the Constitution

When a political figure calls for “Reconciliation 3.0” (shorthand for a third major budget-reconciliation package this Congress) and pairs it with a sweeping-sounding bill like the “SAVE AMERICA Act,” the immediate question people ask is procedural: Can Congress really do that quickly, and...

Read more →