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U.S. Constitution

The U.S. Constitution

Archival records, profiles, and educational resources since 1995.

Presidential Signing Statements Explained

Presidential Signing Statements Explained

You know the scene: Congress passes a bill, cameras click, pens line up on the desk, and the president signs a new law into existence. Then comes the part most people never see. Alongside the signature, the White House often releases a written statement explaining what the president thinks the law...

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Brady Material and the Brady Rule

Brady Material and the Brady Rule

“Brady material” sounds like a technical term, like something you request on a form and receive in a neatly numbered packet. In real life, it is messier and much more constitutional law than paperwork. The Brady rule is the Supreme Court’s name for a due process command: the government cannot...

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Standing to Sue in Federal Court

Standing to Sue in Federal Court

People talk about “taking it to federal court” like it is a civic superpower. The Constitution disagrees. Federal judges are not empowered to referee every political fight or correct every government mistake. They exist to resolve cases and controversies , and that phrase in Article III has...

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The Right to a Speedy Trial Explained

The Right to a Speedy Trial Explained

The Sixth Amendment says that “in all criminal prosecutions, the accused shall enjoy the right to a speedy and public trial.” That guarantee does two things at once. It promises a safeguard against a government that could otherwise lock someone up, leave charges hanging, and wait until the...

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The Confrontation Clause Explained

The Confrontation Clause Explained

The Sixth Amendment promises a criminal defendant the right “to be confronted with the witnesses against him.” That sentence sounds straightforward until you see how modern cases are actually built. Many prosecutions are not just people testifying in person. They are recordings, lab results,...

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The Exclusionary Rule Explained

The Exclusionary Rule Explained

The exclusionary rule is one of those legal ideas that feels backwards the first time you hear it: sometimes a court will keep reliable evidence out of a criminal trial because the government gathered it the wrong way. That sounds like a technicality. It is not. It is a constitutional pressure...

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Senate Advice and Consent

Senate Advice and Consent

“Advice and consent” is one of those constitutional phrases that sounds like a polite formality, like the Senate is gently nodding along while the President runs the executive branch. In practice, it is one of the Senate’s sharpest tools. It is the mechanism that decides who becomes a Supreme...

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How Congress Overrides a Presidential Veto

How Congress Overrides a Presidential Veto

The President can stop a bill with a veto. But the Constitution does not treat that veto like a royal command. It treats it like a speed bump, one that becomes a wall unless Congress can prove something important: that the bill has overwhelming support even after the President has objected. That is...

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The Pocket Veto Explained

The Pocket Veto Explained

The Constitution gives the President a familiar choice when Congress sends a bill to the White House: sign it into law or veto it and send it back. But there is a third option that can feel counterintuitive. The President can do nothing, and if Congress has adjourned in the right way at the right...

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Natural-Born Citizen and Presidential Eligibility

Natural-Born Citizen and Presidential Eligibility

The Constitution sets only a few eligibility rules for the presidency, and one phrase does most of the work: “natural born Citizen.” It is a requirement everyone recognizes and for which almost no one can point to a single, controlling definition. The result is predictable. A short clause...

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Electoral Count Act: How Congress Certifies Electoral Votes

Electoral Count Act: How Congress Certifies Electoral Votes

Americans talk about presidential elections like they end on election night. Constitutionally and legally, they do not. The public vote drives which slate of electors gets appointed in each state, and those duly appointed electors determine the winner by casting electoral votes. The public-facing...

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Writ of Certiorari

Writ of Certiorari

You will hear it in headlines like it is a verdict: “The Supreme Court declined to hear the case.” But what the Court usually declines is not the merits. It declines the invitation . That invitation is called a writ of certiorari , often shortened to cert . It is the procedural gatekeeper that...

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When DHS Revokes Status by Email

When DHS Revokes Status by Email

There is a certain kind of government power that feels almost magical when it is aimed at someone else. A form gets updated. A policy shifts. An email goes out. And a life that was lawful yesterday becomes deportable today. That is the core tension in a new federal court ruling out of Boston, where...

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USPS Weighs Letting Americans Mail Handguns

USPS Weighs Letting Americans Mail Handguns

The U.S. Postal Service is preparing to make a major change to its firearm mailing standards: a proposed rule that would let “lawful handguns to be mailed” under terms similar to those that already apply to rifles and shotguns. If finalized, it would mark a significant shift in how a federally...

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Trump Removes Attorney General Pam Bondi, Names Todd Blanche Acting AG

Trump Removes Attorney General Pam Bondi, Names Todd Blanche Acting AG

President Donald Trump announced Thursday that Attorney General Pam Bondi is leaving the Justice Department, a sudden shakeup that places Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche in the role of acting attorney general. Trump framed the change as a transition, writing that Bondi would be moving to “a...

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Trump, Bondi, and the DOJ: What a Leadership Swap Means for Your Rights

Trump, Bondi, and the DOJ: What a Leadership Swap Means for Your Rights

When people ask whether the Justice Department is “independent,” I usually answer with a question: independent from whom ? The Constitution does not create an independent Justice Department. It creates a President who must “take Care that the Laws be faithfully executed.” The DOJ is part of...

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Trump Officials Born to Immigrant Parents

Trump Officials Born to Immigrant Parents

When people debate birthright citizenship , the conversation can feel abstract, like a courtroom exercise about commas and clauses. But the Constitution’s promise of citizenship at birth has always had a very practical side: it determines who is recognized as an American from day one, including...

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Pam Bondi Fired as Attorney General

Pam Bondi Fired as Attorney General

Attorney General Pam Bondi has been fired by President Donald Trump, a jarring reminder that in the modern presidency, the Justice Department can become both a legal institution and a political mirror. The White House has confirmed that Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche will step in as acting...

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Judge Blocks Trump Order Targeting NPR and PBS Funding

Judge Blocks Trump Order Targeting NPR and PBS Funding

For years, Americans have argued about whether public broadcasting deserves taxpayer support. That is a policy fight. On March 31, a federal court said the Trump White House tried to turn it into something else entirely: a constitutional violation. In a ruling that goes straight to the First...

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Judge Halts White House Ballroom Until Congress Authorizes Funding

Judge Halts White House Ballroom Until Congress Authorizes Funding

A federal judge has ordered construction on the proposed White House ballroom to pause unless and until Congress authorizes the project, turning a high-profile renovation fight into a civics lesson about who controls federal building decisions and, more importantly, federal dollars. The order...

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