The U.S. Constitution
Archival records, profiles, and educational resources since 1995.

Trump’s ‘Anti-Weaponization’ Fund: Constitutional Fix or New Problem?
A new Justice Department move is drawing intense criticism and, understandably, a lot of public confusion. The department has announced a $1.776 billion “anti-weaponization” fund meant to compensate people who say they are victims of “lawfare and weaponization” by the federal government....
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Supreme Court Sends Two Voting Rights Act Cases Back Down
When people picture the Supreme Court at work, they often imagine a dramatic, final decision: a big ruling, a clear winner, and a clear loser. But some of the Court’s most consequential moves are quieter. This week, the justices issued brief orders in two Voting Rights Act cases that did not...
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The Supreme Court’s Worst Decisions (and Why They Never Really Die)
We treat Supreme Court decisions like tombstones. Chiseled in stone. Final. Settled. But the Court’s worst moments do not stay buried. Even when a case is “overruled,” the reasoning that powered it can linger in the legal bloodstream, ready to reappear in a new body with a new name. So when...
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A DOJ Addendum That Would Block IRS Audits of Trump
There are plenty of ways a legal settlement can end a dispute. What is far harder to justify, in a system built on equal treatment, is a settlement term that appears to place one person and his businesses outside the reach of routine tax enforcement for years already on file. That is the concern...
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What Is RICO?
People say “they’re going to hit him with RICO” the way they say “checkmate.” Like it is a single move that ends the game. In real life, RICO is not a magic word. It is a statute with a specific job: to let prosecutors and private plaintiffs target an enterprise by proving a pattern of...
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What Is the RICO Act?
People say “they got hit with RICO” the way they say “they got indicted.” Like it is just another charge. It is not. The Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act, better known as the RICO Act, is a federal law that lets prosecutors treat a pattern of crimes as one larger offense...
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Midterm Elections in the United States
Midterm elections are the regular national elections held every two years. When they happen halfway through a president’s four-year term, they are commonly called “the midterms.” They do not decide the presidency, but they can quickly reshape the rest of the federal government in a single...
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What Are RICO Charges?
People talk about “getting hit with RICO” like it is a single charge, a single statute, and a single kind of defendant. It is not. RICO, short for the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act , is a framework that lets prosecutors treat a pattern of crimes as one connected case when...
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What Is DACA?
You have probably heard DACA described as “amnesty,” “a pathway to citizenship,” or “an executive order that Congress should have passed itself.” All three are common political talking points. None of them is quite right. DACA stands for Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals . It is a...
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What Is Dark Money?
“Dark money” sounds like a spy movie phrase. In American politics, it is something more ordinary and more influential: money spent to shape elections or public policy where the true donors are not disclosed to the public . That last part is the key. Dark money is not necessarily illegal money....
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What Is an Arraignment Hearing?
An arraignment hearing is the moment the criminal justice system stops being a blur of handcuffs, paperwork, and holding cells and becomes a case with a name, a number, and constitutional rules attached. It is often the first time a judge addresses you directly after an arrest or after charges are...
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What Is a Midterm Election in the USA?
Midterm elections are the national elections held halfway through a president’s four year term. Federal elections happen every even numbered year because House members serve two year terms. But midterms specifically are the even year that falls in the middle of a presidency, which means they...
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What Is an Arraignment?
An arraignment is the moment the criminal justice system stops being a blur of flashing lights and holding cells and becomes something more formal. It is a court hearing where you are formally told what you are accused of and asked to enter a plea. In many jurisdictions, it is the first time you...
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DACA and the Constitution
DACA is one of those acronyms that somehow became a stand-in for an entire national argument. It can mean paperwork, protection, identity, and a political flashpoint all at once. But constitutionally, it means something more specific and more fragile: a major immigration policy created by the...
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Virginia’s Assault Firearm Ban and the Post-Bruen Court Test
Virginia’s new “assault firearm” law is now the subject of a federal constitutional challenge, and it arrives at a moment when Second Amendment litigation follows a very different roadmap than it did just a few years ago. In New York State Rifle & Pistol Association v. Bruen (2022), the...
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Trump Targets Thomas Massie
Every so often, American politics gives us a clean civics lesson. Not a tidy one. A real one. The kind with sharp elbows and clear consequences. In Kentucky, Representative Thomas Massie is staring down exactly that kind of lesson. With the Republican primary set for Tuesday, President Donald Trump...
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Graham’s Warning to GOP Dissenters
Political parties are coalitions until they are not. At some point, a coalition stops being a loose agreement about goals and becomes a discipline system. Rewards flow to those who help the leader. Penalties land on those who do not. Sen. Lindsey Graham suggested the Republican Party is operating...
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Supreme Court Blocks Va. Democrats’ Bid to Restore Voter-Approved Maps
The Supreme Court issued a one-sentence emergency order that ends Virginia Democrats’ bid to revive voter-approved redistricting changes . The practical effect is straightforward: the 2021 congressional map stays in place , maintaining a narrow GOP edge. The justices offered no explanation and no...
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What Is RICO?
RICO is one of those laws people name-drop like it is a magic word. “They should hit him with RICO.” “That is a RICO case.” “RICO is for the mob.” Sometimes they are right. Often they are not. RICO stands for the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act , a federal statute...
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What Are RICO Charges?
You have probably heard the phrase “they got hit with RICO” said like it is a supercharge, a legal cheat code, or a one-way ticket to prison. But RICO is not a single crime. It is a framework Congress created to prosecute something that ordinary criminal law often struggles to describe: a group...
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