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

Presidential Impoundment and the Power of the Purse
Everyone knows what a government shutdown looks like: closed offices, delayed paychecks, a deadline clock on cable news. Impoundment is quieter. It often looks like nothing. The law says money is available. Congress appropriates for a purpose and expects execution. The executive branch, for any...
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The Voting Rights Act and the Constitution
Most Americans can name at least one voting rights amendment. Fewer can explain why one of the most powerful voting rights protections in modern history is not an amendment at all. The Voting Rights Act of 1965 is a statute, passed by Congress and signed by President Lyndon B. Johnson. It is not...
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Who Declares War Under the Constitution?
Everyone learns the civics version early: Congress declares war, the President fights it. Then you grow up, watch the United States enter major conflicts without a formal declaration of war, and realize the neat division is real, but incomplete. The Constitution does assign war-related powers. It...
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Federal Rulemaking 101
Most Americans learn the three branches in school and then spend the rest of their lives living under rules they never voted on directly. That sounds like a contradiction until you learn the quiet machinery that sits between Congress’s broad statutes and the real world: federal rulemaking . When...
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The 14th Amendment’s Insurrection Clause (Section 3)
You can read Section 3 of the Fourteenth Amendment in about thirty seconds. You can argue about it for the rest of your life. It is often called the Insurrection Clause , and it does something unusually specific for the Constitution. It does not create a right, fund a program, or outline a branch...
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How the Federal Election Commission Works
Most Americans encounter the Federal Election Commission only when a headline breaks. A super PAC drops a seven-figure ad buy. A candidate gets accused of “coordination.” A complaint lands, and someone says the FEC “can’t do anything” because it is “deadlocked.” All of that is true...
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Can Congress Change the Size of the Supreme Court?
Nine justices feels like a constitutional fact, the way two senators per state does. But it is not. The U.S. Constitution creates “one supreme Court.” It never says how many people must sit on it. The number nine comes from a law Congress passed, and Congress could pass a different law. That...
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Selective Service and the Draft
“The draft” is one of those phrases that can make American politics feel instantly existential. It raises a blunt question: can the federal government compel you to fight? Constitutionally, the answer has long been yes. But the practical reality in 2026 is narrower and more bureaucratic than...
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Citizens United v. FEC Explained
People talk about Citizens United like it flipped a single switch and suddenly “money became speech.” But the decision is narrower and stranger than the slogan. It began with a political documentary, turned into a constitutional showdown about who gets to speak during an election season, and...
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D.C. Home Rule Explained
Washington, D.C. feels like it should work like any other American city. It has neighborhoods, public schools, police, courts, taxes, and a mayor who can lose an election for potholes just like anywhere else. But constitutionally, D.C. is not “anywhere else.” It is the seat of the national...
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What the Solicitor General Does
Many Americans can name the Attorney General. Fewer can name the person who does some of the government’s most delicate legal work: walking into the Supreme Court and telling nine justices what the United States thinks the law means. That person is the Solicitor General, usually shortened to the...
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Faithless Electors and Elector Pledge Laws
Most Americans think the presidential election ends on Election Night. Legally, it does not. In most states, voters are not directly voting for President in a constitutional sense. They are choosing among slates of people called electors that are tied to each candidate or party ticket under state...
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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” 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
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 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 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 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
“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
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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