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U.S. Constitution

The U.S. Constitution

Archival records, profiles, and educational resources since 1995.

Compelled Speech and the First Amendment

Compelled Speech and the First Amendment

The First Amendment is usually taught as a shield for speakers: you can criticize the government, publish unpopular ideas, and refuse to adopt an official viewpoint. But the Amendment has a second edge that matters just as much. The government generally cannot make you say what it wants you to say....

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The 24th Amendment and Poll Taxes

The 24th Amendment and Poll Taxes

You can learn a lot about a country by asking what it charges for. For decades, parts of the United States charged people to vote. Not as a fundraising gimmick, and not as a neutral administrative fee, but as a deliberate filter. If you could not pay, you did not participate. If you did not...

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The Origination Clause

The Origination Clause

There is a simple sentence in the Constitution that looks like it should settle a very modern fight: who gets to start the nation’s tax bills. It is called the Origination Clause. It lives in Article I, Section 7. And it says that “All Bills for raising Revenue shall originate in the House of...

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The Federal Public Defender System Explained

The Federal Public Defender System Explained

You can tell a lot about a justice system by what it does the moment the government accuses someone of a crime. In federal court, that moment often looks like this: a person stands before a judge for an initial appearance, the prosecutor outlines the charge, and the court turns to the defendant and...

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What Is a U.S. Attorney?

What Is a U.S. Attorney?

You have heard the phrase “the U.S. Attorney announced charges” so often it can sound like a single person somewhere in Washington decided to prosecute your local case. But a U.S. Attorney is not a roaming national prosecutor. A U.S. Attorney is the Justice Department’s chief federal...

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Federal Magistrate Judges

Federal Magistrate Judges

You might expect “judge” to mean one thing in federal court: a black robe, a lifetime appointment, and the power to decide the case. Then you open your summons or read a docket update and see a different title: United States Magistrate Judge . That is when the questions start. Is a magistrate...

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Public Forums and Time, Place, and Manner Rules

Public Forums and Time, Place, and Manner Rules

The First Amendment powerfully protects public speech. Everyone knows that. Except that in practice, the “in public” part does most of the work. A sidewalk is not a school hallway. A city park is not a courthouse lobby. A government-run comment page is not always a free-for-all bulletin board....

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Vagueness, Overbreadth, and the First Amendment

Vagueness, Overbreadth, and the First Amendment

Most First Amendment fights are framed as moral dramas. Hate speech versus tolerance. Disinformation versus truth. Protest versus order. But many cases turn on something far less cinematic and far more practical: the words in the law itself. Not what lawmakers meant . What they actually wrote ....

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Pardons, Commutations, and Reprieves

Pardons, Commutations, and Reprieves

When a president grants “clemency,” the headlines tend to flatten everything into one dramatic verb: pardoned . But Article II does not give the president a single magic eraser. It gives a toolkit, and each tool does something different to a conviction, a sentence, and the government’s power...

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Reasonable Expectation of Privacy and the Katz Test

Reasonable Expectation of Privacy and the Katz Test

You can read the Fourth Amendment ten times and never find the word “privacy.” What you will find is a promise about security: the people’s right to be secure against unreasonable searches and seizures. So how did “privacy” become the everyday shorthand for Fourth Amendment protection?...

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The Take Care Clause

The Take Care Clause

You will sometimes hear the presidency described as a job with two contradictory settings: “commander” and “caretaker.” The commander pushes policy. The caretaker runs the machinery of government. The Constitution captures part of that caretaker role in text. Article II requires that the...

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Strict Scrutiny, Intermediate Scrutiny, and Rational Basis

Strict Scrutiny, Intermediate Scrutiny, and Rational Basis

Constitutional arguments often sound moral. They can also sound historical. But in a courtroom, many constitutional fights turn on something that looks almost boring: the standard of review . That standard decides how hard a judge will press the government for an explanation. Some laws get the...

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When Birth Statistics Collide With Birthright Citizenship

When Birth Statistics Collide With Birthright Citizenship

Numbers can be polite. They sit on the page, they look neutral, and they do not raise their voice. But in the wrong argument, a number can land like a constitutional question mark. This piece is about what happens when births, border policy, and constitutional language collide. Not because one tidy...

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Birthright Citizenship and the Share-of-Births Question

Birthright Citizenship and the Share-of-Births Question

Debates over birthright citizenship often hinge on disputed estimates about how many U.S. births involve parents who are not permanent residents. Those claims can be politically potent even when the measurement is not consistent. Treat the premise carefully. The figures that circulate in public...

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The Shadow Docket Can Restrain Presidents

In many public debates, the Supreme Court’s “shadow docket” is used as a broad, sometimes imprecise label for emergency orders and short procedural rulings that can, in practice, change what the law looks like on the ground before the Court issues a full merits opinion. Critics often target...

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Birthright Citizenship: What It Means and What Follows

Birthright Citizenship: What It Means and What Follows

When people argue about birthright citizenship, they are often arguing about something bigger: who counts as “in” the political community, and when? It is a topic where it helps to be precise. The stakes feel enormous, and the legal rules are more specific than most political slogans suggest....

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Supreme Court Takes Up Case on Green Card Holders Charged With Crimes

Supreme Court Takes Up Case on Green Card Holders Charged With Crimes

The Supreme Court has agreed to hear an immigration case involving lawful permanent residents, often called green card holders, who have been charged with crimes. Beyond that basic frame, the central legal issue could take more than one form. Depending on what the justices agreed to review, the...

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Birthright Citizenship and the Jurisdiction Question

Birthright Citizenship and the Jurisdiction Question

Some estimates are sometimes cited in public discussions suggesting that a share of U.S. births involve parents who are either in the United States unlawfully or present on a temporary legal status. Those estimates can vary depending on definitions and methods, and there is not a single universally...

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Birthright Citizenship and the 14th Amendment

Birthright Citizenship and the 14th Amendment

New demographic estimates can land like a spark in a dry field, especially when they touch the Constitution. Before you let a viral number do the thinking for you, it helps to step back. The core civic questions exist even without a headline statistic : who is a citizen at birth, what...

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A Digital Constitution Archive Worth Building

A Digital Constitution Archive Worth Building

Every few years we watch the same national ritual: a public official holds up the Constitution like a prop, a pundit invokes “what the framers intended,” and a classroom of teenagers asks the most honest question of all. “Where does it actually say that?” That question is the beating heart...

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