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

Is the AR-15 Constitutionally Protected?
The Second Amendment debate has a bad habit of turning into a shouting match about modern politics instead of a serious argument about constitutional limits. This week, Assistant Attorney General for Civil Rights Harmeet Dhillon tried to drag it back to first principles, at least in the legal...
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The National Popular Vote End Run
For most Americans, the Electoral College is like a fuse box in the basement. You do not think about it until the lights flicker. But in the last few elections, the flicker has become a strobe, and now a growing bloc of states is trying to rewire the system without touching the Constitution at all....
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Trump’s Truth Social Blitz and the Politics of Sacred Imagery
President Trump used Truth Social the way some presidents used the Oval Office microphone: to define enemies, project command, and compress complicated disputes into sharable certainty. This week’s flare-ups moved on two tracks at once, a public dispute with Pope Leo XIV and a backlash over an...
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The EPA Case That Could Revive Nondelegation
Congress passes a law. An agency fills in the operational details. The public feels the impact. And somehow, no one can quite identify the moment when elected lawmakers made the big choice. That, in plain English, is the constitutional itch behind a new push to get the Supreme Court to take a case...
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Kentucky’s Gun-Maker Shield and the Price of Lawsuits
Kentucky is in the middle of a familiar American argument: who gets to set the rules when a national controversy lands on a statehouse desk? This time the spark is HB 78 , a bill the legislature passed and Gov. Andy Beshear vetoed on April 6, 2026 . The National Association for Gun Rights is urging...
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When a Judge Bans You From Saying Someone’s Name
It is hard to think of a more sweeping speech restriction than this: a court order telling a person to stop “publicly writing, printing, or speaking” another person’s name. That is not a metaphor. It is the kind of command that reaches into ordinary civic life, where we argue about...
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SLAPP Suits and Anti-SLAPP Laws Explained
You can sue someone for defamation. You can sue over a broken contract. In practice, you can file a lot of lawsuits if you can pay a filing fee and draft a complaint. But that does not mean you can file anything without consequence. Pleading standards apply. Some claims require pre-suit steps like...
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The Privacy Act of 1974 Explained
You can spend your whole life hearing that you have a “right to privacy,” and still be surprised by what the federal government can record about you, keep about you, and share about you. The Privacy Act of 1974 is one of the main federal statutes that keeps the government from treating your...
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How Independent Redistricting Commissions Work
Redistricting is one of the few government actions that can change your political reality without changing a single voter’s mind. One set of lines can turn a competitive state into a safe one, protect incumbents for a decade, and quietly decide which communities get listened to and which ones get...
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AUMF Explained
America has a constitutional switch for war. It is supposed to click in Congress. That is the design. But it has never been a perfect on off system. Presidents have long argued that the Commander in Chief role includes some ability to use force quickly, especially to repel attacks, protect U.S....
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Probation vs Parole
Probation and parole get treated like interchangeable words in everyday conversation. They are not. They sit in different places in the criminal justice pipeline, they come from different legal decisions, and they carry different assumptions about what the government is doing when it supervises...
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Dark Money and 501(c)(4) Spending in Elections
“Dark money” is one of those phrases that sounds like it should have a definition carved into federal law. It does not. More precisely, there is no single statutory definition used across federal campaign-finance law . Instead, it is a common shorthand used by journalists, watchdog groups, and...
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Mail-In Voting and Absentee Ballots
Mail voting feels simple until you cross a state line. In some states, you have to ask for a ballot and provide a reason. In others, eligible voters on the active registration list are sent a ballot automatically (and “active” vs “inactive” status can matter). Some states count a ballot if...
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Campaign Contribution Limits and Disclosure
Most Americans have a gut-level sense that campaign money is regulated. There are “limits,” there are “PACs,” and somewhere in the background the Federal Election Commission is supposed to be watching the books. All of that is true. It is also incomplete. Federal campaign finance law is...
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Federal Sentencing Guidelines Explained
Federal sentencing has a reputation for being mechanical. Plug the crime into a formula, out comes a prison range, and everyone pretends the number was inevitable. Reality is more complicated, and more human. The federal system does use a structured framework called the U.S. Sentencing Guidelines ....
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How Supreme Court Oral Arguments Work
Supreme Court oral argument is the part of a case most people can picture: nine justices on a bench, a single lectern, and lawyers trying to answer questions without saying the one sentence that sinks their side. But what the public sees as the event is, for the Court, a very specific tool. Oral...
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How Midterm Elections Work
Midterm elections often function as the country’s constitutional pressure valve. They happen in the middle of a president’s four-year term, and they can quietly rewrite what the federal government is capable of doing for the next two years. People often describe midterms as a “referendum”...
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Senate Leadership: Majority Leader, Minority Leader, and Whips
The U.S. Senate is often described as a chamber of individual lawmakers, each with one vote and the same formal standing as a senator. That is true in the basic sense. In practice, the Senate runs on leadership. Not because leaders can order senators around, but because someone has to decide what...
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The RICO Act Explained
You have probably heard RICO described as the law for mob bosses. It is often framed that way. But RICO is not just a “mob law.” It is a charging tool, built to connect the dots between people, crimes, money, and the structure that makes the crimes repeatable. RICO stands for the Racketeer...
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The Contract Clause Explained
The Constitution has plenty to say about what Congress cannot do. But Article I, Section 10 is where the Founders turned around and aimed a few hard limits at the states. One of those limits is blunt: “No State shall… pass any… Law impairing the Obligation of Contracts.” At first glance,...
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