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

The Roberts Court Won’t Stop Dismantling the Voting Rights Act
It is one thing for the Supreme Court to narrow a landmark statute in a signed opinion after full briefing, argument, and a public explanation. It is another thing entirely to do it in the dark, by unsigned order, on the emergency docket, with a few paragraphs that function like a shrug. That is...
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WNBA Weighs ‘USA 250’ All-Star Patches After Slavery Objection
The WNBA is weighing whether to add a “USA 250” patch to uniforms for the league’s All-Star Game on July 25 in Chicago , hosted by the Chicago Sky . It is a small piece of fabric that has turned into a big civic argument: what does it mean to commemorate the nation’s 250th anniversary when...
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SCOTUS Passed on the Hunter Biden Laptop Case
Some Supreme Court moves arrive with a bang. Others arrive with a shrug, and that shrug can still matter. The Court declined to take up a case tied to the Hunter Biden laptop . There is no blockbuster merits ruling to parse, no sweeping new test announced. But a pass is still a decision. It still...
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The Court Just Made Its Voting Rights Damage Worse
Here is the question I wish every civics student would ask before we start arguing about parties, personalities, or punditry: What is the Supreme Court for ? If your answer is “to enforce the rule of law,” then Tuesday evening’s unsigned shadow-docket order in the Alabama redistricting fight...
Read more →U.S. and U.K. Clash After Teen Dies in Handcuffs
A painful case out of Southampton, England is now reverberating well beyond the U.K. After 18-year-old Henry Nowak was stabbed and later died while in police custody, senior U.S. officials publicly condemned what happened. Downing Street, in turn, pushed back, warning outsiders not to inflame...
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Thomas Scolds Court’s Priorities After Death-Row Ruling
One of the hardest things to explain about the Supreme Court is that it is not required to take most cases. The justices choose their docket, and that choice can be as consequential as any final ruling. This week, Justice Clarence Thomas issued a pointed dissent that was less about the legal...
Read more →GOP Senators Condemn Platner as Democrats Dodge Questions
In the final stretch before Maine’s Democratic Senate primary on Tuesday, the national conversation around one candidacy has become less about policy and more about basic fitness for public office. Republican senators are speaking plainly about why they believe Democrat Graham Platner should not...
Read more →Visa Bulletin and Priority Dates Explained
The Visa Bulletin looks simple until you actually need it. A grid of dates. A few cryptic letters. Two different charts that do not always move together. And the quiet, unnerving truth that your place in line for a green card is not just about eligibility. It is about arithmetic, quotas, and when...
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H-1B Visa Explained
The H-1B visa sits at a uniquely American intersection: business demand, immigration law, and a system built to ration opportunity through paperwork. It is the most widely recognized “specialty occupation” work visa, and it is also one of the most misunderstood. People talk about it like a...
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Mail and Wire Fraud Explained
Mail fraud and wire fraud are the federal government’s legal Swiss Army knife for deception that crosses a mailbox or an internet connection. They show up in investment scams, fake invoices, corrupt contracting, bogus charities, identity theft rings, and corporate coverups. The reason is simple:...
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Obstruction of Justice, Explained
In the movies, obstruction of justice usually looks like a panicked cover-up. A shredded file. A hush-money exchange. A witness who suddenly “can’t remember.” In federal court, it is less cinematic and more structural. Obstruction is not a single crime. It is a family of statutes that punish...
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Federal Conspiracy Charges Explained
Federal conspiracy is one of those charges that sounds like it belongs in spy movies, but it shows up in everyday indictments: fraud, drugs, public corruption, immigration, protest cases, even market manipulation. It is also one of the government’s most flexible tools, because it lets prosecutors...
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VAWA Self-Petition Explained
You can live inside an abusive home and still be trapped by paperwork. That is the leverage an abuser often counts on. The threat is not always a raised hand. Sometimes it is a sentence delivered calmly across a kitchen table: I will get you deported. The Violence Against Women Act, usually...
Read more →T Visa Explained: Protection for Trafficking Survivors
Many immigration categories are anchored in work, family, or a fear of persecution. The T nonimmigrant visa is anchored in something else: what it means to survive human trafficking, and then try to rebuild a life while the criminal justice system moves forward. Congress created T status in the...
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U Visa Explained: Immigration Relief for Crime Victims
You can be the victim of a serious crime in the United States and still be treated, in practice, like you are the problem. The U visa was created to change that. It is a humanitarian immigration status for certain crime victims who have suffered substantial harm and who are willing to help law...
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Primary Elections vs. General Elections
In American politics, we talk about “the election” like it is a single moment. It is not. It is a process, and in many places it has two big gates. The first gate is often a primary election or caucus . In the classic partisan model, this is where Democrats, Republicans, and other parties...
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Six Primary Night Signals That Could Shape the Midterms
Primary nights are supposed to be about nominees. In reality, they are stress tests for political narratives. They reveal which candidates can survive scrutiny, which factions can coordinate, and which signals still move voters when the rubber meets the ballot box. The latest round of midterm...
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Can a Protest Flag Be Banned?
Here is the uncomfortable truth we keep rediscovering in American life: political speech is often ugly, ambiguous, and deliberately provocative. A protest flag is not designed to be soothing. It is designed to be seen. So the constitutional question is not whether a protest flag is in good taste....
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Appeals Court Blocks Pentagon From Removing Trans Troops
The Constitution does not contain a “military fairness” clause. It does not mention the armed forces at all, except to give Congress and the President overlapping powers to create them, fund them, and command them. And yet, some of the most consequential questions about equal protection, due...
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Iran Strikes Kuwait Airport as Trump Says Talks Continue
When a ceasefire is real, civilians can feel it. Planes take off. Markets unclench. Families stop checking their phones every few minutes. When a ceasefire is mostly words, it looks like this: Iran launches a missile and drone attack targeting U.S. military bases in Kuwait, the incoming weapons are...
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