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U.S. Constitution

The U.S. Constitution

Archival records, profiles, and educational resources since 1995.

Writ of Mandamus Explained

Writ of Mandamus Explained

In civics class, we learn that courts interpret the law. In real life, courts sometimes do something more forceful: they order the government to act . That tool is called a writ of mandamus . It is not a routine motion and not a shortcut for people who are frustrated with bureaucracy. It is an...

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Criminal Statutes of Limitations

Criminal Statutes of Limitations

You can think of a criminal statute of limitations as the law’s answer to a hard question: how long is too long to wait before the government files charges? Most people assume the answer is simple. A crime happens, the clock starts, the state either charges in time or loses its chance. That is...

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Immigration Removal Proceedings, Explained

Immigration Removal Proceedings, Explained

“Deportation” is the word most Americans use. The legal system mostly uses a different one: removal . That shift in vocabulary matters because it points to something bigger. Removal is not a single event. It is a process , built from notice requirements, hearings, burdens of proof, and appeals...

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How the Federal Court System Works

How the Federal Court System Works

People talk about “going to federal court” like it is one place with one set of rules. It is not. It is a ladder, and where you start on that ladder determines almost everything: what evidence matters, which judges you face, what you can appeal, and how hard it will be to get the Supreme Court...

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Burden of Proof: Criminal vs. Civil

Burden of Proof: Criminal vs. Civil

You can watch two trials about the same event, hear many of the same facts, and see two different outcomes. Not because one judge “went easy” or one jury was smarter. But because the law asked different questions. The difference is the burden of proof , meaning how sure the factfinder must be...

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Attorney-Client Privilege Explained

Attorney-Client Privilege Explained

Attorney-client privilege is one of the most powerful ideas in American law, and one of the most misunderstood. People hear “privileged” and assume it means anything you tell a lawyer becomes legally untouchable. It does not. The real rule is narrower and more interesting: the law protects...

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Defamation Law Explained

Defamation Law Explained

Defamation law sits in one of the Constitution’s most misunderstood pressure points: the place where the First Amendment’s promise of free expression meets a person’s ability to protect their name. Many people assume the First Amendment means you can say anything without consequence. Others...

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Article IV Privileges and Immunities Clause

Article IV Privileges and Immunities Clause

Most constitutional fights look like a vertical power struggle: you versus the government. Article IV’s Privileges and Immunities Clause is different. It is a horizontal fight, one state versus another, with individual Americans caught in the middle. The basic idea is simple: if you are an...

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The Full Faith and Credit Clause Explained

The Full Faith and Credit Clause Explained

The Constitution is famously skeptical of concentrated power. It splits authority between branches, between federal and state governments, and between 50 separate state legal systems. That raises an obvious problem: what keeps the United States from acting like 50 neighboring countries, each...

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How a Criminal Arraignment Works

How a Criminal Arraignment Works

Arraignment sounds like a technical waypoint in the criminal process, but it is one of the most consequential first moments in a case. It is the court’s way of putting the accusation on the record, making sure the defendant knows what the government says they did, and requiring the court to...

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Discharge Petitions in the House Explained

Discharge Petitions in the House Explained

The House of Representatives is built to run on leadership control. The Speaker, the majority party, and the Rules Committee decide what gets time, what gets amendments, and what never sees daylight. That control is not just a rules trick. It is also the product of member incentives, party teams,...

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Conference Committees Explained

Conference Committees Explained

One essential requirement of Congress’s lawmaking process is this: the House and the Senate have to pass the same bill text . That sounds simple until you remember Congress is two separate institutions with different rules, different political incentives, and often different versions of what the...

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Congressional Quorum Rules Explained

Congressional Quorum Rules Explained

Congress can debate for hours, deliver soaring speeches, and flood the Congressional Record with statements that will never be read again. But it cannot do anything official unless enough members are present. That minimum number is called a quorum , and it is one of the Constitution’s simplest...

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When “Unhinged” Becomes a Constitutional Argument

When “Unhinged” Becomes a Constitutional Argument

On Easter morning, President Donald Trump posted a message that ricocheted across social media: profane, belligerent, and aimed at Iran. At the time of writing, a familiar constitutional phrase is trending in the public conversation: the 25th Amendment . Some commentators and lawmakers did not...

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Calls for the 25th Amendment After Trump’s Easter Post

Calls for the 25th Amendment After Trump’s Easter Post

On Easter morning, President Donald Trump posted a message about Iran that was equal parts threat and spectacle. It included profanity, a deadline tied to the Strait of Hormuz, and even a religious sign-off: “Praise be to Allah.” But this was not posted into a vacuum. It landed as the war...

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Presidential Impoundment and the Power of the Purse

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

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?

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

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)

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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