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U.S. Constitution

The U.S. Constitution

Archival records, profiles, and educational resources since 1995.

Fusion Voting Explained

Fusion Voting Explained

Most American ballots force a simple story: you pick a candidate, and that choice also picks a party. Fusion voting scrambles that script. It lets multiple parties nominate the same candidate so that candidate appears on more than one party line on the ballot. Voters can support the candidate and...

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IEEPA Explained: Presidential Emergency Economic Powers

IEEPA Explained: Presidential Emergency Economic Powers

When Americans hear the words national emergency , they tend to picture troops, disaster zones, and urgent speeches. But a huge share of modern emergency power is quieter and more technical. It runs through banks, shipping insurers, payment rails, export licenses, and corporate compliance...

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Proof-of-Citizenship Voting Requirements Explained

Proof-of-Citizenship Voting Requirements Explained

Most election rules you hear about are framed as a simple question: can you vote or can you not? Proof-of-citizenship requirements sit in a more procedural lane. They are not mainly about how you identify yourself at the polls. They are about how election officials decide whether a person is...

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What Does a District Attorney Do?

What Does a District Attorney Do?

The words district attorney sound straightforward: an attorney for a district. In real life, the job is both narrower and more powerful than that. A district attorney, often called a DA or, in some states, a state’s attorney , is the chief local prosecutor for a county or prosecutorial district....

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Ineffective Assistance of Counsel Explained

Ineffective Assistance of Counsel Explained

The Sixth Amendment guarantees the “Assistance of Counsel” for the accused in criminal prosecutions. Most people hear that and picture a simple promise: if the state is trying to take your liberty, you get a lawyer. But the real promise is sharper than that. A lawyer who shows up and does...

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Criminal Discovery in Federal Cases Explained

Criminal Discovery in Federal Cases Explained

In a federal criminal case, “discovery” sounds like it should mean the same thing it means in civil court: broad, document-heavy exchange where each side can demand information from the other and take depositions to lock in testimony. That is not how criminal discovery works. Federal criminal...

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Shaw v. Reno Explained

Shaw v. Reno Explained

Most redistricting controversies feel like inside baseball until you see the shape of a district that looks like it was poured through a crack in the map. That was the visual spark behind Shaw v. Reno (1993). The case did not say legislatures must ignore race. It said something narrower and more...

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McCulloch v. Maryland Explained

McCulloch v. Maryland Explained

There are Supreme Court decisions that resolve a dispute. And then there are decisions that shape what kind of country the United States can become under the Constitution. McCulloch v. Maryland (1819) is the second kind. On the surface, it was a fight over a bank and a state tax. Underneath, it was...

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Top-Four Primaries and Ranked General Elections

Most Americans grow up with a simple civics story about elections: each party holds its own primary, each party picks a nominee, and the general election is a head-to-head contest between Democrats and Republicans. Alaska’s “top-four primary and ranked general” model departs from that script...

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Approval Voting Explained

Many U.S. single-winner elections ask you to do something oddly narrow: pick exactly one name, even if you would be perfectly fine with two or three. That design choice is not a law of nature. It is a rule, and like any rule, it shapes behavior. Approval voting rewrites that rule in the simplest...

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Good Faith Exception and Fruit of the Poisonous Tree

Good Faith Exception and Fruit of the Poisonous Tree

The exclusionary rule sounds simple: if the police break the Fourth Amendment, the evidence gets thrown out. As a baseline in criminal cases, that is often the idea. In practice, it is much messier. Courts have built in pressure-release valves. Some evidence stays in even if the search was...

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Collateral Consequences of a Criminal Conviction

Most people think a criminal sentence ends when the jail door opens, probation ends, or the fine gets paid. But a conviction can keep punishing you long after the judge is done. Lawyers and policymakers often call these collateral consequences (sometimes collateral sanctions or discretionary...

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Federal Proffers and Cooperation Agreements

Federal cooperation deals have a reputation: a quiet conference room, a stack of exhibits, and a person trying to talk their way out of the worst day of their life. What actually happens is less cinematic and more contractual. “Cooperating” in a federal case usually means the government wants...

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Guilty, Not Guilty, Nolo Contendere, and Alford Pleas Explained

Guilty, Not Guilty, Nolo Contendere, and Alford Pleas Explained

At an arraignment, the judge confirms what you are accused of, makes sure you understand key rights, and asks a deceptively simple question: How do you plead? Those words are a switch. A not guilty plea keeps the government in proof mode. A guilty plea moves the case into sentencing mode. And two...

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Consular Processing Explained

Consular processing is the immigrant visa pathway most people use when they are outside the United States and want to enter as lawful permanent residents. It is not a single form. It is a sequence of handoffs between agencies, deadlines that matter, and one high-stakes moment when a consular...

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Denaturalization Explained: How U.S. Citizenship Can Be Revoked

Denaturalization Explained: How U.S. Citizenship Can Be Revoked

Most Americans treat citizenship as a one-way door. You are in, forever. For people born in the United States, that is close to true. For people who become citizens through naturalization , there is a narrow, high-stakes exception: denaturalization , the legal process of taking citizenship back....

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Allen v. Milligan Explained

People talk about redistricting as if it were a political sport. A new census drops, lines move, and the party in charge tries to lock in power for a decade. Allen v. Milligan (2023) is what happens when that game runs into a federal statute that still has sharp edges. The case did not ask whether...

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VRA Section 2 and Vote Dilution, Explained

VRA Section 2 and Vote Dilution, Explained

Most voting rights debates get framed as a question of access. Can you register? Can you cast a ballot? Can you stay in line long enough? Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act often asks a different, quieter question: even if everyone can vote, does the election system make some voters’ ballots less...

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Brnovich v. DNC Explained

Brnovich v. DNC Explained

Most Americans assume the Voting Rights Act is a broad, sturdy shield: if a voting rule makes it harder to vote, especially for minority voters, federal law will step in. Brnovich v. Democratic National Committee (2021) did not erase that shield. But it did narrow the doorway for one major kind of...

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New U.S. Immigration Rules Explained

Immigration policy in the United States can feel like it changes overnight. One week it is a new “rule.” The next it is a new “guidance.” Then a court blocks something, a new administration reverses it, and everyone asks the same question: did the law actually change? Sometimes it did....

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