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U.S. Constitution

The U.S. Constitution

Archival records, profiles, and educational resources since 1995.

Can a Person With a Felony Conviction Vote? Voting Rights by State

Can a Person With a Felony Conviction Vote? Voting Rights by State

“Can a person with a felony conviction vote?” sounds like it should have one national answer. It does not. In the United States, voting rights after a felony conviction are mostly a state policy choice, and the differences are dramatic. In some states, you can vote even while incarcerated. In...

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Civil Asset Forfeiture Explained

Civil Asset Forfeiture Explained

Civil asset forfeiture is one of those government powers that sounds like a plot device until it happens to you. A traffic stop. A search. A dog alert. A wad of cash in the glove compartment. Then the officer says the words that change the entire posture of the encounter: the property is being...

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Your Rights During a Police Stop

Your Rights During a Police Stop

Most people learn their “rights” from TV: the dramatic warning, the instant lawyer, the clear line between innocent questions and unlawful pressure. Real life is murkier. During a traffic stop or a street encounter, the Constitution gives you powerful protections, but it does not give you a...

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CPAC Texas and the Fight Over America’s Next Chapter

CPAC Texas and the Fight Over America’s Next Chapter

CPAC has always been part pep rally, part power audit. But in Texas this week, the mood felt less like a routine gathering of conservative celebrities and more like a political war room with stadium lighting. The message from the stage and the crowd was consistent: this is not just another election...

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Biden-Era Social Media ‘Jawboning’ Curbed in 10-Year Settlement

Biden-Era Social Media ‘Jawboning’ Curbed in 10-Year Settlement

A decade-long consent decree is reshaping how several federal agencies may interact with social media companies, and it is being celebrated by two Republican-led states as a major First Amendment win. The agreement resolves a lawsuit brought by Missouri and Louisiana, alongside individual...

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The Supreme Court, a Wristlock, and Qualified Immunity

The Supreme Court, a Wristlock, and Qualified Immunity

Here is the uncomfortable question hovering over Zorn v. Linton : When a protester refuses to move, what kind of force can an officer lawfully use to make her move, and when can she sue afterward? On Monday, the Supreme Court did not set a new line for how much force is too much. Instead, it...

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A Republican Plan to Make Colleges Pay for Student Debt Relief

A Republican Plan to Make Colleges Pay for Student Debt Relief

Student loan politics usually arrives in one of two costumes. Either it is a moral crusade for “forgiveness,” or it is a scolding lecture about personal responsibility. Both scripts are familiar. Neither one starts where serious policy should start: who is being asked to pay, and what...

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SAVE America Act Hits the Senate Wall

SAVE America Act Hits the Senate Wall

The Senate can talk about election rules for days and still not be any closer to changing them. That is the reality check now facing Republicans and the SAVE America Act, a bill that would require proof of citizenship to vote. It has become a kind of legislative security blanket, a campaign-ready...

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Democrats Say They Support Voter ID, Then Block a Vote to Require It

Democrats Say They Support Voter ID, Then Block a Vote to Require It

Voter ID is one of those election issues that sounds simple until you look closely at what lawmakers are actually voting on. This week in the Senate, that gap between the slogan and the substance became the story: several prominent Democrats reiterated that they are not opposed to photo...

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Senate Republicans Press Trump to Restore the Title X ‘Protect Life Rule’

Senate Republicans Press Trump to Restore the Title X ‘Protect Life Rule’

Every few years, Washington rediscovers a familiar trick: fight the abortion battle by fighting over the plumbing. Not the moral argument. Not even the constitutional argument. The funding pipes. On Thursday, a group of Republican senators led by Sen. Todd Young of Indiana sent a letter to the...

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HUD Opens Probe Into Washington’s Race-Linked Mortgage Aid Program

HUD Opens Probe Into Washington’s Race-Linked Mortgage Aid Program

The Department of Housing and Urban Development has opened a federal civil rights investigation into a Washington state homeownership initiative that the agency believes may sort applicants by race and ancestry. The question at the center of the probe is a constitutional one with everyday...

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Treasury Plans Trump Signature on U.S. Paper Currency for 250th Anniversary

Treasury Plans Trump Signature on U.S. Paper Currency for 250th Anniversary

The Treasury Department says it plans to place President Donald Trump’s signature on U.S. paper currency as part of the country’s upcoming 250th anniversary of independence. If implemented as described, it would be a major break from modern practice, since U.S. banknotes typically carry the...

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Trump Administration Waives Summer Gasoline Rules as Fuel Prices Spike

Trump Administration Waives Summer Gasoline Rules as Fuel Prices Spike

When gas prices jump fast, the federal government has a familiar temptation: loosen the rules that shape what can be sold at the pump. That is exactly what the Trump administration is doing now, temporarily waiving seasonal gasoline regulations in response to sharply higher fuel costs tied to the...

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Memorial Day

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New $6,000 Tax Break for Seniors: Do You Qualify?

New $6,000 Tax Break for Seniors: Do You Qualify?

Every time Congress announces a “new tax break,” I hear the same question from retirees and their adult kids: Is this real relief, or is it just a new label on the same old rules? The answer with the new senior deduction is: it is real, it can lower your taxable income, and it is also easy to...

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The 2026 Social Security COLA: 2.8% and the Fight Over What “Keeping Up” Means

The 2026 Social Security COLA: 2.8% and the Fight Over What “Keeping Up” Means

Each year, the federal government performs a small ritual that quietly shapes the lives of tens of millions of Americans. It recalculates retirement checks, disability payments, and Supplemental Security Income. Then it announces a number that sounds technical but hits like a household budget...

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Separation of Powers: The Three Branches Explained

Separation of Powers: The Three Branches Explained

Most Americans can name the three branches of government. Fewer can explain what each one actually does without slipping into civics class shorthand like “Congress makes laws” and “the President enforces them.” That shorthand is not wrong. It is just incomplete. The Constitution does not...

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The Bill of Rights Explained (All 10 Amendments)

The Bill of Rights Explained (All 10 Amendments)

The Bill of Rights is the Constitution’s first ten amendments. Think of them as America’s original set of limits on federal power: rules the government must follow even when it has good intentions, even when the public is afraid, and even when the majority would rather not. They were written to...

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The Electoral College Explained

The Electoral College Explained

The Electoral College is the system the United States uses to elect a president and vice president. It is not a separate election that happens instead of the popular vote. It is the mechanism that turns state popular votes into the official votes that legally choose the president. Every four years,...

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Jury Nullification: Can a Jury Legally Ignore the Law?

Jury Nullification: Can a Jury Legally Ignore the Law?

Every criminal trial ends with the same ritual: the judge explains the law, the jury “finds the facts,” and everyone pretends those roles never overlap. Then a jury walks into the deliberation room and does something the system is built to discourage, but cannot completely prevent: it refuses...

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