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U.S. Constitution

The U.S. Constitution

Archival records, profiles, and educational resources since 1995.

Why Dick Durbin Is Trending

Why Dick Durbin Is Trending

Dick Durbin is usually not the headline. He is the institutional voice in the room, the senator who asks the follow-up when the cameras are drifting away. So when his name trends, it is usually because he has become a hinge between two things Americans care about but rarely connect: how Congress...

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Zimbabwe vs Bangladesh: The Viral US Search Spike, Explained

Zimbabwe vs Bangladesh: The Viral US Search Spike, Explained

When a cricket match trends in the United States, it usually looks like a mystery for about five minutes. Why would Zimbabwe vs Bangladesh spike on Google in a country where most sports bars cannot tell a T20 from a Tuesday? USConstitution.net does not usually do sports. But the Constitution is a...

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Prince Harry’s Nightmare Week, Charles Reunion, and the “Full-Time Dad” Fight

Prince Harry’s Nightmare Week, Charles Reunion, and the “Full-Time Dad” Fight

Prince Harry is trending because the internet is not reacting to one headline. It is reacting to a stack of them that, together, revive a long-running question of the post-Megxit era: what is Harry’s relationship to the monarchy now , and what does he want his life to mean outside it?...

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Can ICE Use Traffic Stops?

Can ICE Use Traffic Stops?

When a political figure calls the traffic stop one of ICE’s “most important” tools, it turns a practical tactic into a constitutional question. Can ICE use traffic stops? Sometimes, yes. But in the United States, a “stop” is not a casual conversation. It is a Fourth Amendment seizure ,...

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Can a Special Counsel Collect Lawmakers’ Texts?

Can a Special Counsel Collect Lawmakers’ Texts?

News stories about a special counsel “scooping up” text messages involving dozens of members of Congress land with a particular kind of constitutional charge. Not because texts are inherently sacred, but because of who is collecting them and whose communications are being collected. When the...

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The Vanishing Jury Trial

The Vanishing Jury Trial

The Sixth Amendment promises what sounds like a civic birthright: the accused can demand a “speedy and public trial” before an “impartial jury.” Article III backs it up. The Declaration of Independence even lists the loss of jury trials as a hallmark of tyranny. So here is the question I...

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Can the President Rewrite a Grant?

Can the President Rewrite a Grant?

Federal money always comes with a catch. The question is: who gets to write the catch? On Thursday, a federal judge in California drew a bright line between what Congress funds and what a President can demand in exchange for releasing those funds. U.S. District Judge William Orrick issued a...

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What Is the SAVE Act?

What Is the SAVE Act?

When a voting bill suddenly shows up in the same sentence as budget reconciliation , it is a clue that today’s fight is not only about election rules. It is about how Congress can pass them. The SAVE Act (Safeguard American Voter Eligibility Act), H.R. 8281 , has circulated as an “election...

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Why US Tankers at Ben-Gurion Are Putting Thousands of Flights at Risk

Why US Tankers at Ben-Gurion Are Putting Thousands of Flights at Risk

You do not need to care about aerial refueling to understand why this story went viral. You just need to have ever looked at a departure board. Ben-Gurion International Airport (TLV) is Israel’s primary civilian gateway. When large US aerial refueling aircraft use scarce ramp and stand space at...

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Can a President Shrink National Monuments? The Antiquities Act Explained

Can a President Shrink National Monuments? The Antiquities Act Explained

When a president announces that a national monument will be cut down to size, the fight is not just about acres. It is about which branch of government controls federal land, and whether a statute written in 1906 gives the president a one-way power or a two-way power. Today’s news cycle is...

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LeBron James Trade Rumors, Explained

LeBron James Trade Rumors, Explained

You can almost hear the internet trying to make a decision for a 39-year-old superstar. In mid-July 2024, Google Trends appeared to show a spike in searches for “LeBron James trade” in the United States. The phrasing makes it feel like something already happened. It did not. What happened...

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Supreme Court Recusal Rules, Explained: The Kagan Climate Case Dispute

Supreme Court Recusal Rules, Explained: The Kagan Climate Case Dispute

When a Supreme Court case is headed toward the merits, the loudest fight sometimes happens before the first question is asked: should a justice step aside? That question is back in the news because some conservative advocacy groups have urged that Justice Elena Kagan recuse from a climate-related...

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The Supreme Court ‘Slaughter Case’ and Presidential Power to Fire Federal Officials

The Supreme Court ‘Slaughter Case’ and Presidential Power to Fire Federal Officials

People are searching for a “Supreme Court Slaughter Case” because a recent social media post claims the Court just issued a historic ruling “confirming Presidential Power” under Article II. The post also implies that decades of precedent dating to the 1930s have fallen. Here is the key...

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DOJ Subpoenas and the Press Freedom Line

DOJ Subpoenas and the Press Freedom Line

The most revealing moment in a press freedom controversy is rarely the headline, the talking points, or the partisan outrage. It is the paper trail: a federal subpoena , a demanded appearance, a grand jury date , and the quiet implication that doing journalism might come with a lawyer, a contempt...

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Illinois’ Assault-Weapon Ban and the Second Amendment’s New Test

Illinois’ Assault-Weapon Ban and the Second Amendment’s New Test

Illinois just got a major win in one of the most contested constitutional battlegrounds in modern America: the meaning of the Second Amendment after the Supreme Court’s recent turn toward “history and tradition.” In a 2-1 decision, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit upheld...

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Lindsey Graham, Ukraine, and the Drone Factory Strike: What the Viral Death Rumors Are Really About

Lindsey Graham, Ukraine, and the Drone Factory Strike: What the Viral Death Rumors Are Really About

The Constitution does not protect us from rumors. It protects our right to speak , to publish, and to argue about public events. And sometimes that freedom produces a uniquely modern civic problem: a high-speed narrative that feels like a revelation before it becomes a fact. That is what happened...

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Nancy Mace and the Graham Seat: The Special Election, the Appointment, and the House Math

Nancy Mace and the Graham Seat: The Special Election, the Appointment, and the House Math

When a U.S. Senate seat suddenly opens, the story people think they are following is usually a personality story: who wants it, who can win it, who is trending on social media. The story they are actually following is a constitutional one. A Senate vacancy is where the lofty machinery of federalism...

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Why John McCain Is Trending Again

Why John McCain Is Trending Again

John McCain is trending again, and no, it is not because he suddenly reentered American politics from the beyond. McCain is trending because he has become a prop in a much newer fight: a fresh wave of anger at Senator Lindsey Graham that hit X on July 12, 2026 and used McCain as the moral measuring...

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South Carolina Trend: Lindsey Graham Death Reports and the Senate Vacancy Fight

South Carolina Trend: Lindsey Graham Death Reports and the Senate Vacancy Fight

South Carolina is trending for a reason that hits the American system right where it’s most sensitive: legitimacy. When the public cannot tell whether a sitting U.S. senator is alive, hospitalized, or deceased, the questions that follow are not just personal. They are constitutional, procedural,...

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Why a Judge Ended the Proud Boys Jan. 6 Case, Constitutionally

Why a Judge Ended the Proud Boys Jan. 6 Case, Constitutionally

The short version is straightforward, and it is procedural, not mystical: when presidential clemency documents are filed in a federal criminal case after conviction, the court can enter an order implementing them . That kind of order requires the court to stop enforcing whatever parts of the...

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