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

When the State Wants to Look Inside Your Home
The Fourth Amendment was written with a simple instinct: a person’s home should not be treated like a public hallway. The recurring question in state and local policymaking is how far government should be able to go in peering into the home, and how easily private spaces can be treated as close...
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The Supreme Court Reopens Texas’ Mid-Cycle Map Fight
The Supreme Court just handed Texas Republicans a win with a move that was both simple and deeply consequential: it summarily reversed a lower-court ruling that had blocked Texas’ mid-cycle congressional redistricting plan. In other words, the Court struck down the block and left the new map...
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Trump Fires the National Science Board
American science policy does not usually arrive like a thunderclap. It arrives as a budget line, a grant cycle, a committee vote, a quiet board meeting that decides which fields are “strategic” and which can wait. That is why reports from multiple sources that President Donald Trump has...
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DOJ Adds Firing Squads to Federal Execution Options
The Justice Department has moved to expand the methods available for federal executions by adding firing squads to the federal toolkit, alongside a renewed embrace of a single-drug lethal injection protocol using pentobarbital. The change is part of a broader effort by the Trump administration to...
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Maine’s Criminal-Record Sealing Veto, Explained
Maine Governor Janet Mills has vetoed a sweeping criminal-record sealing bill that would have changed what the public can learn from the state’s court dockets, and what employers and landlords can discover with a quick search. The veto is not just a criminal justice story. It is a civics story...
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The Conspiracy Surge After the Dinner Attack
When a violent incident erupts in a public place, we expect fear. What we do not always expect is the second blast, the one that hits your phone. No sooner had a gunman tried to storm the ballroom of the Washington Hilton, where the White House Correspondents’ Dinner was taking place Saturday...
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Mississippi’s Special Session on Redistricting, Explained
Mississippi is preparing for a fast-moving, high-stakes civic moment: Gov. Tate Reeves says he will call a special legislative session to redraw district lines after the U.S. Supreme Court issues its decision in Louisiana v. Callais . He has said the session will happen 21 days after the Court...
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The Geofence Warrant Case
You can lock your front door. You can shred your mail. You can refuse to answer questions. But your phone can still leave a trail. Depending on your settings and the services you use, location-related data can be created when you open a map, allow an app to check your whereabouts, or turn on...
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A Justice Department Shift Makes DACA Deportations Easier
DACA has always lived in a strange legal space: powerful enough to change lives, fragile enough to be narrowed by a single administrative decision. Last week, that fragility got new reinforcement from inside the executive branch itself. The Justice Department’s Board of Immigration Appeals (BIA)...
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Brandenburg v. Ohio and the Imminent Lawless Action Test
You can say a lot in America, including things most people find ugly, reckless, or flat-out dangerous. The First Amendment does not exist to protect only polite opinions. It exists to protect speech that would be easiest for the government to suppress when public fear runs high. But the protection...
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Carpenter v. United States: CSLI and the Fourth Amendment
You carry your phone. Your phone talks to cell towers. Your carrier keeps the logs. For years, that basic infrastructure quietly reshaped Fourth Amendment law. Not because the Constitution changed, but because the most revealing “search” in modern life often looks like paperwork. A request. A...
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Boumediene v. Bush: Habeas Corpus and Guantánamo
Guantánamo Bay is one of those constitutional stress tests that feels like it was designed to force a hard question: Can the government keep someone in U.S. custody, for years, and still block a judge from asking whether the detention is lawful? In Boumediene v. Bush (2008), the Supreme Court...
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Janus v. AFSCME (2018): Agency Fees and the First Amendment
You can support a union without joining it. You can also reject it entirely. The hard constitutional question is whether the government can still require you to help pay for it. In Janus v. American Federation of State, County, and Municipal Employees (AFSCME) (2018), the Supreme Court answered...
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Tinker v. Des Moines (1969): Student Speech and the First Amendment
Public schools are where America teaches civic life in real time. We learn the Pledge. We learn elections. We learn what it means to disagree without tearing the place down. So when students use school as the stage for a political message, the question becomes painfully direct: is a school a...
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Dobbs v. Jackson Explained
The name is long, but the question the Supreme Court answered in Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization was simple: can a state ban most abortions before viability, and if it can, what happens to Roe v. Wade ? In 2022, the Court said yes to a pre-viability ban, and it went further. The...
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United States v. Lopez and the Commerce Clause
You can tell a lot about a Constitution by the arguments people make when it feels like a problem needs solving fast. In the early 1990s, gun violence near schools was not an abstract policy debate. Congress responded with a broad federal ban on gun possession in designated school zones, subject to...
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Shelby County v. Holder and the End of Preclearance
For nearly half a century, part of the Voting Rights Act worked like a constitutional alarm system. Certain states and local governments could not change their election rules until the federal government checked the change first. That requirement was called preclearance , and it did not apply...
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Buckley v. Valeo
In American politics, money is not just fuel. It is also a form of communication. Buying a television ad is a way to speak to voters at scale. Hiring staff is a way to organize. Printing signs is a way to persuade. That basic reality collided with post-Watergate reform in Buckley v. Valeo (1976),...
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Section 230 Explained
You can understand Section 230 in one sentence: it often means a website is not legally liable for what its users say, and it can still moderate without automatically becoming responsible for everything it did not remove, subject to important exceptions. That can sound like a special deal for Big...
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Congressional Earmarks Explained
People talk about earmarks the way they talk about a bad habit. Congress swore it off, avoided them for a while, then quietly reached for them again when the budget got complicated. But an earmark is not a synonym for corruption. It is a tool. Like any tool, it can be used transparently or used to...
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