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

How is Trump trying to lower gas costs - and will it work?
Gas prices do not rise because the president wakes up and chooses chaos. They rise because oil is a globally priced commodity, refined into gasoline, then pushed through a supply chain that is allergic to uncertainty. Right now, uncertainty has a name: a shooting war with Iran and a chokepoint that...
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Pima County Deputy Accused of Kidnapping Woman in Custody
A former Pima County Sheriff’s deputy in Arizona is facing a felony kidnapping charge after authorities say he abused his position while transporting a woman who was already in custody. The deputy, identified by police as 22-year-old Travis Reynolds, has been arrested, booked, and fired from the...
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‘No Kings’ Protests: What to Know
“No Kings” is not subtle branding. It reads as a constitutional argument in three syllables: America rejected monarchy in 1776, and it did not swap it for an elected version of royal power in 2026. Today, that argument is spilling into streets and town squares at a scale that is hard to miss....
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The Bill of Rights: The First 10 Amendments, Explained
The Bill of Rights is only ten amendments long, but it quietly defines what “freedom” means in American law. These amendments were added in 1791 to answer a fear that the new federal government would grow teeth faster than the people could grow protections. One catch that surprises students...
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Impeachment vs. the 25th Amendment
There are two constitutional off-ramps for a president who should not keep wielding presidential power. One is punishment. The other is triage. Impeachment is Congress accusing and trying a president for serious misconduct. It is designed for abuses of power, corruption, and betrayal of public...
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What Is the Electoral College and How Does It Work?
On Election Day in November, Americans cast ballots that decide who will be president. But constitutionally, that is only the first move. The president is not elected directly by a nationwide popular vote. Instead, the Constitution creates an intermediary body called the Electoral College, a...
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What Is a Grand Jury?
When you hear that someone was “indicted,” it can sound like a judge reviewed the evidence, weighed the arguments, and issued a formal accusation. That is not what happened. In most serious federal criminal cases, an indictment is the product of a grand jury, a group of ordinary citizens...
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Red Flag Laws Explained
“Red flag law” is one of those phrases that sounds self-explanatory until you try to pin it down. Supporters hear a safety valve. Critics hear a shortcut around the Second Amendment. Both reactions miss something important. Most red flag laws are not criminal prosecutions. They are civil court...
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Contempt of Congress Explained
Congress cannot pass laws, oversee the executive branch, or expose corruption if witnesses can simply ignore it. That is the basic logic behind contempt of Congress : a set of tools that lets the House or Senate punish or pressure people who obstruct investigations, refuse to testify, or defy...
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Your Constitutional Rights If You're Arrested
An arrest is one of the few moments in American life when the Constitution stops being an abstract civics lesson and becomes a set of rules that can protect you or fail you depending on what you say next. Most people know two phrases: “You have the right to remain silent” and “You have the...
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The Alien Enemies Act of 1798 Explained
The Alien Enemies Act sounds like a relic from powdered wigs and quill pens. In reality, it is one of the few laws from 1798 that is still on the books, still usable, and still capable of changing someone’s life overnight. It is also widely misunderstood. It was passed in a moment of national...
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How the Supreme Court Works
The Supreme Court does not work like television. There is no surprise witness. No dramatic cross-examination. No jury. Most of what matters happens in writing, largely out of public view, and on a schedule that looks more like an academic calendar than a criminal trial. And yet the Court’s...
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How to Become a U.S. Citizen
Becoming a U.S. citizen is both a legal process and a civic turning point. It is paperwork and appointments, yes, but it is also the moment you move from living under the Constitution to helping steer the republic it creates. Naturalization is run by U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services...
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Posse Comitatus Act Explained
There is a reason most Americans get uneasy when they see troops in the streets, even if the troops are calm, disciplined, and “just helping.” In the United States, military power is supposed to face outward. Policing power is supposed to face inward. The Posse Comitatus Act of 1878 is one of...
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War Powers Resolution Explained
The Constitution gives Congress the power to declare war. The Constitution makes the president the Commander in Chief. Those two sentences look clean on parchment and collide messily in real life. The War Powers Resolution of 1973 is Congress’s attempt to manage that collision. It does not...
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Qualified Immunity
Qualified immunity is one of those legal phrases that sounds like a technical footnote until you realize it can decide whether a person ever gets their day in court. It comes up most often in lawsuits against police officers, but it applies more broadly to many government officials. When qualified...
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What Is the Filibuster and How Does It Work?
The filibuster is one of those Washington words that sounds like a dusty procedural relic until it suddenly becomes the main character of American lawmaking. When the Senate “filibusters” a bill or nomination, what is really happening is simple: a minority of senators is using the Senate’s...
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How Article V Amendments Work
The Constitution is famous for what it protects, but it is just as famous for how hard it is to change. That difficulty is not an accident. Article V is the Constitution’s built-in update mechanism, but it was designed to force broad national agreement before the country rewrites its rules. In...
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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 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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