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U.S. Constitution

The U.S. Constitution

Archival records, profiles, and educational resources since 1995.

Budget Reconciliation and the SAVE AMERICA Act: What Congress Can Do Under the Constitution

Budget Reconciliation and the SAVE AMERICA Act: What Congress Can Do Under the Constitution

When a political figure calls for “Reconciliation 3.0” (shorthand for a third major budget-reconciliation package this Congress) and pairs it with a sweeping-sounding bill like the “SAVE AMERICA Act,” the immediate question people ask is procedural: Can Congress really do that quickly, and...

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SCOTUS Sports Ruling Leaves Trans Kids Paying the Price

SCOTUS Sports Ruling Leaves Trans Kids Paying the Price

When the Supreme Court rules, the legal language can feel distant. But for many families with transgender kids, the Court’s June 30 decision hit like a personal announcement over the loudspeaker: you are not eligible. Not here. Not on this team. Not with your friends. Parents described the moment...

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Title IX’s Next Battlefield: Bathrooms

Title IX’s Next Battlefield: Bathrooms

Americans argue about bathrooms as if the question is cultural. But the next wave of fights will increasingly be fought through administrative complaints, federal investigations, and court orders that quietly redefine what privacy and safety mean in schools. The core question sounds simple: Should...

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Restoring Second Amendment Rights After Mental Commitment

Restoring Second Amendment Rights After Mental Commitment

The Constitution is full of rights that sound absolute until you read the fine print we have built around them. The Second Amendment is one of them. The modern Court says an individual has a right to keep and bear arms, but it also repeats a familiar caveat: some categories of people can be...

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How the Smithsonian Works: Funding, Oversight, and the Constitution

How the Smithsonian Works: Funding, Oversight, and the Constitution

The Smithsonian is back in the headlines after the White House released a report criticizing the National Museum of American History for what it described as “extreme political activism” and a move away from “straightforward education.” Whatever you think of that critique, the larger...

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Supreme Court Transgender Athlete Cases Explained: Title IX and Equal Protection

Supreme Court Transgender Athlete Cases Explained: Title IX and Equal Protection

The headline version of these cases is easy to summarize and hard to understand: whenever a dispute over transgender eligibility in school sports reaches the Supreme Court, politicians and advocates instantly treat it like a cultural Rorschach test. The legal version is different. The Court’s...

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Presidential Pardon Power Explained

Presidential Pardon Power Explained

When a president announces a fresh round of pardons, the same question spikes in search traffic for a reason: the power looks almost unlimited. And in one narrow sense, it is. In a public statement, President Donald J. Trump said he had “signed Pardons for six people,” described them as...

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Can Congress End the Filibuster and Expand the Supreme Court?

Can Congress End the Filibuster and Expand the Supreme Court?

When a political post warns that a party will “terminate the filibuster” and “expand the Supreme Court,” it is trying to trigger a particular civic reflex: Is that even constitutional? Here is the twist. Some of the biggest procedural earthquakes people fear are not blocked by the...

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Trump at Mount Rushmore and the Power of a Picture

Trump at Mount Rushmore and the Power of a Picture

There are two kinds of presidential power that matter in the real world. The first is the kind we teach in civics class: statutes, court orders, constitutional clauses, and the slow grind of enforcement. The second is the kind nobody can enjoin: the power of the stage. Tonight, President Donald...

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What July 4 Really Commemorates

What July 4 Really Commemorates

Every July 4, the country does what it does best: it turns a hard argument into a holiday. We light fireworks, wave flags, and tell ourselves a comforting story about a clean break from tyranny. Then the calendar rolls on and the questions we avoided come rolling after it. Here is the civic truth...

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Liberty, 250 Years Later

Liberty, 250 Years Later

Independence Day is our favorite national shortcut. Light the fireworks, unfurl the flags, rehearse the familiar lines about freedom, and let the founding feel settled. But America 250 does not really allow shortcuts. A quarter of a millennium after July 4, 1776, we are forced to hold two truths at...

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Ninth Circuit Hits Pause on California’s Assault-Weapon Ban Case

Ninth Circuit Hits Pause on California’s Assault-Weapon Ban Case

The Ninth Circuit just did something that looks procedural but reads like a signal: it stayed Miller v. Bonta , the ongoing challenge to California’s ban on so-called “assault weapons,” while it waits for the U.S. Supreme Court to weigh in on a closely related set of questions. In practical...

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Immigration Detention and Due Process After 2022

Immigration Detention and Due Process After 2022

Immigration detention sits in a constitutional gray zone that surprises people on both sides of the debate. The federal government has broad power over immigration. But when it physically holds a person in custody, the Constitution does not turn off. That tension is exactly what the courts have...

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Transgender Sports and the Constitution: What a Supreme Court Action Means

Transgender Sports and the Constitution: What a Supreme Court Action Means

When people hear “the Supreme Court ruled on transgender athletes,” most of us immediately jump to the same question: so is this now the rule for the whole country? Not automatically. And that instinct, the confusion between a state rule, a federal rule, and a constitutional rule, is exactly...

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Is the “86/47” Flag Protected Speech?

Is the “86/47” Flag Protected Speech?

When a short slogan becomes a national controversy, the constitutional question is rarely about the slogan itself. It is about who gets to decide what it means , and what the government is allowed to do when it believes a political message sounds like danger. The “86/47” flag has become that...

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Why HHS Can Freeze Medicaid Fraud Unit Funding

Why HHS Can Freeze Medicaid Fraud Unit Funding

When a headline says the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) “froze” funding for a state Medicaid fraud unit, it triggers a basic civic question: How can the federal government pause money for a unit that operates inside a state government? The short answer is that a Medicaid Fraud...

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The Court Lets States Bar Trans Girls From Girls’ Sports

The Court Lets States Bar Trans Girls From Girls’ Sports

For years, the fight over girls’ sports has been sold as a cultural argument about fairness, safety, and identity. The Supreme Court’s latest move forces a more uncomfortable civics question: who gets to define what “equal” means inside a public school , and under which constitutional...

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Pentagon Escorts and the First Amendment

Pentagon Escorts and the First Amendment

The First Amendment does not promise journalists a reserved seat inside every government building. But it also does not allow the government to hand out access like a reward and take it away like a punishment. That tension is now playing out in one of the most symbolically loaded workplaces in...

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Foreign Funding and Judicial Training: What Ethics Rules and Oversight Allow

Foreign Funding and Judicial Training: What Ethics Rules and Oversight Allow

“Foreign influence” is one of those phrases that instantly turns civic life into a fog machine. It suggests a hidden hand. It implies a compromised judge. It invites a simple fix: ban it. But judicial education is not a single government program with one set of national rules. It is a patchwork...

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Birthright Citizenship After the Court Says No

Birthright Citizenship After the Court Says No

You can almost hear the constitutional gears grinding when a president loses at the Supreme Court and immediately turns to Congress for a do-over. That is exactly what happened after the Court rejected President Trump’s January 2025 executive order that attempted to condition U.S.-birth...

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