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U.S. Constitution

The U.S. Constitution

Archival records, profiles, and educational resources since 1995.

Cancellation of Removal, Explained

In immigration court, “removal” is the formal word for deportation. “Cancellation of removal” is exactly what it sounds like: a judge can cancel the removal case and let a person stay in the United States. But here is the catch that confuses people. Cancellation is not a constitutional...

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Monell Liability Explained

Monell Liability Explained

You can sue a police officer for violating the Constitution. That part is familiar. Suing the city is where people get blindsided. Most of us assume the government “owns” what its employees do. In everyday life, employers are often responsible for employees under a doctrine called respondeat...

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SpeechNow.org v. FEC Explained

SpeechNow.org v. FEC Explained

Super PACs did not appear out of nowhere in 2010. They grew out of a specific legal conclusion: if a group is making independent expenditures , meaning it is not coordinating its spending with a candidate, then limiting how much people can give to that group starts to look less like corruption...

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McCutcheon v. FEC Explained

You can legally buy an entire season of courtside tickets and no one calls it speech. But give money to politics and the Supreme Court treats it as a First Amendment problem. McCutcheon v. Federal Election Commission (2014) is a major campaign finance case, not because it invented a new right, but...

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The Purpose of the 2026 Midterm Elections

Midterm elections are a product of the Constitution’s staggered election cycles: the United States does not hand one election a four-year blank check. The House of Representatives turns over every two years. The Senate turns over in thirds. Put together, midterms force the national government to...

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Baker v. Carr (1962) Explained

You can tell a lot about a democracy by what it counts and what it ignores. After each federal census, Tennessee had fresh population numbers in hand, then largely ignored what the new figures meant for representation. District lines for the state legislature had not been meaningfully updated since...

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Trump’s Endorsement Power Hits a Primary Reality Check

Trump’s Endorsement Power Hits a Primary Reality Check

Every election cycle has its shiny objects. This week’s primaries have one that is stranger than most: a Trump-backed, reality TV famous, online influencer turned candidate trying to crack open Los Angeles City Hall, a place Republicans have not won in roughly three decades. But the deeper story...

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Justice Thomas, Criminal Procedure, and the Bill of Rights

Justice Thomas, Criminal Procedure, and the Bill of Rights

The Bill of Rights was written for the ordinary moment: the knock at the door, the traffic stop, the search you did not expect, the courtroom you never planned to enter. Most constitutional rights are not exercised in marble hallways. They are tested in fluorescent-lit rooms by people who cannot...

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The Courts vs. a Transgender Troop Ban

The Courts vs. a Transgender Troop Ban

Americans tend to talk about “the military” like it is a separate country with separate rules. In one sense, that instinct is right. The Constitution gives the political branches extraordinary control over national defense, and courts traditionally hesitate before telling commanders how to run...

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Appeals Court Keeps Block on Trump’s Transgender Troop Ban

Appeals Court Keeps Block on Trump’s Transgender Troop Ban

Every generation gets its own version of a familiar question: Who gets to define what the military is, and who gets to belong in it? This week, a divided federal appeals court in Washington, D.C. stepped into that question and came down, at least partly, against President Donald Trump’s push to...

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Spencer Pratt’s LA Mayor Surge and the Constitution of Celebrity Politics

Los Angeles is the kind of city that can turn anything into a spectacle, including a municipal election. But the spectacle is not the story. The story is that Spencer Pratt, a reality TV figure turned online influencer turned mayoral candidate, is gaining real traction in the race, powered by a...

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Trump Wants New York Cases Tossed

President Donald Trump is demanding that New York courts wipe away two of the legal judgments stemming from his recent New York cases: his criminal conviction in the hush money matter and the civil fraud judgment against him and the Trump Organization. In an overnight post on Truth Social, Trump...

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Indiana Jail Hire Arrest Raises Questions About Asylum Claims and Screening

Indiana Jail Hire Arrest Raises Questions About Asylum Claims and Screening

Every civics class eventually arrives at the same uncomfortable truth: the American system is built on paperwork. Rights get asserted on forms. Duties get assigned on forms. And, more often than we would like to admit, the public safety we assume is “screened” into existence is also built on...

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New Hampshire’s Proof-of-Citizenship Voting Rule Blocked

New Hampshire’s Proof-of-Citizenship Voting Rule Blocked

New Hampshire tried to add a simple checkpoint to one specific voting scenario: if you show up on Election Day not yet registered and you want to register and vote that day, you must prove you are a U.S. citizen. Late Thursday, U.S. District Judge Samantha Elliott blocked that requirement, ruling...

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Judge Orders Kennedy Center to Drop Trump Name

Judge Orders Kennedy Center to Drop Trump Name

The John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts is not just another cultural venue. Its name is fixed by federal statute, not by branding instincts or board votes. On Friday, U.S. District Judge Christopher Cooper ordered that President Donald Trump’s name be removed from the Kennedy Center,...

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Fusion Voting Explained

Fusion Voting Explained

Most American ballots force a simple story: you pick a candidate, and that choice also picks a party. Fusion voting scrambles that script. It lets multiple parties nominate the same candidate so that candidate appears on more than one party line on the ballot. Voters can support the candidate and...

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IEEPA Explained: Presidential Emergency Economic Powers

IEEPA Explained: Presidential Emergency Economic Powers

When Americans hear the words national emergency , they tend to picture troops, disaster zones, and urgent speeches. But a huge share of modern emergency power is quieter and more technical. It runs through banks, shipping insurers, payment rails, export licenses, and corporate compliance...

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Proof-of-Citizenship Voting Requirements Explained

Proof-of-Citizenship Voting Requirements Explained

Most election rules you hear about are framed as a simple question: can you vote or can you not? Proof-of-citizenship requirements sit in a more procedural lane. They are not mainly about how you identify yourself at the polls. They are about how election officials decide whether a person is...

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What Does a District Attorney Do?

What Does a District Attorney Do?

The words district attorney sound straightforward: an attorney for a district. In real life, the job is both narrower and more powerful than that. A district attorney, often called a DA or, in some states, a state’s attorney , is the chief local prosecutor for a county or prosecutorial district....

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Ineffective Assistance of Counsel Explained

Ineffective Assistance of Counsel Explained

The Sixth Amendment guarantees the “Assistance of Counsel” for the accused in criminal prosecutions. Most people hear that and picture a simple promise: if the state is trying to take your liberty, you get a lawyer. But the real promise is sharper than that. A lawyer who shows up and does...

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