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

All 27 Constitutional Amendments, Explained Simply
The Constitution was built to last, but it was never meant to stay frozen. The 27 amendments are the official updates, each one a snapshot of a national argument: what freedom means, who counts as a citizen, and how power should be restrained. This guide explains every amendment in plain English....
Read more →
Your Constitutional Rights at a Protest
You do not need a law degree to attend a protest. But you do need to understand one uncomfortable truth: the First Amendment can protect a lot of protest speech and expressive conduct, but it does not turn every tactic into a constitutional right. The Constitution gives you real leverage against...
Read more →
Does the First Amendment Protect You on Social Media?
You posted a political take. It got removed. Your account got flagged, throttled (downranked or given less reach), or suspended. Then comes the sentence everyone reaches for like a constitutional shield: “That’s a First Amendment violation.” Sometimes it is. Most of the time, it is not . But...
Read more →
The Presidential Veto Explained
The Constitution gives Congress the power to write laws, but it gives the President a powerful brake: the veto. That brake is not a royal “no.” It is a forced second look. Article I, Section 7 builds a simple system that turns legislation into a conversation between branches, and then hands the...
Read more →
Recess Appointments Explained
Presidents nominate. The Senate confirms. That is the civics class version of appointments in the federal government. Then real life happens. Senators go home. Agencies keep running. Courts still hear cases. And the Constitution quietly hands the president a temporary workaround: the recess...
Read more →
The State of the Union Address
You can spot the State of the Union in two places at once: in the Constitution, and in the political theater of modern America. One is a single sentence in Article II, Section 3. The other is a televised ritual with applause lines, invited guests, real-time media fact-checking, and a second speech...
Read more →
Extradition: How It Works in the U.S. and Abroad
Extradition is one of those legal concepts that sounds dramatic, like it belongs in a courtroom thriller. In real life, it is mostly paperwork, deadlines, and a question that matters more than people realize: Which government gets to bring you back ? Extradition is the process of transferring a...
Read more →
Sanctuary Cities Explained
"Sanctuary city" sounds like a legal status. It is not. There is no checkbox in federal law that turns a city into a sanctuary, no formal certification from Washington, no constitutional clause that blesses or bans the label. What the term usually means is much narrower and much more technical: a...
Read more →
The National Emergencies Act Explained
You can feel the word emergency doing work in American politics. It signals urgency, danger, and the idea that normal rules might need to bend. But under federal law, a “national emergency” is also something much more technical. It is a legal switch. Flip it, and scores of dormant statutory...
Read more →
Jury Duty: What to Expect
Few envelopes trigger as much immediate bargaining as a jury summons. You scan it as if it were a parking ticket. You check the date. You do the math. You start asking everyone you know: “Can I get out of this?” But jury duty is not a random civic chore invented to ruin your week. It is one of...
Read more →
How Primaries and Caucuses Choose a Nominee
Every four years during presidential cycles, Americans watch “the primary” unfold as if it were an official constitutional rite, like the Electoral College or the State of the Union. It is not. The Constitution never created primary elections. It never mentions political parties. It does not...
Read more →
What Is Asylum? The U.S. Asylum Process
In everyday conversation, people use the word asylum like it means “a safe place to go.” Under U.S. law, it means something narrower and much more structured. Asylum is a legal protection the United States can grant to a person who is seeking protection inside the U.S. or in removal proceedings...
Read more →
How to Register to Vote
Registering to vote feels like it should be automatic in a constitutional democracy. In some countries, it is. In the United States, it usually is not. That is not an accident of paperwork. It is built into how American elections are administered: states run the day-to-day machinery, and the rules...
Read more →
How Supreme Court Justices Are Nominated and Confirmed
Supreme Court justices are not “hired” the way most powerful decision-makers are. They are appointed through a constitutional handshake between two elected branches, with the President choosing a nominee and the Senate deciding whether that choice becomes a justice with life tenure (absent...
Read more →
The Debt Ceiling Explained
You have probably heard the debt ceiling described as a national credit limit. That metaphor is close enough to be useful, and wrong enough to cause real confusion. The United States does not suddenly “run out of money” simply because Congress hit a preset number. The bind is legal, not...
Read more →
Medicare Drug Price Suits Move Through Lower Courts
The Biden administration is defending the Medicare drug price negotiation program created by the Inflation Reduction Act, but the fight is playing out where many major federal programs are tested first: in the lower courts. Drugmakers and industry groups have filed multiple lawsuits in federal...
Read more →
How Shutdowns Work
Source text needed to publish. The only reference provided is a Google News RSS link. No extractable article text is available from it, so there is nothing to cite, summarize, or fact-check for a publication-ready explainer about how shutdowns work. Not publishable yet. With no readable source...
Read more →
Medicare Pricing Case: Source Needed
Editor’s note: The only reference provided for this assignment is a Google News RSS link. It returned no extractable article text. Without accessible source material, we cannot write or verify a factual report about any Supreme Court request, Justice Department submission, or Medicare drug...
Read more →Source Unavailable
The authoritative source provided does not contain readable story text. The only extractable line available is: “[No extractable content found]” . With no article body to review, there are no narrative details, facts, quotes, figures, or attribution available to draft a publication-ready news...
Read more →
House GOP Rejects Senate Deal, Shutdown Drags On
House Republicans turned down a Senate continuing resolution, prolonging a partial shutdown. A plain-English guide to CRs, the Antideficiency Act, and what stops first.
Read more →