The U.S. Constitution, featuring profiles on Founding Fathers, a comprehensive collection of amendments, and a wealth of historical documents.
Online since 1995.
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What happens when an institution designed to stay out of politics finds itself caught in the center of a political storm? That’s the question now confronting the U.S. Army, after the sudden suspension of a commanding officer at Fort Liberty…
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The War on Harvard: Is Academic Freedom the Next Constitutional Battleground?
What happens when the federal government uses its financial muscle to shape the ideology of America’s universities? That’s no longer a theoretical question. Harvard University—one of the country’s oldest and most prestigious academic institutions—is now at the center of a…
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Judge Blocks DOGE’s Access to Social Security Data: Where Efficiency Meets the Fourth Amendment
What happens when a government office created to streamline bureaucracy is accused of overstepping constitutional boundaries? That’s the question at the heart of a new federal court order targeting the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE), a relatively new agency under…
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Washington’s War on Big Tech Heats Up – And the Constitution Is Caught in the Crossfire
How far can the federal government go to dismantle private power? That’s no longer a hypothetical question. This month, the Biden-era legal framework collided head-on with a Trump-era enforcement engine, as Google, Meta, Apple, and Amazon all face serious antitrust…
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Latest Polls: Technically, the Constitution doesn’t care about approval ratings
Is a presidency still powerful if the public turns away from it? As Donald Trump enters the second quarter of his second term as President of the United States, his approval rating is not just a political metric – it’s…
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Justice Alito Slams Supreme Court for Halting Trump-Era Deportations Under 1798 Law
Is the Supreme Court now second-guessing the Constitution’s own text? That’s the charge Justice Samuel Alito levels in his sharp dissent from a recent decision temporarily blocking the Trump administration’s use of the Alien Enemies Act of 1798 to deport…
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Supreme Court Halts Deportations of Venezuelans Under 18th-Century Law: A Constitutional Standoff
Can a law written during the presidency of John Adams still determine who stays in the United States today? That’s the constitutional dilemma at the center of a new Supreme Court order blocking the Trump administration from deporting Venezuelan migrants…
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Are the Deaths of the “D.C. Five” a Federal Crime – or a Federal Cover-Up?
What happens when the executive branch chooses silence over scrutiny? That’s the question Republican lawmakers are now forcing back into the national spotlight as they call for a long-delayed federal investigation into the deaths of five late-term aborted babies discovered…
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“Loyalty or Leave”: Trump’s Civil Service Reshape Raises Constitutional Alarms
What if your job in government depended not on competence, but on loyalty to the president? That’s the question at the heart of a sweeping proposal unveiled this week, in which the Trump campaign pledged to implement a new civil…
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‘NOT coming back’: White House Attacks NYT For ‘Wrong’ Headlines
Can a president ignore a court order and still claim to uphold the rule of law? That question continues to intensify following new statements from the Trump White House, which forcefully rejected recent criticism over the deportation of Kilmar Abrego…