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17,285 result(s) for "Constitution-US"
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Inauguration Day 2025: Trump begins second presidential term
Donald J. Trump took the oath of office in the Capitol rotunda on Jan. 20, 2025.
JD Vance sworn in as vice president of the United States
JD Vance was sworn in as vice president of the United States on Jan. 20.
Editor's Page - Volume 88, Number 1
IADC members have helped lead the effort to strengthen Americans' understanding and faith in the Court systems. \"Genomics in the Courtroom: The Current Landscape of DNA Technology in Criminal and Civil Litigation\" by Scott Elder and Anderson Kemp is a fascinating review of the Court's approach to genetic technology. [...]there is an article by Mitchell L. Lathrop entitled \"Carve-Outs and Injunctive Relief in Arbitration Cases\" that analyzes and discusses issues related to enforceability of arbitration clauses.
Harris swears in Regan as EPA administrator
Vice President Harris swore in Michael Regan as the Environmental Protection Agency administrator in a brief ceremony on March 17.
DISLOYALTY & DISQUALIFICATION: RECONSTRUCTING SECTION 3 OF THE FOURTEENTH AMENDMENT
To become President of the United States, you must be constitutionally qualified. You must be thirty-five years old, a natural born citizen, and fourteen years a resident within the United States. Neither Congress nor any state can set this threshold higher; the same is true for congresspeople. But since it was last successfully invoked in 1917, most have forgotten the other qualifier-for officers at both the state and federal levels-from Section 3 of the Fourteenth Amendment. Those who have violated their oath to uphold our Constitution can be disqualified from holding any public office under the United States or any state. This Article reconstructs this lost qualification and develops a framework for its twenty-first-century application by the states, the federal courts, and Congress. Part I uses sources from and contemporary to the drafting of the Fourteenth Amendment alongside recent secondary sources to determine what Section 3 means. Part II then develops a test that can be applied in judging a Section 3 case. Part III briefly explores mechanisms through which the qualification can be enforced. Part IV reviews and summarizes some surviving use-cases so that decision makers can easily compare modern transgressions to precedent. And finally, Part V adopts the analysis from Parts I and II and scrutinizes a hypothetical person who may be barred by Section 3. The Article then concludes.
Harris sworn in as 49th vice president of the United States
Kamala D. Harris was sworn in as the 49th vice president of the United States on Jan. 20 at the U.S. Capitol.
The Limits of Liberalism
Bryan Garsten's essay suggests that liberal polities should be understood as offering \"refuge\" from overweening public power. While there are sound arguments to support this approach, it downplays the affirmative exercise of public power in the liberal state and leads to policy proposals—such as a more generous stance toward refugees—that may not make sense when taking into account both the right of political communities to put the needs of their members first and the considerations that have led to rising doubts throughout Western democracies about accepting large numbers of refugees at this time.
Marco Rubio sworn in as secretary of state
Vice President JD Vance swore in Marco Rubio as secretary of state on Jan. 21, the morning after the Senate unanimously voted to confirm his nomination.