34 Min Read

What a Search Warrant Actually Allows FBI Agents to Take

On the morning of February 25, 2026, FBI agents arrived at two locations: the San Pedro home of Alberto Carvalho, superintendent of the Los Angeles Unified School District, and LAUSD's…

27 Min Read

The Housing Ban Bill Targets Large Investors. Here’s Who Would Actually Be Covered.

Hawley and Merkley agree on almost nothing. In late February 2026, they agreed on this: Senator Josh Hawley, a Missouri Republican, and Senator Jeff Merkley, an Oregon Democrat, introduced the…

An Independent Team to Decode Government

GovFacts is a nonpartisan site focused on making government concepts and policies easier to understand — and government programs easier to access.

Our articles are referenced by trusted think tanks and publications including Brookings, CNN, Forbes, Fox News, Pew Research, Snopes, The Hill, and USA Today.

Your Money & Home

The Supreme Court Struck Down IEEPA Tariffs. Here’s the 1974 Law Trump Invoked Hours Later.

The Supreme Court handed down its ruling at 10 a.m. On February 20, 2026. By that afternoon, the White House…

If Section 122 Tariffs Are Struck Down, Here’s Whether Importers Get Their Money Back

No president had ever used Section 122 of the Trade Act of 1974 in its fifty-year history. That changed on…

Section 122 Tariffs Are Now Law. Here’s What That Means for Prices.

Four days after the Supreme Court struck down the administration's emergency tariffs, a new 15% surcharge on most U.S. Imports…

Your Health & Safety

An ICE Agent Killed a U.S. Citizen. Here’s What Accountability Mechanisms Exist—and Where They Break Down.

Renee Nicole Good's SUV was stopped sideways across a one-way street when ICE agent Jonathan Ross fired three shots and…

Civil Rights History in Schools: What Federal Education Standards Require

When Reverend Jesse Jackson died in February 2026, the national conversation about his legacy collided with an uncomfortable reality: most…

Inside the Grand Jury: How Citizens Block Prosecutions Prosecutors Want

In fiscal year 2013, federal grand juries approved charges in 99.993 percent of cases—196,964 indictments out of 196,969 matters presented.…

Your Voice & Rights

DOJ Says Title VI Bans Only Intent. Decades of Civil Rights Law Say Otherwise.

For fifty years, a school district that suspended Black students at three times the rate of white students, with no…

The Fourth Amendment Protections That Apply During Immigration Sweeps—For Citizens and Noncitizens Alike

The Fourth Amendment does not say "citizens." It says "the people." Courts have spent decades arguing about what that phrase…

How Jesse Jackson’s Presidential Campaigns Reshaped Voting Rights Enforcement

Jackson launched his first presidential campaign in 1983. The law existed. The federal government had tools to enforce it. What…

Your World

The Pentagon Wants to Own Stakes in Mining Companies. Congress Wants to Know If That’s Legal.

By late February 2026, the Pentagon had committed hundreds of millions of taxpayer dollars to buying ownership stakes in private…

Federal Judges Are Fining the Trump Administration for Defying Court Orders. Here’s What Happens Next.

A federal judge in Minnesota issued a direct order: do not move Fernando Gutierrez Torres out of state while his…

Supreme Court Struck Down Trump’s Tariffs. Here’s Why the Next Ones May Survive.

On February 20, 2026, the Supreme Court handed President Trump a 6-to-3 loss that invalidated the sweeping tariffs he had…

Section 122 of the 1974 Trade Act Was Designed for Emergencies. Here’s What Congress Actually Intended.

Not during the Latin American debt crisis of the 1980s, not during the 1997 Asian financial crisis that spread across…

Trending Federal Guidance

USPS Package Size Limits

Whether you're shipping products nationwide as a small business owner or sending gifts to loved ones, choosing the right packaging and mailing option can save you time, money, and stress.…

14 Min Read

Understanding Your Passport Costs: A Clear Guide to Fees

Getting a U.S. passport is your ticket to international travel, but understanding the associated costs…

Understanding the Social Security Earnings Limit

You can receive Social Security retirement or survivor benefits while still employed. However, if you…

Exempt vs. Non-Exempt Employees: Understanding Your Rights Under the FLSA

The Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA) is the cornerstone of federal wage and hour law…

Step-by-Step Guide for Applying for Social Security Benefits

Navigating Social Security benefits doesn't have to be complicated. This guide breaks down the application…

Other Top Federal Guidance

USPS Media Mail Rules and Restrictions

Media Mail is an economy shipping service provided by the USPS specifically for sending media items. Its primary purpose is…

Medicare Enrollment and Social Security: Your Guide to Getting Started

Understanding the Basics: Medicare and Social Security What is Medicare? Medicare is the federal health insurance program primarily designed for…

A Recent History of Government Shutdowns in America

A government shutdown represents one of the most dramatic failures of American democracy. It happens when the most fundamental responsibility…

Is the FCC Ready for the Digital Age? A 90-Year-Old Agency Faces Modern Challenges

In the heart of the Great Depression, President Franklin D. Roosevelt signed into law the Communications Act of 1934, a…

USPS Weight Limits Explained: How Heavy Can Packages Be?

When sending a package through the United States Postal Service (USPS), weight is one of the most important factors to…

You May Also Like

Section 122 Was Written for a Dollar Crisis. Trump Just Used It for Something Else.

Fifty-two years. That is how long Section 122 of the Trade Act of 1974 sat untouched, through the Latin American debt crisis of the 1980s, the 1997 Asian financial crisis,…

29 Min Read

Can Businesses Sue Over the New Section 122 Tariffs?

President Trump signed a new tariff proclamation within hours of the Supreme Court striking down the IEEPA tariffs on February 20, 2026. He invoked a completely different statute before most…

21 Min Read

DHS Is Partially Shut Down. Here’s Which Services Are Still Running and Which Aren’t.

Ten days in, and the DHS shutdown has stopped being theoretical. The gap between what officials predicted before February 14 and what is happening now is large enough to fuel…

25 Min Read

The 150-Day Clock on Trump’s New Tariffs—And What Legal Authorities Come Next

Within hours of the Supreme Court striking down Trump's IEEPA tariffs on February 20, 2026, the administration had already chosen its next legal tool. By the following morning, Section 122…

21 Min Read

Importers Challenged the IEEPA Tariffs and Won. Here’s Whether They Can Do It Again.

The White House needed four hours. That's how long passed between the Supreme Court striking down President Trump's primary tariff program on February 20, 2026, and the announcement of a…

28 Min Read

Businesses Paid Billions in Tariffs the Court Says Were Illegal. Here’s How Refunds Would Work.

The Supreme Court struck down the IEEPA tariffs on February 20, 2026, and said nothing about what happens to the money the government collected — CBP-reported IEEPA tariff collections ran…

23 Min Read

Congress Handed Presidents Tariff Power Decades Ago. The Court Just Took It Back.

Rick Woldenberg paid millions in legal fees to sue the federal government. He described his willingness to put his name on the lawsuit in blunt terms: "I didn't do anything…

25 Min Read

The Supreme Court Just Stripped the President’s Tariff Power. Here’s What That Means.

Roughly $240 billion in tariff revenue had been collected since April 2025 from importers across the country. On February 20, 2026, the Supreme Court ruled 6-3 that the International Emergency…

24 Min Read

The Tariff Ruling Eliminated Nine Percentage Points of U.S. Trade Barriers Overnight

In Learning Resources, Inc. V. Trump, six justices formed a majority opinion, and with it, nearly half of America's tariff regime stopped existing. No trade negotiation produced this result. No…

24 Min Read

When Immigration Agents Can Enter Your Home Without a Warrant

More than 63,000 TSA officers are working without pay. FEMA disaster reimbursements to states face delays, including $11 billion tied to COVID-19 pandemic costs, though the extent to which current…

25 Min Read

Federal Workers in Shutdown Limbo: What Happens to Pay and Benefits

Approximately 260,000 Department of Homeland Security workers are either on the job without pay or sitting at home without pay. The first full missed paychecks will land in mid-March, right…

24 Min Read