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The Federal Program That Lets You Buy Prescription Drugs From the White House

The discounts look dramatic. But here's what the White House doesn't emphasize: for most people with insurance, using the program will cost more than their current plan. How the Program…

6 Min Read

New Rules Let Your Child See Out-of-State Medicaid Doctors More Easily

About 2.8 percent of children on Medicaid get emergency or urgent care out of state nationally, but that varies wildly. Families in rural areas face the starkest choices. For specialized…

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

If Meta Loses This Case, Every Social Platform’s Business Model Changes

A jury decision that platforms are consumer products with design defects companies can be held accountable for would force every…

Could Congress Ban Addictive Design Features in Apps? The Constitutional Issues

A 19-year-old identified in court documents as K.G.M. took the stand this week in Los Angeles County Superior Court to…

What the FTC Can Do About Social Media Targeting Minors

Internal company documents have been uncovered showing employees discussing the psychological effects of their platforms on teens despite knowing potential…

Your Health & Safety

How Federal Agents Are Investigated When They Kill U.S. Citizens

Two Americans are dead, shot by federal immigration agents in Minneapolis seventeen days apart. Renée Nicole Good, 37, mother of…

When Federal Agents Kill Citizens During Raids, These Programs Offer Recourse

Two Americans dead within three weeks. Both shot by federal agents during immigration raids in Minneapolis. Both families now facing…

How State Criminal Cases Can Jump to Federal Court—And Why It Rarely Happens

A federal judge in Manhattan heard arguments about something that almost never happens in American criminal law: whether to move…

Your Voice & Rights

When Government Officials Post Racist Content: What the Law Allows

On Thursday night, February 5, 2026, at 11:44 PM ET, President Donald Trump posted a 62-second video to Truth Social…

The Constitutional Provisions That Give States—Not Presidents—Election Power

The FBI seized original ballots from Georgia in January 2026. That's not how it works. That's never been how it…

Can the FBI Seize State Election Records? What Federalism Law Says.

On January 28, 2026, federal agents wearing tactical vests walked into the Fulton County Elections Hub and Operations Center in…

Your World

How Immigration Judges Decide Who Gets Released on Bond—And Who Doesn’t

As of late January 2026, more than 70,000 people were in immigration detention—and a federal appeals court ruled that tens…

What Due Process Rights Apply to Noncitizens Detained Inside the U.S.

By mid-January 2026, ICE held a record 73,000 people in immigration detention—a number that had grown dramatically over the previous…

Why Circuit Courts Keep Reaching Opposite Conclusions on Immigration Detention

More than 360 federal judges said no. Then one appeals court said yes. On February 6, 2026, a divided panel…

Indefinite Detention Without Hearings: The Operational Reality DHS Now Faces

By mid-January 2026, ICE was detaining approximately 73,000 individuals—the highest level in the agency's 23-year history. A federal appeals court…

Trending Federal Guidance

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 can be confusing. This guide breaks down the different fees for obtaining or renewing your…

16 Min Read

USPS Package Size Limits

Whether you're shipping products nationwide as a small business owner or sending gifts to loved…

Understanding the Social Security Earnings Limit

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

USPS Media Mail Rules and Restrictions

Media Mail is an economy shipping service provided by the USPS specifically for sending media…

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…

Other Top Federal Guidance

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 process for Retirement, Disability, and…

Can Renters Get LIHEAP? Your Guide to Energy Bill Assistance

Navigating LIHEAP as a Renter The Low Income Home Energy Assistance Program (LIHEAP) offers crucial support for individuals and families,…

America’s Pacific Military Plan: Countering China with Allies and Bases

The Indo-Pacific region is home to over half of the world's population and a major contributor to the global economy.…

Omnibus Bills vs. Single-Subject Legislation

The laws that govern the United States are crafted through complex legislative processes. Central to understanding this system is recognizing…

Burden of Proof vs. Standard of Evidence: How Legal Cases Get Decided

Every day in American courtrooms, judges and juries face a fundamental question: Has someone proven their case? The answer depends…

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Supreme Court Delay on Tariffs Leaves $133 Billion in Legal Limbo

The Supreme Court heard arguments about President Trump's tariff authority in early November 2025—95 days ago. The justices granted expedited review, which means the Court fast-tracks cases it considers urgent.…

23 Min Read

The Constitutional Clause That Gives Congress—Not Presidents—Tariff Power

President Trump imposed $133 billion in tariffs by declaring a national emergency. Two lower courts declared them unconstitutional. The Supreme Court heard arguments on November 5, 2025—four months ago—and still…

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Why Supreme Court Decisions Sometimes Take Months to Release

Ninety-five days after the Supreme Court heard oral arguments in a high-stakes challenge to President Trump's executive tariff authority, the justices still have not issued a decision. U.S. businesses continue…

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Paid Tariffs Under Legal Challenge? How Importers File for Refunds

The Supreme Court has been deliberating for three months on whether President Trump's tariffs were lawfully imposed. For American importers, there's a more immediate problem: entries are being finalized by…

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Presidential Records Act Governs Social Media—Here’s What It Requires

A legal question with no clear answer has emerged regarding presidential social media deletions and record preservation requirements. The Presidential Records Act says that content related to official presidential business…

18 Min Read

What the Fourth Amendment Requires Before ICE Can Enter Your Home

Federal agents broke into ChongLy "Very Scott" Thao's St. Paul home with the wrong address. They knew this within minutes—the person they were seeking no longer lived there and the…

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ICE Doubled in Size in One Year. Here’s the Legal Framework That Allowed It.

The immediate questions were obvious: How did this happen? Who authorized it? But there was another question, less dramatic but more structurally important: How did ICE suddenly have 2,000 officers…

14 Min Read

Sealed Warrants and Election Records: How Federal Search Authority Works

On January 28, 2026, FBI agents in tactical gear loaded more than 700 boxes of certified 2020 ballots into vehicles outside Fulton County's election operations center near Atlanta. They were…

21 Min Read

What Role Does the Intelligence Director Play in Domestic Law Enforcement?

FBI agents backed trucks up to the Fulton County Elections Hub and Operations Center in Georgia on January 28, 2026, and loaded boxes of ballots and election materials from the…

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The Obscure 1977 Law at the Center of Trump’s Tariff Battle

Hundreds of billions of dollars in tariffs hang in the balance. The Supreme Court is deciding whether a president can rewrite America's entire tariff system by declaring a national emergency—using…

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If the Supreme Court Sides with Trump, Congress Loses Its Oldest Power

When the First Congress convened in 1789, it didn't start with grand speeches about democracy or the rights of man. It passed a tariff bill. The Tariff Act of 1789…

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