The Constitution Is on the Ballot Every Week.Listen Before They Vote.
A roughly one-hour, three-voice podcast that puts the most constitutionally concerning bills moving through Congress on trial — narrated, defended, and challenged in plain English. New episodes drop as new bills emerge.
Most bills become law before most citizens know they exist.
Thousands of pages of legislation move through Congress every session. Buried inside are provisions that quietly redraw the line between branches, expand executive power, narrow your rights, or shift authority away from the states. By the time the headlines catch up, the vote is already over.
This podcast exists so that does not keep happening.
Three Voices. One Constitution.
Every episode is a structured debate — not a monologue. You hear the case for and the case against, side by side, on each bill.
The Narrator
Neutral, journalistic guide
Opens with the latest platform analytics, frames each bill in plain language, and keeps the debate grounded in facts — not partisanship.
The Proponent
Defender of the bill
Argues that each bill is constitutional and beneficial, citing specific Articles, Amendments, and the underlying AI analysis.
The Opponent
Constitutional critic
Challenges each bill on constitutional grounds, surfacing risks to your rights, your community, and the structure of government.
What You'll Hear in Every Episode
Bill selection is grounded in U.S. Census Bureau data — specifically the four super-categories the Census uses to describe every American in its American Community Survey: Demographic, Social, Economic, and Housing characteristics. They are the same definitions used to apportion congressional seats and federal funding.
Each episode starts with the constitutionally concerning bills currently moving through Congress, then ranks them by demographic impact — a composite score (50% severity, 30% breadth, 20% vulnerability weighting) produced by an AI classifier that maps every bill against those four Census-defined categories. Bills are interleaved across all four so a single episode reflects the full picture of who is affected, with extra weight given to historically underserved groups.
Demographic Characteristics
Who is affected by age, sex, race, ethnicity, ancestry, household composition, marital status, fertility, and migration status — from infants to seniors, single-person households to multigenerational families, native-born citizens to recent immigrants and refugees.
Social Characteristics
Impacts on education attainment, language spoken at home, disability status, veteran status, grandparent caregivers, and computer/internet access — the social fabric that shapes how households participate in civic and economic life.
Economic Characteristics
Effects on employment status, occupation, industry, income, poverty status, commuting patterns, work schedules, and health insurance coverage — from the uninsured and gig workers to retirees on Medicare and full-time professionals.
Housing Characteristics
Consequences for housing units, costs, value, quality, utilities, vehicle access, and tenure — from cost-burdened renters and homeless households to homeowners with a mortgage and those who own outright.
One Hour. A Sharper Citizen.
What you walk away with when you press play:
- Hear both sides argued at full strength — no spin, no shouting matches.
- Understand the constitutional stakes of bills your representatives are voting on right now.
- Catch the legislation that will not make the evening news but will shape your rights for decades.
- Walk away with the language and citations you need to call, write, and hold your reps accountable.
- Listen on your commute, your walk, your dishes — one hour to become the most informed citizen in the room.
Listening is the easy part. Acting is the point.
Every episode ends with bills you can name, clauses you can cite, and reasons you can give. Press play, then pick up the phone. Your representatives work for you — make sure they hear from you before the next vote.