Protect Democracy
Democratic institutions don't protect themselves — citizens do. Understanding how checks and balances work helps you support them effectively.
Democracy Requires Active Participation
Checks and Balances
The U.S. Constitution distributes power across multiple institutions specifically to prevent any single branch from becoming too powerful. Each institution has tools to check the others.
| Institution | Role | How It Checks Power |
|---|---|---|
| Congress | Makes laws, controls spending, confirms appointments, conducts oversight, can impeach | Can override vetoes, subpoena witnesses, refuse to fund programs |
| Federal Courts | Interprets laws, reviews constitutionality, protects individual rights | Can block unconstitutional actions, issue injunctions, rule laws invalid |
| State Governments | Run elections, maintain own laws, provide services, command National Guard | Can refuse to cooperate with federal overreach, protect state residents |
| Free Press | Informs public, investigates wrongdoing, holds power accountable | Can expose corruption, shape public opinion, preserve historical record |
Key Topics
Constitutional Checks
How the separation of powers works. The roles of Congress, courts, and states in checking executive power.
Learn moreElection Protection
How to protect voting rights. Poll watching, election monitoring, and reporting irregularities.
Learn moreLegal Pathways
How courts and legal advocacy work. Understanding lawsuits, injunctions, and constitutional challenges.
Learn moreFree Press
Why independent journalism matters. How to support local news and identify reliable sources.
Learn moreInstitutional Resistance
How public servants, institutions, and civil society can resist unlawful orders and defend democratic norms.
Learn moreWhat You Can Do
Support Institutions
- Subscribe to quality local and national journalism
- Donate to legal organizations defending civil liberties
- Thank officials who uphold their oaths
- Volunteer as a poll worker or election observer
Stay Informed
- Follow court cases affecting civil liberties
- Track your representatives' votes
- Understand your state's election laws
- Learn to identify misinformation
Democratic Resilience
Scholars identify these as warning signs:
- • Attacks on the legitimacy of elections
- • Weakening of independent media
- • Politicization of law enforcement and courts
- • Undermining of civil service institutions
- • Demonization of political opponents as enemies
Source: Steven Levitsky and Daniel Ziblatt, "How Democracies Die"
Recognizing these patterns early allows citizens to respond before democratic erosion becomes irreversible. History shows that democracies are most resilient when citizens actively defend norms and institutions, even when their preferred party holds power.
Organizations & Resources
- Protect Democracy — Nonpartisan organization fighting authoritarianism
- Brennan Center for Justice — Research and advocacy on democracy and justice
- Common Cause — Holding power accountable through civic engagement
- League of Women Voters — Voter education and election protection
- Facing South — Investigative journalism on democracy in the South