An interesting phenomenon often happens when the national administration changes. When a newly elected President of the United States starts making policy changes, people are understandably concerned. People wonder if the actions are constitutional – especially if the President represents a different political party.
Market research firm Circana began keeping track of purchases of America’s founding documents in 2004 and claims that they are selling faster in 2025 than in any previous year since 2004. Joshua Arnold believes that “the tumultuous state of America’s political affairs” could be the reason for the “rising civic interest.”
The
U.S. Constitution, the Declaration of Independence, and the Federalist Papers
have sold a combined 162,000 copies this year, Circana noted – and that’s only
through mid-April. This is 76% higher than the same period in 2017, President
Donald Trump’s first term in office, when these documents sold 92,000 copies,
more than twice as many as in 2016. Sales totaled 58,000 over the same period
in 2024 and 33,000 over the same period in 2023.
Circana
analyst Brenda Connor said the record-high interest “is likely in response to
the recent change of administration,” noting rising intrigue in other books
about government as well. “We generally see increased sales of editions of the
Declaration of Independence and the Constitution every election cycle,” said
Shannon DeVito, Barnes & Noble’s senior director of book strategy, “but
particularly this year.”
In
addition to the cyclical election spike in sales, DeVito also noted that the 250th
anniversary of the Declaration of Independence, which will take place next
July, may also play a role in the spiking demand.
Yet
multiple analysts still suggested the record-high orders were due to “the fast
and furious current political conversations and policy changes,” as DeVito put
it. Indeed, political changes have been fast and furious, as the Trump
administration swings the pendulum back from the Biden administration’s lawless
leftism.
In
less than 100 days, the Trump administration has undertaken massive downsizing
and restructuring within the federal bureaucracy, slashed through one agency
after another with the DOGE chainsaw, overhauled America’s tariff regime, and
nearly abolished both USAID and the Department of Education. As if that weren’t
enough, the Trump administration has picked fights with universities like
Harvard over their rampant antisemitism, punished states like Maine over their
refusal to protect girls’ sports, and played chicken with the federal court
system on a host of issues. Not only has the Trump administration embraced
rapid political changes, but it has also done so in ways that challenge
longstanding liberal assumptions about how government is supposed to work and
what it is supposed to do.
These
changes evoke a range of emotions across the political spectrum. The Left is
outraged, Trump’s base is enthused, while many ordinary Americans – those with
only a casual understanding of politics – are merely bewildered. The question
that pops into their head is, “Wait a minute, can they do that?”
And
that is a legitimate question. Many Americans are not rabid political activists
who broach the question merely as a prelude to a more hostile political
broadside. They genuinely want to know.
But
– due to another seismic shift that helps account for the record-high interest
in
America’s
founding documents – these curious Americans no longer trust the media to
answer this question for them. In days gone by, they were too busy to research
arcane legal issues for themselves. They trusted those whose job it was to
research and report on the news to track down the answer for them.
Not
anymore. In October 2024, Gallup recorded that a record-low 31% of Americans
had “a great day/fair amount” of trust in mass media, compared to 33% who had “not
very much” trust, and 36% who had “none at all.”
So,
if Americans want to know what the Constitution allows, but they don’t trust
the media to tell them the truth, the simplest solution is to return to the
founding documents and read them for themselves….
Yet
the more important – and salutary -- trend is that the increased demand for America’s founding documents
indicates increased civic awareness. When Americans are studying the
Declaration of Independence and U.S. Constitution, and when they analyze the
actions of their elected representatives through that lens, then they are thinking
like citizens, not subjects. They will recognize the self-evident wisdom of our
system of government. And these ordinary Americans will thereby be empowered to
defend their system of government against all manner of authoritarian assaults.
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