Constitutional Law on the Multistate Essay Exam: Highly Tested Topics and Tips

Constitutional Law is regularly tested on the MEE. It is tested, on average, once every year or year-and-a-half. It used to be the least-tested MBE subject on the MEE, but it has been making a comeback and is now tested relatively equally with other subjects.

Here, we tell you tips for approaching Constitutional Law on the MEE and we reveal some of the highly tested issues in Constitutional Law questions.

Constitutional Law on the Multistate Essay Exam

1. First, be aware of how Constitutional Law is tested

Constitutional Law is about once every year or year-and-a-half, as noted above. The subject of Constitutional Law can be divided into two sections: (1) governmental powers (the powers of Congress, the President, judiciary, federalism, etc.) and (2) individual rights (First Amendment, Equal Protection Clause, Due Process Clause, etc.). Constitutional Law MEE questions have shifted from testing primarily First Amendment and individual rights issues to lately primarily testing governmental powers.

Constitutional Law was combined with another subject for the first time in July 2019 (Civil Procedure). Constitutional Law was combined with Corporations and LLCs in July 2020.

2. Be aware of the highly tested Constitutional Law issues

The examiners tend to test several of the same issues in Constitutional Law questions. You can maximize your score by being aware of these highly tested issues. (We have a nice summary of these in our MEE One-Sheets if you want to see all of them and have them all in one place.)

Some highly tested Constitutional Law Multistate Essay Exam issues include:

Commerce Clause and Dormant Commerce Clause

These are NCBE favorites! You should be aware of Congress’s power to regulate commerce, as well as the states’ power to regulate commerce in the absence of congressional regulation.

Commerce Power

Dormant Commerce Clause - Unreasonable Burdens

Equal Protection Clause (EPC)

To perform well on an EPC MEE question, you need to memorize the standards of review under the EPC. This will help boost your score not only for the MEE but also for the MBE. You should also memorize the standards of review under the Due Process Clause, although so far, the EPC has shown up more frequently on the MEE, with issues involving age and gender.

Strict ScrutinyApplying Strict Scrutiny in Equal Protection Claims

Intermediate Scrutiny

Rational BasisApplying Rational Basis in Equal Protection Claims

First Amendment free speech

First Amendment free speech is heavily tested on the MEE. Some highly tested free speech topics are:

Application of the First Amendment

Content-based versus content-neutral