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Get my referral link →Bills are only part of how policy actually changes. Executive orders get issued, rules move from proposed to adopted, and the interim work that sets up next session keeps shifting, all quietly, outside the bill-tracking process most teams already have. USLege tracks executive orders, the state register, the full statutory corpus, and interim topics in one place, alerts you the moment one of them actually moves, and ties every one of them back to the legislation driving the change.
Most teams have a real process for bill tracking: a list of bills, a radar, an alert when something moves. Almost none of them have the equivalent process for the things that happen after a session ends, or beside it. A governor signs an executive order. An agency opens a rulemaking docket and quietly rewrites how a statute gets enforced. A committee gets an interim charge to study an issue that becomes next session's biggest fight, and nobody outside the capitol sees it coming.
Each of those moves through its own record, in its own format, on its own timeline, published state by state and agency by agency. Watching all of it by hand means checking a dozen different sources on a schedule nobody has time for. So teams get blindsided, not by a bill they missed, but by regulatory or executive action nobody was watching in the first place. USLege puts executive orders, agency rulemaking, statutes, and interim topics in the same searchable record as the bills you already track, so the quiet parts of government stop being invisible.
Executive action, agency rulemaking, statute text, and the interim work that precedes filing, all searchable and all connected back to the bills that touch them.
Federal executive orders, listed by the issuing president, and state executive orders, listed by the issuing governor, all full text and full-text searchable. Filter by state, date, or keyword to find the order that matters instead of scanning a press release archive. Coverage is growing across states, so an order may not yet be tracked for every state.
Proposed and adopted agency rules from the state register, the formal notice-and-comment record most states publish. Search by agency, rule name, section, or issue date, and read the full text of the rule in-platform, instead of pulling it agency by agency, state by state.
Codes, constitution, and session laws by state, browsable and searchable down to the section level. Every version is pinned to a specific legislative session, so the text you're reading matches what was actually in effect at that point in time, not just what's current today.
The study assignments a legislature hands its committees between sessions, plus the reports that respond to them. This is the actual work shaping next session's priorities, visible to you months before a single bill gets filed.
Find every bill that would Add, Repeal, or Amend a specific statute section. Regulatory and statutory change is tracked in the same record as the legislation driving it, not as two silos you have to reconcile yourself.
SOC 2 Type II certified, TX-RAMP certified, and USLege never trains AI models on customer data, so regulatory and compliance monitoring never adds risk of its own.
A statute section, an agency, a program, a topic, a state. USLege applies that context across executive orders, the state register, statutes, and interim topics, not just bills, so you're not running four separate searches for one issue.
A new executive order, a proposed rule opening for comment, an interim charge assigned to a committee, an adopted rule that changes enforcement. USLege catches these the moment they publish, with the full text available in-platform.
Cross-reference any statute section against every bill that would Add, Repeal, or Amend it. Regulatory change and the legislative fight behind it show up together, so you understand not just what changed, but why.
Bring the statutes, agencies, or programs you're already watching. In a short demo we'll show you executive orders, state register rulemaking, session-pinned statutes, and interim topics working together, cross-referenced against the bills that touch them.
A full AI-policy intelligence report across all 50 states: 241 curated bills, an AI-Friendliness Index for every state, verified legislative hearing clips in 39 states, and the sponsors driving both sides of the debate. This is the type of report USLege builds in minutes, not weeks.