The Contract with the American People
The Constitution was designed to diffuse power—not concentrate it. Yet over time, factionalism, partisanship, and corporate dominance have warped the system into one that serves the few at the expense of the many. The Contract with the American People reaffirms that the Constitution is a living document—a contract between the people and their government—and demands its modernization to restore balance, accountability, and freedom
Key Principles
Abolish Political Parties:
- End the red-versus-blue division that fuels polarization and political violence.
- Return governance to ideals and merit, not partisan rhetoric or manipulation.
- Restore democracy to a system of individuals serving the public—not factions competing for power.
Defuse Concentrated Power:
- Reevaluate and repeal laws that have shifted authority disproportionately to one branch of government.
- Rebalance the federal structure to reflect the founders’ intent: separation of powers and shared responsibility.
Modernize the Constitution:
- Recognize the Constitution as a living document that must evolve with modern realities.
- Address the Founders’ oversight: they never anticipated corporate entities powerful enough to rival nations.
- Close constitutional loopholes that corporations exploit to dominate markets, politics, and even sovereignty.
Restore the People’s Contract:
- The Constitution is a contract between the government and the governed.
- When the government or corporations violate the rights of the people, they break that contract—and forfeit legitimacy.
- The American people must hold all institutions accountable to their founding purpose: protecting liberty and serving the common good.
The Constitution was never meant to enable tyranny—whether by party, faction, or corporation. By abolishing partisanship, modernizing the Constitution, and reaffirming it as a binding social contract, we can restore the United States to what it was always meant to be: a government of the people, by the people, for the people.
Our rights are not privileges—they are the terms of our contract with America