Amendment 28 — the People’s Amendment
A Constitutional Framework for Government Integrity, Accountability, Fiscal Responsibility, and Democratic Reform
A Constitutional Framework for Government Integrity, Accountability, Fiscal Responsibility, and Democratic Reform
Amendment 28 (Article XXVIII) to the United States Constitution provides a comprehensive constitutional framework intended to restore public confidence in the federal government by addressing institutional dysfunction, political corruption, fiscal instability, election integrity, and structural incentives that many Americans perceive as undermining representative government.
The amendment is designed as an integrated constitutional system rather than a collection of unrelated reforms. Its provisions operate together through self-executing enforcement mechanisms, objective standards, transparency requirements, automatic compliance triggers, and limitations on discretionary abuse.
The amendment contains twenty-one Sections organized around six principal objectives:
The amendment repeatedly emphasizes:
The amendment is expressly drafted to function through constitutional text rather than reliance upon ordinary legislation alone.
Section 1 establishes the foundational purposes of the amendment.
The amendment declares that the People, acting through Article V of the Constitution, are exercising their sovereign authority.
The Amendment:
The Section frames the amendment as a structural reform measure rather than an ideological or partisan document.
Section 2 provides an extensive constitutional definitions framework.
The amendment repeatedly relies upon objective criteria, ministerial duties, measurable standards, GAO certifications, and transparent public reporting. To support this structure, Section 2 defines numerous operational terms.
Defined terms include:
This Section is designed to reduce ambiguity, constrain discretionary abuse, and improve judicial administrability.
The amendment repeatedly attempts to distinguish objective constitutional compliance from subjective political judgment.
Section 3 establishes a constitutional guarantee of equal, reasonably accessible, and nondiscriminatory voting access in federal elections.
The Section prohibits laws or practices that materially burden voting rights absent objectively supportable necessity grounded in election integrity or comparable legitimate governmental interests.
This Section:
The Section also clarifies that nothing within it creates a constitutional right to unlimited election spending inconsistent with Section 15.
Section 4 prohibits partisan gerrymandering for congressional districts.
The Section requires congressional districts to be drawn through independent state-established redistricting bodies operating under neutral and transparent standards.
Required districting criteria include:
The amendment eliminates partisan map manipulation while preserving state-level implementation authority.
The Section also includes:
Sections 5 and 6 impose term limits on Members of Congress.
House of Representatives:
Senate:
The amendment states that the purpose of these limits is to:
Transition rules are addressed in Section 9.
Section 7 is one of the amendment’s most extensive and structurally significant provisions.
The Section attempts to preserve Article III life tenure while restructuring active participation on the Supreme Court.
The amendment maintains:
At the same time, it creates a rotating “active service” system.
Under the rotation sysem:
Senior Justices may:
The amendment attempts to prevent strategic retirements and irregular vacancy timing by creating predictable appointment intervals.
The Section also establishes:
The President retains constitutional nomination authority, but bipartisan committee procedures encourage broader consensus.
The amendment repeatedly states that:
The Section further attempts to constrain judicial-management concerns by limiting judicial review largely to ministerial and declaratory enforcement.
Section 8 creates a constitutionally authorized line-item veto process.
Unlike the previously invalidated statutory federal line-item veto, this authority would exist directly within the Constitution.
The President may disapprove individual appropriations or monetary items identified through objective certification procedures.
Key safeguards include:
The amendment repeatedly attempts to prevent:
The Section is tightly integrated with the amendment’s broader fiscal framework.
Section 9 establishes implementation rules.
Key provisions include:
The Section is designed to ease transition into the amendment’s long-term structural framework.
Section 10 creates an extensive ethics and anti-corruption framework.
Major provisions include:
The amendment is designed to stop:
The Section also attempts to create automatic compliance incentives by tying compensation to constitutional performance obligations.
Section 11 establishes constitutional safeguards designed to prevent unrelated provisions from being buried inside large omnibus legislation, where they may be combined with dozens or even hundreds of unrelated measures. It creates procedures requiring stand-alone consideration and separate recorded votes for designated legislative measures.
Under the Section, a relatively small number of Representatives or Senators may trigger stand-alone consideration procedures requiring a recorded up-or-down vote on designated legislation
Objectives include:
Section 12 creates the Independent Office of Public Integrity (IOPI).
IOPI functions as an independent constitutional oversight and enforcement institution.
IOPI responsibilities include:
The amendment constrains IOPI authority through:
The Section repeatedly states that IOPI:
The office is designed as a constitutional accountability mechanism rather than a policymaking body.
Section 13 establishes a constitutional taxation framework.
The Section to combines:
Major provisions include:
The Section also authorizes a generally applicable supplemental tax structure for extraordinary realized income events exceeding extremely high thresholds.
The amendment repeatedly:
Section 14 establishes a constitutional fiscal-control framework.
The Section creates:
The amendment creates a rules-based fiscal system that automatically responds when spending or debt thresholds exceed constitutional limits.
At the same time, the amendment protects:
Automatic enforcement mechanisms are designed to activate if Congress fails to maintain required fiscal standards.
The amendment repeatedly emphasizes:
Section 15 establishes a constitutional campaign-finance and anti-corruption framework.
The Section establishes constitutional limitations intended to reverse judicial doctrines that treat unlimited political spending as protected speech.
The amendment authorizes:
The Section simultaneously preserves:
The amendment repeatedly emphasizes that regulation must operate under objective and uniformly applicable standards.
Section 16 establishes additional election-integrity protections.
The Section includes safeguards relating to:
The amendment is designed to strengthen both public trust and operational reliability in federal elections.
Section 18 establishes broader federal fiscal-management obligations.
The Section addresses:
The amendment constitutionalizes higher standards of fiscal administration and public accountability.
Section 17 provides interpretive rules for courts.
The Section repeatedly directs courts to:
The Section is designed to prevent judicial nullification through narrow interpretive doctrines.
Sections 19 and 20 establish constitutional protections for Social Security and Medicare.
The amendment:
The Sections are closely connected to the fiscal mechanisms established elsewhere in the amendment.
Section 21 establishes the amendment’s enforcement architecture.
The amendment operates through:
The Section:
The amendment repeatedly attempts to minimize the need for courts to supervise political branches continuously while still preserving enforceability.
Several recurring themes run throughout Amendment 28:
Objective Standards Over Subjective Judgment
The amendment repeatedly attempts to replace discretionary standards with measurable constitutional requirements.
Automatic Constitutional Enforcement
Many provisions operate automatically when triggering conditions occur, reducing reliance upon political willingness to enforce the amendment.
Transparency and Public Reporting
The amendment repeatedly requires publication of decisions, certifications, fiscal actions, and compliance records through a public fiscal ledger.
Institutional Accountability
The amendment imposes enforceable consequences for governmental nonperformance.
Structural Anti-Corruption Measures
Many Sections are directed toward reducing incentives for corruption, influence peddling, insider advantage, and procedural manipulation.
Fiscal Sustainability
The amendment constitutionalizes long-term fiscal discipline while preserving essential programs.
Separation-of-Powers Preservation
The amendment repeatedly states that it does not eliminate core constitutional functions of the legislative, executive, or judicial branches except where expressly modified.
Judicial Administrability
The amendment repeatedly frames enforcement around the use of objective records, ministerial duties, and manageable constitutional standards.
Amendment 28 creates one of the most extensive structural constitutional reform packages in modern American history.
Rather than focusing upon a single issue, the amendment attempts to establish an integrated constitutional framework.
It addresses:
The amendment is designed around the principle that constitutional reform should:
Throughout the amendment, substantial emphasis is placed upon objective constitutional standards, transparency, automatic enforcement, and operational continuity.
The amendment redesigns multiple structural aspects of federal governance through permanent constitutional reform rather than temporary and often changing statutory measures.