The American People — not parties, donors, or officials — are
responsible for the government we allow.
The United States Constitution begins with a simple but often overlooked principle: ultimate authority in this country rests with the people.
Not with elected officials.
Not with political parties.
Not with donors, lobbyists, or institutions.
Those actors exercise delegated power — authority that exists only because the American People permit it.
The People = the country.
When government drifts from accountability, it reflects more than a failure of leadership. It also reflects a lapse in civic responsibility. A system designed to answer to the people cannot correct itself unless the people are willing to act — collectively, peacefully, and deliberately.
This is not a call to anger.
It is not a call to partisanship.
It is not a call to blind trust in any movement or individual.
It is a reminder of constitutional reality.
Self-government functions only when citizens hold their representatives to clear, enforceable standards — and sustain that expectation over time.
Amendment 28 – the People’s Amendment. — provides a practical mechanism for doing exactly that
It does not depend on elections alone.
It does not rely on promises.
It does not ask anyone to abandon their political beliefs.
It asks something more fundamental: that the American People accept responsibility for the structure, incentives, and accountability of their own government, and that they work together to bring about changes in governance that reflect the will of most Americans.
If you agree that constitutional authority ultimately resides with the people, this is how that responsibility is translated into action with real results.
Pledge Your Support For Amendment 28.
The People’s Amendment to The United States Constitution.
No donation required.
No party affiliation required.
Takes about 30 seconds.
Restore accountability in Washington.
Add your name today.
Support Amendment 28 — the People’s Amendment.
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