Everyone is Welcome

The People’s Bill of Rights is an open, nonpartisan process to identify the rights, protections, and standards Americans believe everyone should be able to count on - no matter who they voted for, or whether they voted at all. It begins with the issues most people are already worried about: cost of living, health care, housing, safety, freedom, accountability, and a fair future. 

Because most of us are worried about the same things:

Can we afford to live?
Are we safe?
Does anyone in power listen?

The People’s Bill of Rights is about us answering that - together. And then turning those ideas into new amendments to the Constitution, so what we believe and what we need is actually written into the foundation of this country.

Come as you are.
Say what matters to you.
Be part of what comes next.

  • cost of living

  • housing

  • health care

  • wages / economic security

  • public safety

  • freedom from violence

  • peace and responsible use of our tax dollars

  • honest government

  • less corruption

  • more transparency

  • public say in major decisions

  • bodily autonomy

  • free speech

  • privacy

  • equal treatment

  • freedom from discrimination

  • education

  • children’s wellbeing

  • clean environment

  • a fair shot for the next generation

How it works:

We come together in conversations online and start with a simple question:

What should every person in this country be guaranteed?

From those conversations, we build a renewed People’s Bill of Rights—written by us, rooted in real lives, real struggles, real hopes.

We shape those ideas into clear, collective demands.

Then we take them to our representatives and make it known: this is what the people stand for. This is what must be protected.

And we fight to turn those demands into constitutional amendments - so they are no longer optional, but guaranteed.

The constitution has always had an upgrade button. It's called Article V.  The Founding Fathers believed it should be activated every generation.  It was used to end slavery, to give women the vote and to lower the voting age to 18.  It's time to use it again.

This isn't political.  This is human. And meant for you.

Why Now?

Because most Americans feel the same thing:

  • The system isn’t working the way it should

  • We’re more divided than we want to be

  • And somehow, our voices aren’t shaping the outcomes

But there is a way forward — if we build it together.