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Read It Before You Vote On It

Read It Before You Vote On It

Every policy arc we have built, and every bill we have written, in one place.


CAMPAIGN BLOG  ·  THE RECORD SO FAR


A plan you cannot read is not a plan. It is a dream.


Here is something that should not be unusual, and is: a campaign that hands you the actual bills before it asks for your vote.


Most campaigns give you a feeling. A direction. A list of things they are against and a shorter list of things they are for, worded carefully enough that no one can hold them to it later. Then, if they win, the writing starts — behind closed doors, with lobbyists in the room and the public shown the result only after it is too late to change.


We did it the other way around. We wrote the legislation first. All of it. We published it while we were still asking for your support, so you could read it, argue with it, and decide for yourself whether it holds up — before a single vote is cast, not after. Nothing in this campaign is meant to arrive on Inauguration Day as a surprise.


That is the whole idea behind the line at the top of this page. A promise is a feeling. A plan is a document you can hold in your hand, check against reality, and measure us by. If you cannot read it, it was never a plan. It was a dream someone was selling you.


What You Are Looking At


Below is the full record. We organized the work into arcs — each one a subject area, each one built the same way: policy papers that name the legal authority, the responsible agency, the timeline, and the plain measure a citizen can check; and then the enrolled bill itself, the actual legislative language, ready to be submitted to Congress.


Every fact in every paper is sourced. Every source is named. There are no confidential sources and no unnamed experts anywhere in this body of work. Where we relied on something, we tell you exactly where it came from and when we read it, so you can go read it too.


Nine arcs cover the policy. A tenth — Arc 010 — gathers the legislation itself: every enrolled bill we have written, in one place, so you can read the law as it would actually be submitted.


The Record — Every Arc, Every Paper, Every Bill


The complete set of links follows below. Read any paper. Read any bill. Read the whole thing if you want to — that is the point.


The Nine Policy Arcs

 

Arc 001 — Economy, Cost of Living & Inflation. What the government can actually do about prices, wages, and the cost of a normal life — and the mechanisms to do it.

Arc 002 — Democracy, Political Extremism & Radicalization. Protecting the vote, the count, and the peaceful transfer of power, and confronting the forces that pull people toward political violence.

Arc 003 — Immigration & Border Security. A border that works and an immigration system that is lawful, humane, and finally honest about tradeoffs.

Arc 004 — Health Care & Health Costs. Coverage, cost, and the day-to-day reality of getting care — written by someone who worked at the bedside.

Arc 005 — Government Performance & Leadership. Making the machinery of government do its job: measurable performance, real accountability, and leadership that answers for results.

Arc 006 — Government Spending, Deficit, Taxation & Debt. How the money is raised, spent, and owed — and an architecture built to survive the business cycle instead of pretending it away.

Arc 007 — Education & Opportunity. Developing people instead of gatekeeping them, from early grades through the credential that opens the next door.

Arc 008 — Environment & Energy. Energy that is abundant and affordable and an environment that is protected — treated as one problem, not two enemies.

Arc 009 — Foreign Policy & National Security. Deterrence, alliances, the industrial base, and the strategy to keep the country safe without spending its strength foolishly.

Arc 010 — The Legislation Itself

The policy arcs explain the thinking. Arc 010 is the thing itself: every enrolled bill we have written, collected in one place. This is the language that would be submitted to Congress immediately after the swearing-in — published now, before the 2026 mid-terms, so no one has to take our word for what is in it.


These bills are published before the 2026 mid-terms and submitted to Congress immediately after the January 2029 swearing-in. Published first. Submitted second. Never the other way around.


Legislative Proposals:


What We Are Asking

Read it. That is the first ask, and it is a real one. We did not write all of this to have it admired. We wrote it to be checked.


And then ask the people already in office, and the people asking to replace them, the question we hold ourselves to:

Will you answer these publicly before asking for our votes?


We published our answers. They are above. The measure of anyone who wants your vote is whether they are willing to do the same — to put the plan on the table where you can read it, instead of asking you to trust a feeling.


A plan you cannot read is not a plan. It is a dream. Here is ours, written down, where you can hold us to it.


Sources

This post is an index of the campaign's own published policy arcs and enrolled legislation; the primary sources for every factual claim appear in the Bibliography of each individual policy paper linked above. No external sources are relied upon in this index post itself.

 
 
 

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