Geometric Districting
Districts must be compact, contiguous, and follow clear geometric rules—no gerrymandering by party, incumbency, or convenience. Equal population and simple shapes make representation fair and transparent.
These proposals will be met with skepticism, and that is understandable. Amending the Constitution is intentionally difficult. At times, it can feel unrealistic to believe our country can unite around structural reform when we struggle to agree on so much else.
Yet nearly all of us, regardless of party or ideology, share a frustration with how our government functions. We care deeply about different issues, but meaningful progress on any of them depends on the integrity, accountability, and fairness of the system itself. These three amendments will not solve every policy dispute, but without structural reform, lasting solutions will remain elusive.
No single leader will rescue the country. Political figures rise and fall. Durable change requires strengthening the foundations of our system so it works for everyone. These reforms are not about left or right; they are about restoring trust, representation, and accountability.
Opposition will come from those who benefit from the current structure. Expect resistance. Stay focused on principles, not personalities. Do not let bad-faith arguments distract from the larger purpose.
If you believe our republic is worth improving, make these amendments part of the conversation. Ask your representatives where they stand. Share the ideas. Organize. Be relentless in your commitment to reform. Structural change is never easy — but the health of a republic depends on citizens willing to sustain the effort.
Clear geometric rules for districts—no gerrymandering by party or incumbency.
Read amendment →Smaller districts, multiple places of assembly, and equal voting power for every member.
Read amendment →Balanced term limits for the House and Senate that close the chamber-hopping loophole.
Read amendment →Districts must be compact, contiguous, and follow clear geometric rules—no gerrymandering by party, incumbency, or convenience. Equal population and simple shapes make representation fair and transparent.
Cap district size so every representative speaks for a manageable number of people. Allow Congress to meet in multiple lawful places and ensure every member’s vote counts equally, regardless of where they are.
Cap consecutive service in the House at nine terms and in the Senate at three, with a twelve-year cooling-off period that applies to both chambers. A "final tenure" path lets a Senator serve one additional term and then step aside permanently. Public service over permanent political careers.