About We The People

Constitution.Voteis a real-time direct democracy engine where Americans form political parties, vote on the issues that matter, and build a transparent Citizens' Assembly that makes the people's will impossible to ignore.

Free
Forever. No premium tiers.
No Ads
No political advertising. Ever.
No Data Sales
Your data is never sold or shared.
Nonpartisan
No affiliation with any party or PAC.

Why This Exists

The U.S. democratic system transmits roughly 2.7% of what citizens wantinto actual policy. That's not a talking point — it's a measurement, computed using Shannon's information theory on two decades of preference-policy data. A telecommunications engineer would call a channel operating at 2.7% efficiency non-functional.

The system was designed in 1787 when the fastest communication technology was a horse. Elections every two to four years were the highest sampling rate available. Compressing your views on hundreds of issues into a choice between two candidates was the only encoding possible. Those constraints no longer exist. The technology to measure, aggregate, and display the will of millions of people — in real time, on every issue, with verification — exists today. Constitution.Vote builds that channel.

What We Don't Do

We don't run political ads. We don't take money from candidates, parties, PACs, or lobbyists. We don't sell user data. We don't endorse candidates. We don't shape editorial positions on any issue — the platform measures what citizens think, it doesn't tell them what to think.

Your individual votes are private by default. You control what's visible on your public profile. The only data that's public is the aggregate: what percentage of Americans — and what percentage of each party — voted which way on each issue. That aggregate data is in the public domain, free for journalists, researchers, and policymakers to use.

How It Works

Citizens take a political alignment quiz to find their party, then vote on daily policy polls. Every vote is counted. Every party breakdown is visible. Results are displayed in a live parliament visualization — the Citizens' Assembly — showing what America's representation would look like if it actually reflected the people. Delegates emerge from voting behavior, not campaigns. Counties are claimed by the party with the most members there. The map changes color in real time as the assembly grows. For the full guide, see Welcome to Constitution.Vote.

Who Built This

Constitution.Vote is built and operated by Euler's Identity, LLC, a small independent research firm based in Florida. The platform grew out of original research into democratic responsiveness — specifically, measuring the information-theoretic efficiency of the citizen-to-policy channel. When the data showed that channel operating at 2.7% capacity, building an alternative became the obvious next step.

We are not a nonprofit in the legal sense — we are an LLC that operates at cost. There are no investors demanding returns, no board of donors with agendas, no advertising revenue to protect. The platform exists because someone decided to build it and put it on the internet. If it grows, it grows because citizens found it useful. If it doesn't, the code and the data remain public.

Open Data & Transparency

All aggregate voting data, poll results, party breakdowns, and assembly seat allocations generated on Constitution.Vote are in the public domain. Journalists, researchers, policymakers, and citizens are free to use this data without restriction. We ask only that you cite constitution.vote as the source.

The platform's verification system uses tiered identity checks — from email verification to government ID — to ensure vote integrity while respecting privacy. Verified citizens carry more vote weight, making the signal harder to game while keeping participation open to everyone. See Vote Weight & Verification for details.

Contact

For press inquiries, partnerships, or general questions: [email protected]

Constitution.Vote is not affiliated with any political party, candidate, government agency, or PAC. All political perspectives are welcome. The platform measures the people's will — it does not shape it.