Election Reform
  • A person has a choice of how long they would like to be in power
    • They can be in power for eight years. If they choose this option, they must fix or finish the issues that the previous leader has started to deal with. For the next four years, they will start and finish different issues. For the last two years, they will start to resolve some issues, and they will be finished by the next leader.
    • A person can be in power for as long as they want, until they die, quit or retire. If this is what a leader decides to do, the people have to write down five problems they would like to do something about. Whatever the top four ideas are, the leader has to make an impact on it. Once they have done that, they can choose any other issue to address. (keep)
  • There should be limits to how much a person donates - $10,000 maximum
  • The voting age should be 18 years of age. If a person moves into the country, they must be 18 years or older and a citizen to be able to vote.
  • To be able to be elected, a person must have lived in the United States for at least 10 years or was born somewhere in the US
  • Redistricting (areas of land - decides district for high schools) - happens after the census is taken because of equal populations
  • A person must be at least 28 years of age to run for any kind of placement in the government
  • Each district/area of land would have three votes. The number of votes per candidate is based off of what the people vote on (i. e. 100% democratic, all three votes go to the democratic candidate; 75% republican and 25% democratic, 2 go to the republican and 1 goes to the democratic candidate)