The National Initiative for Democracy |
A "Plan B" when Congress doesn't Represent |
How we're getting Better and NATIONAL Ballot Initiatives

Led by former US Senator Mike Gravel, the National Initiative empowers us to check and balance representatives, similar to ballot initiatives in 24 States, but at all levels from local to national and with major improvements. It gives us a "Plan B" whenever representatives don't represent us. (Do torture, perpetual wars and debt, domestic spying and bailouts for the rich represent you??)
A few Congress members have tried to get us this power from Congress since 1907, without success. Gravel discovered the Founders had the same problem: the existing 13 Legislatures refused to share their power with the USA. The Founders found a way: The People ratified the Constitution at the Constitutional Conventions. James Madison said "The people were in fact, the fountain of all power, and by resorting to them, all difficulties were got over."(His 2nd response in the 1787 Debate)
Now we resort to you to read and vote to ratify the National Initiative, to make real the promise of "government by the people." The National Initiative consists of the brief Democracy Amendment and the more detailed Democracy Act.
Real Leaders Agree

- The Founders would agree! George Washington said "The basis of our political systems is the right of the people to make and to alter their constitutions of government." More Founders' quotes.
- America's best Constitutional expert agrees. As Yale's Akil Reed Amar says in
Popular Sovereignty and Constitutional Amendment "We the People of the United
States have a legal right to alter our government--to amend our Constitution--via a
majoritarian and populist mechanism akin to a national referendum, even though that
mechanism is not explicitly specified in Article V." - Superlative people agree: Patch Adams to Howard Zinn "Participation, that's what's going to save the human race." -Pete Seeger
- The Economist Magazine agrees: in 17articles!
This vote is no poll. It's as legal as the conventions which ratified the Constitution. Senator Gravel keeps your email, registered address, etc., with your vote so it can be verified, but will share this data ONLY with the government when ratification is complete: when more than half the people who voted in the previous Presidential election vote for the Initiative. You can change your vote at any time until then. This will take several years.
Why ballot initiatives?
- Initiatives put the people in the drivers seat. Responsibility brings more responsible people: more people vote in States with initiatives. In Switzerland, national initiatives since 1891 result in the highest newspaper readership in the world. The mental health benefits are incalculable.
- Initiatives are competition for legislators. The National Initiative will break the monopoly Congress has on national legislative power.
- People are less swayed by money than representatives are. This study and book show that people favor "grassroots" initiatives over "big money" initiatives while the Associated Press shows Congress usually votes the way big money wants. Buying Congress is the world's best investment, paying off at 1000 to 1 or more. See what jailed lobbyist/bribesman Jack Abramoff says in this Washington Post article (3rd paragraph).
- "No one misunderstands the public as much as its representatives." See this study from the U. of Maryland

- When legislators make mistakes they cover them up --to protect their careers. Citizens lack the coverup incentive but have incentive to fix mistakes: regular people suffer more than the privileged. Thomas Jefferson said "The will of the majority is the natural law of every society and the only sure guardian of the rights of man; though this may err, yet its errors are honest, solitary and short-lived."
- Large, diverse groups of independent people make better decisions. The award-winning book The Wisdom of Crowds
shows how and why.
- Even animals practice democracy! NY Times article
Improvements
The National Initiative makes these improvements over state ballot initiatives
based on a century of state initiatives and 160 years of Swiss initiatives:
- More deliberation: Randomly-selected "Deliberative Committees" would hold hearings, take expert testimony, and negotiate amendments. Their reports would be disseminated by all media. Oregon's governor just signed a bill for similar Citizen Initiative Review
- Easier: Initiatives could qualify by poll, as well as by petition: if a majority polled want to vote on an initiative, they get to.
- Less influence of money, by allowing only individual contributions to initiative campaigns. No corporate or union donations. The Deliberative Committee reports seen everywhere would make big-money ad campaigns much less important.
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"We want saints and gurus and leaders and heroes because we are lazy. We think they have done all the work, and all that we have to do is just to follow them. You know, when you follow somebody, you're not only destroying yourself, but the other whom you follow." -Krishnamurti Who really likes democracy? A tale of 4 Udalls -my Congressman, his brothers and late mother. |
Why has Vote.org's founder, previously happy-go-lucky entertainer Evan from Heaven, spent 20 years promoting better and national ballot initiatives? See here.
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Evan Ravitz, founder My Back to the Garden blog 303-440-6838

"Fool's gold exists because there is real gold." -Rumi
More info is at Senator Gravel's web site.

