The amendment: A structural imperative

Discover the foundational principle behind Elect the DOJ: a constitutional amendment to elect the U.S. Attorney General and a Justice Board. This critical change aims to introduce a structural separation of power within the Executive Branch, safeguarding due process and preventing the dangerous concentration of authority.

Why structural separation matters

At the heart of "Elect the DOJ" is the proposal for a Constitutional amendment to:                                                “Elect the U.S. Attorney General and Justice Board.”              This new structure would assist and oversee the actions of the Attorney General, creating a vital structural separation of power within the Executive Branch—much like the separation of powers within Congress. Currently, there's an irreconcilable conflict of interest and a corrupt concentration of political and quasi-judicial power in one single person. Only STRUCTURAL SEPARATION OF POWER will protect the SANCTITY of DUE PROCESS. As Antonin Scalia once said, “Structure is Everything.” Americans rely on a WRITTEN CONSTITUTION, NOT MERE WORDS.

Safeguarding our future: A call to action

We are speaking to every American who understands the profound power of the Department of Justice. We have allowed the DOJ, the most powerful force in government that can either protect our rights or destroy our personal lives, to be overseen and controlled by a politician who can easily favor himself and his cronies over doing justice for all. This is an awesome power that requires judgment, ethics, education, and training that are not always characteristic of Presidents over more than the past 50 years since the DOJ was founded. Your engagement is crucial to ensuring a just future.

Urgency of reform: Preventing dictatorship

The biggest problem this amendment aims to fix is the constitutional flaw of over-concentration of power in one person. This dangerous imbalance can be used to establish a dictatorship, a threat that could have materialized in the past and continues to loom over our future as free citizens. Fixing this is not just important; it's urgent to preserve our democratic principles and individual liberties. The time to act is now.

"Like separation of powers between the two houses of Congress—the Legislature—there will be two houses within the Executive Branch. One house for due process, law enforcement, investigation, prosecution, and litigation; the other house for political process, policymaking, budgeting, and veto of legislation."

Elect the DOJ