Let’s be honest — folks are fed up with wondering if their vote actually counts.
Tired of shady ballot drop-offs, out-of-date voter rolls, two identical mail ballots being mailed to one individual, election results posted where votes are going down (?), and foreign money creeping into our elections like termites in a woodpile.
That’s why a group of grassroots patriots just dropped a serious hammer: the U.S. Citizens Elections Bill of Rights — a plainspoken, common-sense call to clean up our elections and restore faith in the vote.
It’s about time…and the time is now. So we can affect the 2026 election cycle.
To add insult to injury, the Nevada legislature is currently proposing bills that will exacerbate the lack of accountability and security in our elections and we must put a stop to it.
Here are 4 examples:
1.) One bill proposes for people with valid driver’s licenses from other states to vote after renting an apartment for 60+ days.
2.) Another proposal is to allow prisoners to register new voters and on top of that these prisoners will also be able to vote online via email – a known security risk called out by the National Institute of Technology, a government agency that regulates the use of its computer systems. They recommend against email-based voting over the public internet for security and privacy reasons. Go figure!
3.) And another bill suggests for any Nevadan to be able to vote online by email, similar to the prisoners mentioned above. All the registrant needs to claim is a sudden illness or a need to leave town for business or personal reasons. And, voila, just send an email with your e-ballot in it.
4.) Lastly, and maybe the worst of all proposals, the Secretary of State (SoS) is advocating to set up an account called the “Voter Access Grant Program”.
This would allow him to control a brand new account where he, alone, can dole out money for any reason and accept donations from any non-governmental source.
NN&V published an article on it March 24, titled Slush Fund Politics. To make matters worse, the original bill proposal was part of AB420.
However, last week, that portion of AB420 re-appeared as Amendment #123 to AB287. Imagine that!
I guess our testimonies on AB420 must have had their effect. But instead of giving up, they doubled down and quietly moved the text to another bill.
What’s the Big Idea?
This “Bill of Rights” isn’t just some wish list cooked up in a DC think tank.
It’s a 10-point game plan written by everyday Americans who believe elections should be fair, honest, and run by the people — not bureaucrats or billionaires.
Here’s the heart of it: Only U.S. citizens should vote. Period.
Sounds simple, right?
But right now, some states let folks register without ever proving they’re a citizen. That’s like letting anyone hop in your truck and drive off just because they say they’ve got a license.
The new Bill of Rights demands documentary proof of citizenship to vote — no exceptions.
It calls on states to adopt “Only Citizens Vote” constitutional amendments, scrub voter rolls clean, and verify identities using solid sources like the DMV and Social Security records.
And for mail-in voting? They want more than just a signature scribble. Think QR codes, valid passports, and IDs that actually say “CITIZEN.”
One Day, One Vote — Like the Good Ol’ Days
Raise your hand if you miss when folks voted on Election Day, not Election Month.
This plan brings it back — one day, one vote, in person, at your local precinct.
Absentee ballots? Sure, for folks who really need them. But no more same-day registration or dragging out results for weeks while some “cures” their ballot with help from partisan lawyers.
Votes should be counted and reported on election night, just like we used to do it.
No More Foreign Funny Business
The Bill also slams the door on foreign influence — no foreign cash in campaigns, no foreign-owned voting machines, and no sketchy software made overseas.
If the machines that count our votes are made in China, we’ve got bigger problems than potholes.
There’s even a call to ban ranked-choice voting and other “billionaire-concocted election schemes” like the National Popular Vote, which is basically a backdoor way to kill the Electoral College and let places like California run the whole show.
Election Tech: Back to Basics
Another key part? Ditch the machines.
These citizen voters want to bring back hand-marked paper ballots and boot out hackable touchscreen gizmos.
Why? Because machines can be manipulated. But paper ballots? Hard to argue with a pencil and a piece of paper.
They also want every single election record — including ballot images and vote tallies — made public and saved for at least two years.
None of this “oops, we deleted the files” stuff.
What About Our Troops?
Great question.
The plan separates military voters from overseas civilians to make sure our men and women in uniform don’t get lumped in with folks who haven’t set foot on U.S. soil in decades.
The goal is simple: make it easier for service members to vote, not harder.
Critics Cry Foul — But Don’t Be Fooled
Now, let’s be fair. Critics are calling parts of this plan “voter suppression.” They say it’s too strict and will make it harder for some folks to vote.
But here’s the reality — voting isn’t supposed to be a free-for-all. You need ID to rent a movie, board a plane, or pick up a package.
Is it really too much to ask for ID to pick a president or our local county commissioner or state assembly member?
As one supporter put it, “We’re not trying to stop anyone from voting — just stop people from voting illegally.”
Bottom Line
The U.S. Citizens Elections Bill of Rights isn’t fancy. It’s not wrapped in academic double-speak or political fluff. It’s plain, powerful, and practical — just like the folks behind it.
It’s about protecting the one thing that makes this country tick: the vote.
If we can’t trust our elections, we can’t trust anything.
Learn more, share it with your neighbors, and let your lawmakers know: the people are watching. It’s time to bring back real election integrity — not just talk about it.
The urgency is now, in time for the 2026 election cycle.
Read the full plan at www.VoteFair2026.com.
Want a printable copy of the U.S. Citizens Elections Bill of Rights to stick on your fridge or hand out at church? Grab it here: www.VoteFair2026.com.
Because freedom isn’t free — and neither is your vote.
This article was written with the assistance of AI. Please verify information and consult additional sources as needed.