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Constitutional Accountability Now, 2026

Building permanent systems to document constitutional conduct and enable lawful civic accountability when institutional oversight fails.

The Constitution assigns oversight powers to specific institutions. When those powers are declined, delayed, or left unused, accountability does not disappear. It shifts to the public.
CAN 2026 exists to make constitutional conduct visible, documented, and traceable, and to enable informed civic accountability grounded in verified evidence.
Funded entirely by supporters. No party money. No dark money.
Support Accountability Infrastructure

What CAN 2026 Builds

CAN 2026 builds independent constitutional accountability infrastructure.
We do not advocate, speculate, or campaign. We document and enable lawful civic engagement.

Documentation Infrastructure

A permanent public record tracking how federal officials uphold or abandon their constitutional duties.

· Primary source verification

· Source-linked records and timelines

· Nonpartisan methodology

· Continuous operation across all administrations

Civic Accountability Infrastructure

When institutional oversight powers exist but are not exercised, lawful constituent engagement makes that refusal visible and consequential.

· Evidence-based civic engagement

· Strategic district-level visibility

· Constitutionally grounded public accountability

· Lawful, nonviolent participation only

Documentation creates the record. Civic accountability ensures the record has consequences.

Why This Infrastructure Matters

Congressional oversight is not discretionary. It is a constitutional duty assigned to specific committees with specific powers.

When those powers go unused, the failure itself becomes part of the constitutional record. Without documentation, that failure fades. Without organized civic response, it carries no consequence.

The Constitution ultimately relies on an informed citizenry when institutional checks fail. That reliance requires permanent records and lawful civic engagement, not memory or outrage.

CAN 2026 builds the infrastructure that makes this possible.

Building Irreversible Accountability

Constitutional accountability does not depend on volume. It depends on scale.

When verified records are distributed across thousands of citizens, districts, and communities, they become impossible to quietly dismiss or erase. Documentation combined with broad civic visibility creates accountability that outlasts any single administration.

CAN 2026 builds that infrastructure. Your support expands its reach.

Documented Oversight Failures

The following categories reflect documented instances where constitutional oversight authority existed but was not exercised. Each links to primary sources, timelines, and verification notes.

Federal Use-of-Force Incidents
Oversight jurisdiction existed. Committees declined to issue subpoenas.
View documentation

Closed or Reversed Investigations
Investigations halted or redirected without public explanation.
View timelines and records

Congressional Oversight Refusals
Committees declined subpoena authority despite clear jurisdiction.
View votes and procedural records

Judicial Non-Intervention
Courts declined review on procedural or jurisdictional grounds.
View filings and decisions

These entries are descriptive, not accusatory. Conclusions belong to the public.

(Cases are added and updated as research is completed.)

How Documentation and Civic Accountability Work Together

Documentation establishes

· Which officials hold oversight authority

· When that authority was exercised in the past

· When it is being declined now

· Exact votes, procedures, and jurisdictional decisions

Civic accountability applies

· Lawful constituent visibility in relevant districts

· Public accountability tied to documented actions and votes

· Media and public attention grounded in verified records

· Strategic focus where institutional incentives can change

Evidence creates visibility. Visibility creates political cost. Political cost changes calculations.

Transparency and Independence

· Funded entirely by individual supporters

· No party funding

· No dark money

· No coordination with political campaigns

· All spending documented publicly

· Lawful, nonviolent civic engagement only

Trust is demonstrated through structure, transparency, and discipline.

What You Can Do Next

· Explore the Public Record

· Learn How Oversight Works

· Support Accountability Infrastructure

CAN 2026 is not a momentary response.
It is permanent capacity for constitutional accountability.

Add Your Name to the Public Record

You don’t need to donate to support constitutional accountability.

This registry records individuals who support congressional oversight and constitutional checks regardless of party. Names are collected to demonstrate public concern and district-level relevance, not for fundraising.