We still hold
these truths
Even though they are under attack.
Personal Freedoms
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Equality
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Personal Freedoms ◦ Equality ◦
Democracy and Elections
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The Rule of Law
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Separation of Powers
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Democracy and Elections ◦ The Rule of Law ◦ Separation of Powers ◦
It will take all of us to protect & defend people, their rights, and our future.
“We Hold These Truths” unites people across the political spectrum, communities, and professional sectors to share accessible principles and civic values that are increasingly under threat today.
THE TRUTHS
We hold these truths to be self-evident…
…that constitutional democracy in the United States rests on the following enduring principles:
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The personal freedoms accorded throughout the Constitution and its many amendments are an essential protection against government tyranny and reflect the inherent rights of every person in the United States. These include:
Freedom of expression: Democracy depends on freedom of speech and the press. The government has no right to intimidate or punish anyone simply on the basis of their views and ideas.
Criminal justice: Those suspected and accused of crimes are protected by many provisions of the Bill of Rights, including those limiting police searches and arrests, ensuring the privilege against self-incrimination, and providing for fair trials. These rights are imperative to protect individual freedom and prevent abuses by the government.
Personal autonomy: Our society respects fundamental aspects of autonomy, including the liberty to make important decisions about one’s life.
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Equality is a precondition of freedom. We all are free only when all of us, not just some of us, are free from discrimination, exclusion, and threat. Without equality for all, freedom for all is a broken promise.
Equality of difference: Our differences are our strength, not our weakness. Where autocracy and authoritarianism demand allegiance to uniformity, democracy demands the opposite—differences of people and opinion.
Equality of voice: Every person’s voice is of equal worth, and every person’s voice is equal, whether in the workplace, the public square, or the voting booth.
Equality of opportunity: Equality of opportunity is a right, not a privilege. Everyone is guaranteed the opportunities of education, employment, and participation in our democracy—regard-less of their color, walk of life, social status, poverty or wealth.
Equality under law: Every person is equal in the eyes of the law, and equality under law is guaranteed only when the government’s decisions about our lives are free of discrimination, racism, prejudice, bias, and favoritism.
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In a democracy, voters elect their leaders, and elected candidates make the law. Our democratic republic functions best when Americans accept, honor, and respect election results. To achieve this outcome, elections must be conducted in a fair manner.
Voting: A democratic society must enfranchise voters to the fullest extent possible, make elections open and accessible, and refrain from erecting unnecessary barriers to voting. Voter suppression is antithetical to democracy, and it exists when eligible voters are unable to register to vote, cast a ballot, or have that ballot counted.
Peaceful transfer of power: Our constitutional republic depends upon our shared commitment to the peaceful transfer of power, regardless of whether our preferred candidate wins.
Judicial review of elections: To ensure fair elections, aggrieved candidates must be able to invoke the judicial process to challenge the results of elections when the facts and law so justify, and in return are obligated to respect the important work of election officials and any resulting judicial decisions. However, baseless claims of fraud in an election undermine public confidence in a trustworthy election administration system.
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To preserve liberty, fairness, and the stability of our democratic society, the exercise of power by the government and other actors must be limited by law. This rule of law requires:
Equality under the law: All people, no matter their station, stand equal before the law, subject to the same rules, protections, privileges, and sanctions.
Due process of law: Before the government may deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, the individual must have a meaningful opportunity to challenge the legality of the deprivation before an independent and neutral adjudicator.
Neutrality: Law enforcement—investigations, prosecutions, adjudications, and pardons—must be conducted according to law, with respect for human dignity, and without regard to the personal or political interests of the executive.
Access to Justice: All people should have meaningful ability to vindicate their rights and interests in court before an independent and neutral decisionmaker, particularly when subject to suit or prosecution by the government.
Judicial independence: The rule of law cannot be preserved without an independent judiciary that is neither subject to intimidation by the executive or legislative branches of government, nor beholden to the demands of political parties.
Accountability: Government officials must conform their actions to the law and be checked by other branches of government, as well as the people, to prevent the abuse of power and abrogation of the public trust.
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A fundamental structural feature of the Constitution, and its chief safeguard of our liberty, is avoiding the concentration of power by separating and placing limits upon the legislative, executive, and judicial powers of government among three branches that check, balance, and respect each other’s power.
Responsibility of each branch of government: Congress alone possesses the legislative power, which is limited to that authority enumerated in the Constitution. Presidents are not Kings; their power must come from the Constitution or a statute passed by Congress and may not be applied to violate the constitutional rights of others. And it is “emphatically the province and duty of the judicial department to say what the law is.”
National defense: The federal government must provide for the common defense, which today means protecting the United States, supporting our allies overseas, and preventing foreign interference from disrupting our political system. But whether the federal government is protecting national security or fulfilling its domestic responsibilities, it must adhere to the limits of its legal authority.
Respect for state sovereignty: The American system of government divides power between the national government and state governments. States may do all that is not prohibited by the Constitution or federal law.

We the People
The Constitution provides an answer to the question of how people of a diverse nation who don’t think alike can still act together. The complex structure of lawmaking that document creates seeks to force compromise and ensure the accountability of those in power. Its implementation requires an informed citizenry and faithful political representatives who will engage in good faith negotiations to seek mutual accommodation, always putting country first.
CONTRIBUTORS
From Stacey Abrams and Pete Buttigieg to Barbara Comstock, Sophia Bush, and Stuart Gerson, Americans from across the political spectrum — judges, writers, actors, and everyday citizens — have joined to support and protect these truths. Join us. Share the truths. Stand for what’s right.
We signed
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Erwin Chemerinsky
Dean, U.C. Berkeley School of LawJ. Michael Luttig
Judge, United States Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit (ret.)Skye Perryman
President & Chief Executive Officer, Democracy Forward FoundationLisa Tucker
Professor of Law, Drexel University Thomas R. Kline School of Law
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Stacey Abrams – former Minority Leader, Georgia House of Representatives
Pete Buttigieg – former United States Secretary of Transportation; former mayor of South Bend, Indiana
Wesley Clark – four-star general, United States Army (ret.); Supreme Allied Commander, NATO (ret.); Chair and CEO, Wesley K. Clark & Associates
Thomas B. Griffith – Judge, United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit (ret.)
Sherrilyn Ifill – Vernon E. Jordan Jr. Chair in Civil Rights, and Founder, 14th Amendment Center for Law & Democracy, Howard Law School
Peter Keisler – former Acting Attorney General of the United States
Harold Hongju Koh – former Dean and Sterling Professor of International Law, Yale Law School
Brad Meltzer – bestselling author and historian
Ted Mitchell – President, American Council on Education (ACE)
Melissa Murray – Frederick I. and Grace Stokes Professor of Law; Faculty Director, Birnbaum Women’s Leadership Center, New York University School of Law
Jamie Raskin – United States Representative, Maryland’s 8th Congressional District
Dana Remus – former White House Counsel; Partner, Covington & Burling LLP
Cristina Rodriguez – Leighton Homer Surbeck Professor of Law, Yale Law School; Co-Chair, Commission on the Supreme Court of the United States
Brian Sandoval – former Governor of Nevada; Judge, United States District Court for the District of Nevada (ret.); President, University of Nevada, Reno
Reshma Saujani – founder, Girls Who Code; CEO, Moms First
David Tatel – Judge, United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit (ret.)
Christine Todd Whitman – former Governor of New Jersey; former Administrator, United States Environmental Protection Agency; President, Whitman Strategy Group
Seth Waxman – former Solicitor General of the United States; Co-Chair, Appellate and Supreme Court Litigation Practice, WilmerHale
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Erika Alexander – actor and activist
Donald B. Ayer – former United States Deputy Attorney General
Sophia Bush – actor and activist
Lynda Carter – actor
Kelsi Brown Corkran – Supreme Court Director and Senior Lecturer, Institute for Constitutional Advocacy & Protection at Georgetown Law School
Barbara Comstock – former United States Representative, Virginia’s 10th Congressional District; former Director of Public Affairs, Department of Justice
Rachel Dratch – actor and comedian
Jennifer Finney Boylan – Anna Quindlen Writer-in-Residence, Barnard College of Columbia University
Michael Gerhardt – Burton Craige Distinguished Professor of Jurisprudence, UNC-Chapel Hill
Stuart Gerson – former Acting United States Attorney General; Of Counsel, Epstein Becker Green
Adam Grant – Saul P. Steinberg Professor of Management and Professor of Psychology, University of Pennsylvania Wharton School of ManagementBlake Cooper Griffin – actor and activist
Lauren Groff – writer
Deb Haaland – former United States Secretary of the Interior
Robert Henry – Judge, United States Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit (ret.)
Thomas R. Kline – Co-Founding Partner, Kline & Specter, PC
William P. Marshall – former Deputy White House Counsel; William R. Kenan Jr. Distinguished Professor of Law, University of North Carolina Law School
Sharon McMahon – bestselling author and editor-in-chief of The Preamble
Mary McCord – former Acting Assistant Attorney General for National Security, U.S. Department of Justice; Executive Director and Visiting Professor, Institute for Constitutional Advocacy and Protection at Georgetown Law School
Casey McQuiston – bestselling author
Leona Mitchell – operatic soprano
Julianne Moore – actor
Trevor Morrison – Roth Professor of Law and Dean Emeritus, New York University School of Law
Celeste Ng – bestselling author
Carter G. Phillips – former Assistant to the Solicitor General and experienced Supreme Court advocate
Jodi Picoult – bestselling author
Anna Quindlen – writer
Richard Russo – novelist and screenwriter
David Saperstein – former United States Ambassador-at-Large for International Religious Freedom
Curtis Sittenfeld – writer
Shanin Specter – Co-Founding Partner, Kline & Specter, PC
Nic Stone – bestselling children’s book author
Chutatip Suntaranon – James Beard award-winning chef and restauranteur
Michael Waldman – President & CEO, Brennan Center for Justice
Jennifer Weiner – writer
Bradley Whitford – actor and activist
Elizabeth Wydra – President, Constitutional Accountability Center
Add Your Name
By adding your name, you’re joining a nationwide movement to protect freedom, equality, and democracy through facts, not politics. Remember: it’s about principle, not party.