Politicians spend too much time fighting each other and playing political games instead of doing their job.
But it doesn’t have to be this way. The Missouri Agrees Amendment will give voters more power to hold politicians accountable by ensuring our elections represent the will of the people.
Watch our campaign video!
Help pass reforms.
We are pausing the Missouri Agrees campaign at this time. If you want to contribute to help protect the citizen initiative process and pass future reforms, please donate to our partner Show Me Integrity:
“A fundamental step in protecting the will of the people of Missouri and creating more effective, accountable government.”
“The simple, free, and obvious solution to nominate strong candidates and protect the will of the majority.”
“Candidates would be forced to appeal to more voters — not a small plurality that can lift a candidate to victory in the party primary.'“
Together, we will:
Stop politicians from deceiving voters with confusing ballot language: Require all ballot summaries for ballot questions to be “unbiased, clear, fair,” and “only include language found in the proposed measure.” This will ensure voters actually know what they’re voting on.
Increase liberty by giving voters the freedom to choose all the candidates they like in each separate party primary and general election. Very similar to school board elections: voters choose multiple candidates, and the one with the most votes wins.
In our current system, leaders are often elected with less than 35% of the vote. This amendment would ensure that winners have broad support from voters, instead of divisive politicians. That forces officials to actually solve problems like the economy and education, instead of playing political games.
Guarantee all qualified political parties and candidates the right to appear on the general election ballot, as required by current law. Some political consultants are trying to change this. The Missouri Agrees Amendment would protect it in the Constitution.
Require election authorities to remove voters from the voting rolls when provided notification from a state agency that the voter has died and give non-partisan candidates the right to have observers where ballots are cast and counted, as political parties are already allowed to do.
These common-sense, widely supported reforms increase trust in our elections.
Meet the Team
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Freddie Steinbach
CHAIR & TREASURER. Former Finance Director to Gov. John D. Ashcroft. Former Mayor of Chesterfield. Former Chair, United Way of Greater St. Louis West Region. Outreach Director, Conservatives Against Corruption.
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Shamed Dogan
PARTNERSHIPS. Former 4-Term Missouri State Representative (R-Ballwin), where he chaired the Local Government and Criminal Justice committees, and former Ballwin alderman. Previously worked for the Regional Business Council, the Missouri Republican Party, Sen. Jim Talent, and the National Republican Senatorial Committee.
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Benjamin Singer
OPERATIONS. Benjamin previously helped run reform campaigns for transparency, ethics, conflicts of interest, redistricting, and the initiative process alongside leaders across the spectrum, including Rob Schaaf, John Danforth, Tishaura Jones, and Carl Bearden.
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Addison Theil
FUNDRAISING. Addison is from Carthage (near Joplin) and is a graduate of Missouri State University.
Who’s donating?
Republicans like
David Brain
Bob Hermann
Randy McDonnell
Jack Danforth
Mark Burgess
Democrats like
Maxine Clark
Scott Intagliata
Rick White
Harvey Wallace
Independents like
Kim Halleman
Steve Fox
Sara Gilbert
Eric Gilbert
Ready to take the next step?
Help pass reforms.
We are pausing the Missouri Agrees campaign at this time. If you want to contribute to help protect the citizen initiative process and pass future reforms, please donate to our partner Show Me Integrity: