All demandments

TOTAL GOVERNMENT TRANSPARENCY

Public trust in government is at an all-time low. The current attempts at transparency are partial at best — dense PDF reports, buried datasets, statistics from last year that no one can interrogate in real time.

What we don’t see: who signed the deals. Who approved the budgets. Who we should hold accountable. That information exists. You keep receipts — but you hide them.

We’re not asking for favours. We’re asking for function. Use the tools now available. Conduct a real audit. Show the people where their money goes. Only then can we make informed choices at the ballot box.

Problems

  • You hide where public money goes

    Ask a basic question — “How much do first-generation immigrants cost the taxpayer?” — and you’ll get vague shrugs or cherry-picked figures. “We don’t collect that data,” or “EU skilled workers are net positive.” You’re paid too well for such lazy answers.

  • You waste public money with no consequences

    Billions are lost yearly to failed projects, inflated salaries, and gold-plated contracts. No one is fired. No one is charged. Instead, we’re told taxes must rise. In the private sector, this would be criminal. In government, it’s business as usual. That ends now.

  • You use division to distract from corruption.

    When services collapse, you tell the public to blame immigrants, benefit claimants, or NHS staff. But the truth is: it’s you. If mass migration is straining services, show us. If councils are burning taxpayer money, prove it — in full.

Solutions

  • AI-powered audits of public spending.

    Use the same forensic systems banks use to detect fraud. Scan every transaction. Flag anomalies. Back the results with human oversight. National security exemptions can remain — but council spending? It must be public, searchable, and tied to names.

  • Real consequences for government waste.

    Fraud, negligence, or reckless spending should trigger clear outcomes: suspension, loss of seat, criminal charges, or MiPO. The public deserves names, figures, and accountability. No more hiding behind complexity.

  • Public spending must serve the public.

    n emergencies, you protect your own first. You must put on your own oxygen mask before you can properly attend to everyone else. The UK economy is in crisis. You keep telling us. Suspend foreign aid until domestic poverty, NHS waitlists, and child hunger are resolved. You are not responsible for the world, you are responsible for us.

If your party is in power now, you may feel the urge to resist this audit. Don’t.

Faith in institutions is collapsing. You can help restore it.

If you’ve spent public money fairly, and wisely, this is your chance to show us.