Contact us:
50501.wi.mke@gmail.com
+1(414) 376-0651
About 50501
We are defenders of the U.S. Constitution – a peaceful, decentralized, grassroots movement with a mission to uphold democracy and constitutional governance.
We stand against:
- Executive overreach
- Attacks on constitutional freedoms
- Illegal government purges
- Misinformation and divisive rhetoric
- Unjust immigration policies
- Unprecedented wealth inequality
We are calling for:
- Restoring checks and balances
- Undoing unconstitutional executive orders and policies
- Accountability for political appointees
- Fair and ethical governance
- An end to the this second gilded age
Keep reading for a more detailed explanation about what we stand for and why its important!
- Limit executive overreach
- Article 1, section 9, clause 7 of the US Constitution “makes clear that Congress holds the power of the purse, giving it authority “to lay and collect Taxes, Duties, Imposts and Excises” and specifying that “No Money shall be drawn from the Treasury, but in Consequence of Appropriations made by law.” In short, federal taxing and spending requires legislation that is enacted into law.” (Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, 2024). Executive orders are not law, as laws are established by Congress.
- 65 executive orders have already been signed since inauguration day. This is nearly as many as Biden’s entire first year of his term (77), and more than any one of the years in Obama, Bush, Clinton, and George H.W. Bush’s terms. Obama signed a total of 277 executive orders over the span of his two terms- Trump signed 220 in his first term, which means he has already surpassed the previous high number of EO’s during his first 30 days in office of his second term (his current total is 285).
- Restore democracy
- Dependent on limiting overreach
- Restricting the involvement of unelected officials in official government business that impacts tax payers
- Hold politicians accountable for lying to the American people in order to secure an election win – namely, denouncing Project 2025 after backlash during the campaign only to implement many of its day 1 policies, as well as hiring many people involved in it’s conception onto the administration.
- “The Senate on Thursday confirmed Russell Vought as the Director of the Office of Management and Budget—over Democrats’ opposition—after Vought served as a co-author and reported “architect” of the controversial right-wing policy agenda Project 2025, one of several contributors to the document that have now been elevated to major roles in President Donald Trump’s White House.” (Forbes, 2025)
- Tom Homan: Formerly the acting Director of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), Homan has been designated as the “border czar” in the Trump administration.
- Stephen Miller: Known for his role in immigration policy during the previous administration, Miller has been appointed as Deputy Chief of Policy.
- John Ratcliffe: A contributor to Project 2025, Ratcliffe has been nominated as the Director of the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA).
- Brendan Carr: Also a contributor to Project 2025, Carr has been nominated as the Chair of the Federal Communications Commission (FCC).
- Implementing Project 2025 policy including:
- Withdrawing from the WHO
- Withdrawing from the Paris Climate Agreement
- Putting stipulations of ability of states to receive federal emergency relief (FEMA)
- Ending Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion programs
- Freezing federal funding
- Restricting gender affirming care
- Revoking security clearances of intelligence officials invovled in Hunter Bidens case
- Removing civil servants employment protections
- Reinstating military members who refused COVID vaccination
- Banning transgender people from the military
- Federal hiring freeze
- Sending active duty troops to the Mexican/American border
- Limiting refugee acceptance
- Abolishing the department of education
- Protect our citizens
- Federal funding cuts for research will affect thousands of studies across nearly every specialty- including healthcare, biology, and psychology, which are necessary for guiding educated policy decisions
- “Forbidding” words in federally funded research, including the words “women, female, race, disability, victim, LGBT, gender, bias, and trauma”. Any article containing any of these words will be pulled for review to determine if they are compliant with the “anti-woke” aim of the DEI rollback EO. Many of these words are essential parts of any research study in the realm of biology, psychology, and healthcare. This will severely impact the amount of available information to inform decision and policy making.
- Important medical information has been removed from government websites because it does not align with the Trump Administration ideology, including: information on AIDS, vaccinations, and STDs on the CDC website, the entire reproductive rights government website, and 5 of 6 information pages dedicated to women’s research. This not only makes it more difficult for individuals to find information for themselves, but also impacts resources that doctors use when making care decisions for patients.
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