Because we all believe a government should serve the people — not itself.

 This is just one person’s idea.

No party machine. No donors. No PR team. Just a citizen who, like so many others, is sick of politics. Not government itself — but what we’ve allowed it to become.

We’re sick of being lied to every four years. We’re sick of hearing promises made, only to be broken or reversed the moment votes are counted. We’re sick of an economy that works for shareholders but not for workers — where the public subsidise the low wage earners of billion-pound companies with public funds in the form of universal credit, while families visit food banks. We’re sick of a system where truth is optional and trust is irrelevant.

Most people feel this. But not many have the time, space, or energy to ask what we’d build if we could start again. So this is my attempt. To ask — what if we could reimagine government in Britain?

Not tear it all down. Not rage at the gates. But strip it back to the foundation and ask: what is this for?

Because government is not meant to rule. It’s meant to serve.
And somewhere along the line, we forgot.

We started measuring our success by market indexes while life expectancy fell with the standard of living.
We allowed homelessness to persist while thousands of homes sat empty and in some cases we allowed those who have fought for our country to be abandoned by it.
We started protecting the image of institutions instead of the dignity of the people who need them.
We call it “fiscal responsibility” to squeeze the poor — but not to chase offshore profits and allow corporations to pretend they are operating in another country to dodge tax.

This is not a party. It’s a proposal. A sketch of something better.

It started as an idea. But ideas grow legs when you have ADHD and Autism. This is my Hyperfocus.
And what I want to say, as honestly as I can, is that I believe Britain is not broken — it’s been neglected.

We haven’t run out of money.
We’ve run out of imagination.

You can vote for whatever reason you like.
You can vote for a man with a bucket on his head in Maidenhead — and that’s your right.
But most people don’t vote for something.
They vote against something.

We’re also sick of the hypocrisy — of politicians claiming expenses for what ordinary people are expected to pay for with their wages. Glasses. Suits. Travel. Meals. There is no reason why a public servant, paid generously by the taxpayer, should not buy their own clothes from the salary we pay them.

And we’re sick of fear being used as a campaign tool.
“If you vote for them, this will happen.”
“If they get in, everything will fall apart.”
They don’t ask for your trust — they try to win your fear.
They don’t earn your vote — they threaten you into it.
It’s not a vision — it’s a warning label.

That’s not leadership. That’s manipulation.