Why this matters
Most Americans can name the President. Far fewer can name their House member. Almost nobody can name their state senator — the person who votes on their schools, their roads, their police, their rent laws. That gap isn't a personal failing. It's a design failure: the information was never made easy to find.
Access is the first step of engagement
When knowing who represents you takes research, most people never start. When it takes ten seconds, everything downstream changes: you know who to call when something affects your life, you know whose name to look for on your ballot, and you know exactly who is accountable to you. Representation only works when constituents can see it.
Your vote counts — and it's counted carefully
American elections are run by your neighbors: county and city election officials, overseen publicly, with paper trails, audits, and observers from both parties. Errors are caught because the system is built to catch them. Distrust thrives on distance — the closer you look at how elections actually work, the more reasons you find to participate.
What we believe
This project is nonpartisan, free, and private by design. We don't care who you vote for. We care that you know who represents you, when your next election is, and how to make your voice heard. That's it. That's the whole mission.