A Citizens’ Petition for Articles of Impeachment


Statement of Purpose

This action exists for one reason: to reaffirm the rule of law.

The United States is not a nation governed by personalities, parties, or offices. It is a nation governed by law. When the law is selectively enforced, delayed for political convenience, or ignored outright, the legitimacy of every public office is weakened—not only the executive’s, but Congress’s as well.

Congress shall uphold the law if it expects citizens to respect its authority or consent to its continued exercise of power.

This Citizens’ Petition for Articles of Impeachment is a lawful, nonviolent, and formal civic action intended to place Congress on notice that its constitutional duties are being actively monitored by the people it represents.


What This Is

This is a rule-of-law maneuver, not a partisan demonstration.

It is a coordinated act of civic instruction in which citizens submit written Articles of Impeachment to Members of Congress and relevant offices, asserting that:

  • Congress is constitutionally obligated to conduct oversight
  • Credible, documented allegations require investigation
  • Failure to act is not neutrality, but abdication

Citizens do not possess the power to impeach.
Congress does.

This Petition exists to invoke that power and to document Congress’s response—or refusal to respond.


What This Is Not

This is not a riot.
This is not harassment.
This is not a demand for preordained outcomes.

This action does not presume guilt, dictate verdicts, or bypass constitutional process. It insists only on process itself.

A republic does not survive by outcomes alone.
It survives by procedures being honored even when inconvenient.


Why This Is Necessary

When laws are ignored at the highest levels, citizens receive a clear message:
that obedience is optional for the powerful and mandatory for everyone else.

That is the definition of a nation of men rather than a nation of laws.

If Congress tolerates noncompliance with statutes, evasion of oversight, or executive action undertaken without lawful authorization, it establishes a precedent more corrosive than any single administration: that law is subordinate to power.

Congress shall not permit that precedent to stand.


The Role of the Citizen

In a constitutional system, citizens are not spectators. They are the source of delegated authority.

This Petition is an exercise of the First Amendment right to petition government for redress of grievances—but it is also more than that. It is a formal statement of expectations:

  • That Congress will investigate credible allegations
  • That Congress will place matters of public concern on the public record
  • That Congress will act in accordance with its sworn duties

Silence, deferral, or procedural evasion is itself an answer—and one citizens are entitled to evaluate.


Why Paper, Why Mail

This action uses physical mail intentionally.

Digital outrage is easy to ignore.
Paper creates records, labor, and accountability.

Each Petition represents an individual constituent entering a formal notice into the institutional workflow of Congress. Volume matters. Persistence matters. Documentation matters.

This is how lawful pressure is applied in a functioning republic.


The Principle at Stake

This Petition is not about loyalty to a person or opposition to one.
It is about whether law still governs power in the United States.

If Congress expects citizens to comply with statutes, rulings, taxes, subpoenas, and regulations, Congress shall demonstrate that the law applies upward as well as downward.

No office is above it.
No administration is exempt from it.
No Congress is relieved of enforcing it.


Closing Statement

This Citizens’ Petition for Articles of Impeachment is issued in good faith, in public view, and in defense of constitutional order.

History does not judge republics by how passionately their citizens argued online.
It judges them by whether lawful institutions were allowed to decay without resistance.

This Petition is that resistance—measured, documented, and peaceful.

Congress shall act.


Take Action

1. Download the Petition

A standardized, printable petition has been prepared for public use.
You may submit it as written or complete it with additional personal statements.

(If you disagree with ours, write your own—but make your voice heard.)


2. Print and Sign

  • Print the document
  • Complete the signature block in full
  • Use your legal name and current address

Unsigned or anonymous submissions are routinely disregarded by congressional offices.


3. Mail the Petition

Mail copies to the congressional and executive offices listed below.

Each envelope represents an individual constituent instruction and is logged accordingly.


Where to Send It

(Do not combine recipients in a single envelope.)

  • Your U.S. House Representative
  • Both of Your U.S. Senators
  • House Committee on the Judiciary
  • Senate Committee on the Judiciary
  • The White House
  • Office of the White House Counsel
  • Supreme Court of the United States (for notice)

ROUTING AND SERVICE ADDRESSES


Petitioners are instructed to mail copies of this Petition to the offices listed below. These addresses are official government service addresses designated to receive constituent correspondence.
Mailing multiple copies is intentional and appropriate.

  1. Your Member of the U.S. House of Representatives
    (Use the name of your Representative)
    The Honorable __________________ U.S. House of Representatives Washington, DC 20515
    Note: House offices log and process constituent mail by address and district. Including your full return address is required for acknowledgment.
  2. Your United States Senators (Both)
    The Honorable __________________ United States Senate Washington, DC 20510
    The Honorable __________________ United States Senate Washington, DC 20510
  3. House Committee on the Judiciary
    (Primary committee with impeachment jurisdiction)
    Chair, Committee on the Judiciary U.S. House of Representatives 2138 Rayburn House Office Building Washington, DC 20515
  4. Senate Committee on the Judiciary
    (Receives impeachment articles and oversight referrals)
    Chair, Committee on the Judiciary United States Senate 224 Dirksen Senate Office Building Washington, DC 20510
  5. The White House – Executive Office
    President of the United States The White House 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue NW Washington, DC 20500
  6. White House Counsel’s Office
    (The office responsible for executive compliance with law)
    Office of the White House Counsel The White House 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue NW Washington, DC 20500
  7. Supreme Court of the United States
    (For notice to the judicial branch; informational service only)
    Clerk of the Supreme Court Supreme Court of the United States 1 First Street NE Washington, DC 20543
    Note: The Supreme Court does not adjudicate petitions of this nature. This copy is served as formal public notice.
    Mailing Guidance (Include This as a Footnote or Sidebar)
  • Use First-Class Mail
  • Do not combine multiple recipients in one envelope
  • Include the signature block and full address
  • Retain a copy for your records
    Why This List Matters (Optional One-Line Explanation)
    This routing ensures that all three constitutional branches receive formal notice that citizens are documenting and asserting


Why This Matters

Digital outrage disappears.
Paper creates records.

Every letter forces an institution to acknowledge that citizens are paying attention, documenting inaction, and preserving evidence of compliance—or refusal.

This is how lawful pressure is applied in a republic.

Congress shall act.

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