Use the fields below to let us know how you currently feel about politics currently (before reform) and what you want in the future (after reform).
"*" indicates required fields
UniVote reveals where voters overwhelmingly agree on issues and policies—agreement that is deliberately ignored by the political establishment.
This revealed consensus gives voters the basis for united action at the ballot box.
Pragmatic, solution-focused voters—Democrats, Republicans, and independents—constitute the majority of the electorate. Most:
Today’s highly partisan politics has drowned out the voices of these voters. “In-your-face” confrontations and shouting matches between extremists and special interests—“red” versus “blue”—dominate the political scene.
Practical, solution-focused voters are marginalized and largely ignored, despite poll after poll showing them to be a clear majority in almost every state in the union.
Polling also reveals that, on most issues, there are one or more policies supported by at least two-thirds of voters and opposed by only a few.
Policy proposals with bipartisan majority support address issues such as: Social Security & Medicare, immigration, poverty programs, jobs, housing, cost of living, the federal budget, energy & the environment, police reform, election reform, government reform, abortion & reproductive rights, gun safety, and international trade.
Why don’t we hear about these broadly supported, workable solutions to real concerns? Because politicians, parties, and special interests benefit by keeping this hidden, especially during elections. But the fact remains that we Americans agree on a lot of policies that would guide government to solve many of our nagging problems.
This is the unacknowledged common ground that UniVote reveals and empowers.
UniVote is a radically new strategy for applying digital technology to empower voters willing to seek solutions—to make them aware with remarkable efficiency of the issues and policies they overwhelmingly support. In future, this will build the foundation for them to mobilize to evaluate candidates in a way that diminishes the influence of special interests and extreme partisans at the ballot box.
This project is the work of ordinary citizens like you. It is led by William Spira, a retired scientist and educator, who started designing the model during the COVID-19 lockdown.
This grew into a manuscript—UniVote Town Halls: Mobilizing Common Ground Voters to Fix America’s Broken Democracy—that provides the blueprint for building a fully functional system.
The UniVote Town Hall is a strictly non-partisan tool that simply reveals the collective will of the voters using it. Unlike anything seen before in politics, it does not set an agenda for voters.
The upshot is this: By spending just a few hours during an election year using the UniVote app, hundreds of thousands of voters in a state can find common political ground and identify candidates who will be faithful to their priorities.
The UniVote Town Hall replaces outdated, unstructured political organizing with highly efficient, web-based technology.
Here are the key steps in the complete UniVote process:
In the future, the UniVote Town Hall model can be extended to enable participants to use the same panel-based protocol to evaluate candidates (both ranking and approval scoring). This may be done using video clips of candidates’ responses to issues in the Common Ground Agenda—done in “side-by-side” matchups between pairs of candidates.
In this future application, UniVoters can endorse candidates based on how closely they align (compared to their opponents) with the Common Ground Agenda.
The general protocol for UniVote Town Halls follows these guidelines:
UniVote reveals where voters overwhelmingly agree on issues and policies—agreement that is deliberately ignored by the political establishment.
This revealed consensus gives voters the basis for united action at the ballot box.
Pragmatic, solution-focused voters—Democrats, Republicans, and independents—constitute the majority of the electorate. Most:
Today’s highly partisan politics has drowned out the voices of these voters. “In-your-face” confrontations and shouting matches between extremists and special interests—“red” versus “blue”—dominate the political scene.
Practical, solution-focused voters are marginalized and largely ignored, despite poll after poll showing them to be a clear majority in almost every state in the union.
Polling also reveals that, on most issues, there are one or more policies supported by at least two-thirds of voters and opposed by only a few.
Policy proposals with bipartisan majority support address issues such as: Social Security & Medicare, immigration, poverty programs, jobs, housing, cost of living, the federal budget, energy & the environment, police reform, election reform, government reform, abortion & reproductive rights, gun safety, and international trade.
Why don’t we hear about these broadly supported, workable solutions to real concerns? Because politicians, parties, and special interests benefit by keeping this hidden, especially during elections. But the fact remains that we Americans agree on a lot of policies that would guide government to solve many of our nagging problems.
This is the unacknowledged common ground that UniVote reveals and empowers.
UniVote is a radically new strategy for applying digital technology to empower voters willing to seek solutions—to make them aware with remarkable efficiency of the issues and policies they overwhelmingly support. In future, this will build the foundation for them to mobilize to evaluate candidates in a way that diminishes the influence of special interests and extreme partisans at the ballot box.
This project is the work of ordinary citizens like you. It is led by William Spira, a retired scientist and educator, who started designing the model during the COVID-19 lockdown.
This grew into a manuscript—UniVote Town Halls: Mobilizing Common Ground Voters to Fix America’s Broken Democracy—that provides the blueprint for building a fully functional system.
The UniVote Town Hall is a strictly non-partisan tool that simply reveals the collective will of the voters using it. Unlike anything seen before in politics, it does not set an agenda for voters.
The upshot is this: By spending just a few hours during an election year using the UniVote app, hundreds of thousands of voters in a state can find common political ground and identify candidates who will be faithful to their priorities.
UniVote reveals where voters overwhelmingly agree on issues and policies—agreement that is deliberately ignored by the political establishment.
This revealed consensus gives voters the basis for united action at the ballot box.
Pragmatic, solution-focused voters—Democrats, Republicans, and independents—constitute the majority of the electorate. Most:
Today’s highly partisan politics has drowned out the voices of these voters. “In-your-face” confrontations and shouting matches between extremists and special interests—“red” versus “blue”—dominate the political scene.
Practical, solution-focused voters are marginalized and largely ignored, despite poll after poll showing them to be a clear majority in almost every state in the union.
Polling also reveals that, on most issues, there are one or more policies supported by at least two-thirds of voters and opposed by only a few.
Policy proposals with bipartisan majority support address issues such as: Social Security & Medicare, immigration, poverty programs, jobs, housing, cost of living, the federal budget, energy & the environment, police reform, election reform, government reform, abortion & reproductive rights, gun safety, and international trade.
Why don’t we hear about these broadly supported, workable solutions to real concerns? Because politicians, parties, and special interests benefit by keeping this hidden, especially during elections. But the fact remains that we Americans agree on a lot of policies that would guide government to solve many of our nagging problems.
This is the unacknowledged common ground that UniVote reveals and empowers.
UniVote is a radically new strategy for applying digital technology to empower voters willing to seek solutions—to make them aware with remarkable efficiency of the issues and policies they overwhelmingly support. In future, this will build the foundation for them to mobilize to evaluate candidates in a way that diminishes the influence of special interests and extreme partisans at the ballot box.
This project is the work of ordinary citizens like you. It is led by William Spira, a retired scientist and educator, who started designing the model during the COVID-19 lockdown.
This grew into a manuscript—UniVote Town Halls: Mobilizing Common Ground Voters to Fix America’s Broken Democracy—that provides the blueprint for building a fully functional system.
The UniVote Town Hall is a strictly non-partisan tool that simply reveals the collective will of the voters using it. Unlike anything seen before in politics, it does not set an agenda for voters.
The upshot is this: By spending just a few hours during an election year using the UniVote app, hundreds of thousands of voters in a state can find common political ground and identify candidates who will be faithful to their priorities.
UniVote reveals where voters overwhelmingly agree on issues and policies—agreement that is deliberately ignored by the political establishment.
This revealed consensus gives voters the basis for united action at the ballot box.
Pragmatic, solution-focused voters—Democrats, Republicans, and independents—constitute the majority of the electorate. Most:
Today’s highly partisan politics has drowned out the voices of these voters. “In-your-face” confrontations and shouting matches between extremists and special interests—“red” versus “blue”—dominate the political scene.
Practical, solution-focused voters are marginalized and largely ignored, despite poll after poll showing them to be a clear majority in almost every state in the union.
Polling also reveals that, on most issues, there are one or more policies supported by at least two-thirds of voters and opposed by only a few.
Policy proposals with bipartisan majority support address issues such as: Social Security & Medicare, immigration, poverty programs, jobs, housing, cost of living, the federal budget, energy & the environment, police reform, election reform, government reform, abortion & reproductive rights, gun safety, and international trade.
Why don’t we hear about these broadly supported, workable solutions to real concerns? Because politicians, parties, and special interests benefit by keeping this hidden, especially during elections. But the fact remains that we Americans agree on a lot of policies that would guide government to solve many of our nagging problems.
This is the unacknowledged common ground that UniVote reveals and empowers.
UniVote is a radically new strategy for applying digital technology to empower voters willing to seek solutions—to make them aware with remarkable efficiency of the issues and policies they overwhelmingly support. In future, this will build the foundation for them to mobilize to evaluate candidates in a way that diminishes the influence of special interests and extreme partisans at the ballot box.
This project is the work of ordinary citizens like you. It is led by William Spira, a retired scientist and educator, who started designing the model during the COVID-19 lockdown.
This grew into a manuscript—UniVote Town Halls: Mobilizing Common Ground Voters to Fix America’s Broken Democracy—that provides the blueprint for building a fully functional system.
The UniVote Town Hall is a strictly non-partisan tool that simply reveals the collective will of the voters using it. Unlike anything seen before in politics, it does not set an agenda for voters.
The upshot is this: By spending just a few hours during an election year using the UniVote app, hundreds of thousands of voters in a state can find common political ground and identify candidates who will be faithful to their priorities.
Town Halls will become active as soon as enough voters have signed up as members to provide statistically valid study groups and we have fully developed a working prototype of the basic agenda-building software.
We hope to go live with activity by mid-January. This will include mainly controlled testing of the UniVote decision-making protocol for ranking issues and approving policy proposals. This may be augmented with focus groups, other surveys, and interviews.
The following are the 10 issues that surveys suggest are going to be the highest priority concerns for Wisconsin voters during the upcoming 2026 election year. The UniVote pilot test will include some or all of these issues in its starting set of issues & policy proposals. This list may be modified if future circumstances warrant it.