The People's Audit.

Government accountability is bipartisan. Every American, regardless of party, wants to know their tax dollars are being spent honestly. That belief is not left or right. It is the foundation this country was built on.

The data to verify how government money is spent already exists. By law, nearly every federal dollar is publicly disclosed. But it lives in portals built for policy analysts, not the people. It was never meant to be found. It was never meant to be used.

That ends here.

We are giving that data back to the people it belongs to. On a map. In plain language. Free to anyone with an internet connection.

Because the parent who drives past the same subsidized daycare every day and notices it is never open deserves to be heard. The contractor who knows a vendor is overbilling deserves somewhere to put that. The neighbor who sees something that does not add up deserves to know they are not alone, and that what they noticed matters.

These observations have always existed. No one built a place for them to go.

This is not for one side or one party. Waste, fraud, and abuse happen under every administration, across every agency, in every state. No party has a monopoly on misusing public funds. No party gets a pass. Our only allegiance is to the taxpayer.

Through Qui Tam, a 160-year-old law built into the American legal system, what people find on this platform can become real legal consequences — and citizens who help recover stolen taxpayer money are entitled to keep a share of what is recovered.

Imagine what happens when millions of people are looking.

The data was always public. It was just never meant to be found. Until now.

This is the people's audit.