Policy Document Series · Issue 50 · Justice & Governance
Ethics in
Politics
Truth, Accountability, and the End of the Permanent Campaign

Members of Congress spend 30+ hours a week fundraising instead of governing, sleep in their offices because they cannot afford DC housing, and face no legal consequence for knowingly lying to the people they represent. The permanent campaign has replaced public service. Three reforms end it.

0Federal laws prohibit elected officials from lying to the public
30+Hours per week members of Congress spend fundraising
70+Members of Congress have reported sleeping in their offices
6 wkUK campaign length vs. permanent US campaigns
Contents
Section 01

Executive Summary

It should be against the law for elected officials to knowingly lie to the public. Not differences of opinion — verifiable, deliberate falsehoods. If a CEO lies to shareholders, it is fraud. If a witness lies in court, it is perjury. If a president lies to 330 million Americans about matters of war, public health, or the economy, it is just Tuesday. Three reforms change this: a Truth in Government Act, 90-day campaign windows, and congressional housing.

Three pillars: Truth in Government Act — criminal penalties for knowing falsehoods by elected officials. Three-month campaign windows modeled on the UK, Canada, Japan, and France. Congressional housing near the Capitol so members can focus on governing.

Section 02

The Problem

There is no federal law that makes it illegal for an elected official to knowingly lie to the public. A president, senator, or representative can make a verifiably false statement of material fact — not opinion, not projection, not honest error, but a deliberate, knowing falsehood — and face zero legal consequences. Perjury applies under oath. Fraud applies to financial schemes. But lying to 330 million Americans about matters of governance? The law is silent.

The permanent campaign has consumed Congress. Per the DNC and RNC’s own training materials for newly elected members, representatives are expected to spend 30+ hours per week on fundraising calls. That is more time than most Americans spend at their full-time jobs. Calls cannot legally be made from federal buildings — but that law is universally ignored and never enforced.

Congressional salary is $174,000 per year. DC median rent is $2,200/month for a one-bedroom. Over 70 members sleep in their offices on cots, couches, or air mattresses. This makes the job inaccessible to anyone who is not independently wealthy.

Canada criminalizes false statements about candidates. The UK Ministerial Code requires resignation for knowingly misleading Parliament. UK campaigns last 6 weeks. Canada: 36–50 days. Japan: 12 days. France: 2 weeks per round. The US campaign never ends.

Sources: DNC/RNC orientation materials — cbsnews.com · Congressional salary data — crsreports.congress.gov

Section 03

How We Got Here

The Rise of the Permanent Campaign

Campaign costs have exploded. The cost of winning a House seat has increased from approximately $100,000 in the 1970s to over $2 million today. Senate races regularly exceed $50 million. The only way to raise this money is to spend every available hour calling donors. Governing becomes the thing you do between fundraising calls.

No Truth Accountability

The First Amendment broadly protects political speech, and courts have been reluctant to impose restrictions on false political statements. But the Supreme Court in United States v. Alvarez (2012) recognized that false statements of fact have limited First Amendment protection. The question is not whether a narrowly tailored truth-in-government law is constitutional — it is whether there is political will to pass one.

The Housing Crisis in Congress

Congressional salaries have not kept pace with DC housing costs. Members who maintain homes in their districts cannot easily afford a second residence. The result: sleeping in offices, accepting lobbyist-funded housing, or commuting from home states and barely being present in DC. None of these outcomes serve the public.

Section 04

What Other Countries Do

CountryCampaign LengthTruth Accountability
Japan12 days (official)Strict campaign regulations including content restrictions
France2 weeks per roundStrict campaign spending limits enforced by independent commission
Canada36–50 days (Elections Act)Elections Act criminalizes false statements about candidates
United Kingdom6 weeks (general election)Ministerial Code requires resignation for knowingly misleading Parliament
CGP Proposal90 daysTruth in Government Act + independent commission
United States (current)PermanentNo law. No accountability. No consequences for deliberate falsehoods.
Section 05

Our Policy — Three Pillars

Pillar 1 — FlagshipTruth in Government Act

Zero federal laws prohibit elected officials from knowingly lying to the public. Canada and the UK have accountability mechanisms. The US has nothing.

  • Criminal penalties for elected officials who knowingly make false statements of material fact to the public
  • Independent, non-partisan Truth in Government Commission — odd-numbered board, no deadlock by design
  • Mandatory 48-hour public correction if a statement is found materially false
  • Clear safe harbor for opinion, projection, honest disagreement, and good-faith error
  • Narrowly tailored to target deliberate falsehoods, not political speech
Pillar 2Three-Month Campaign Windows
  • Campaign activities restricted to 90 days before each election
  • Advertising, rallies, and fundraising solicitation limited to the window
  • Outside the window, members legislate — not fundraise
  • Fundraising ban from federal buildings actually enforced
  • Paired with public campaign financing (Issue #24) so shorter windows do not advantage the wealthy
Pillar 3Congressional Housing
  • Secure, federally owned apartment-style housing near the Capitol for all members and families
  • Protected by Capitol Police — rent at fair market rate deducted from salary
  • Eliminates office-sleeping, lobbyist-funded housing, and the wealth barrier to service
  • Modeled on military base housing — the government houses people who serve
Section 06

How We Pay For It

PolicyFiscal PositionMechanism
Truth in Government ActMinimal costIndependent commission staffing; offset by improved governance quality
Campaign window enforcementMinimal costFEC/ethics office resources; net savings from reduced fundraising infrastructure
Congressional ResidenceCapital investmentFederally owned building near Capitol; fair-market rent from members covers operating costs; eliminates lobbyist housing subsidies
Public campaign financingSee Issue #24Small-dollar matching and public financing replace permanent fundraising
Section 07

Implementation Timeline

Phase 1 — Year 1
Truth in Government Act
Truth in Government Act introduced and passed. Independent commission established with odd-numbered board. Safe harbor provisions codified. Enforcement framework operational. Campaign window legislation introduced concurrently.
Phase 2 — Years 1–2
Campaign Reform and Housing
90-day campaign window enacted. Fundraising ban from federal buildings enforced. Congressional Residence design and construction initiated. Public campaign financing (Issue #24) advanced in parallel.
Phase 3 — Years 2–4
Full Operation
Congressional Residence completed and operational. First full election cycle under 90-day campaign windows. Truth in Government Commission fully operational with case record establishing precedent. Campaign finance reform reduces fundraising pressure.
Phase 4 — Ongoing
Cultural Shift
Governing replaces campaigning as the primary activity of Congress. Truth accountability becomes institutional norm. Housing removes wealth barrier to public service. International-standard campaign windows become accepted practice.
Section 08

Addressing Counterarguments

“The Truth in Government Act violates the First Amendment.”
The Supreme Court in United States v. Alvarez (2012) recognized that false statements of fact have limited First Amendment protection. The Act is narrowly tailored to target deliberate, knowing falsehoods of material fact — not opinion, not projection, not honest disagreement. Perjury laws already criminalize lying under oath. Fraud laws criminalize lying for financial gain. This extends the principle: lying to 330 million Americans about governance should have consequences too. Safe harbor provisions protect all legitimate political speech.
“Campaign windows will be abused — people will just campaign outside the window under a different name.”
Enforcement matters, and the CGP pairs campaign windows with public campaign financing. The UK, Canada, Japan, and France all enforce campaign-period restrictions effectively. The perfect cannot be the enemy of the good. The current system — where members spend 30+ hours per week fundraising year-round — is demonstrably broken.
“Congressional housing is a perk for politicians.”
Members pay fair-market rent. It is not a perk — it is professional infrastructure. The military houses service members. We should house the people we elect to serve. The current system — where 70+ members sleep on office cots while others accept lobbyist housing — is worse in every way. Congressional housing makes the job accessible to non-wealthy Americans and eliminates a corruption vector.
“Who decides what is ‘false’?”
The independent, non-partisan Truth in Government Commission — structured with an odd-numbered board specifically to avoid the FEC’s structural deadlock. The standard is knowing falsehood of material fact — not disputed interpretation, not policy disagreement, not honest error. Courts adjudicate truth claims every day in fraud, perjury, and defamation cases. This is not unprecedented; it is overdue.
Section 09

Key Statistics

StatisticFigureSource
Laws prohibiting officials from lying to the public0 (federal)18 U.S.C.
Hours/week fundraising (members of Congress)30+DNC/RNC orientation materials
Members sleeping in offices70+News reports
Congressional salary$174,000/yearCRS
DC median 1BR rent$2,200/monthCensus / Zillow
UK campaign length6 weeksUK Electoral Commission
Canada campaign length36–50 daysCanada Elections Act
Japan campaign length12 daysJapan Public Offices Election Act
France campaign length2 weeks per roundFrench Electoral Code
CGP campaign window90 daysCGP policy
“If a CEO lies to shareholders, it is securities fraud. If a witness lies in court, it is perjury. If an elected official lies to 330 million Americans about matters of war and peace, public health, and the economy — nothing happens. That ends now.”
— The Common Good Party
Paid for by The Common Good Party (thecommongoodparty.com) and not authorized by any candidate or candidate's committee.