The CARE Constitution is a plain-speaking book. It is about Parliamentary power, responsibility, and the need to make government visible to the people it serves.
Written from lived experience rather than party politics, it asks a simple question:
Why should the people be kept in the dark about political decisions made in their name?
CARE stands for Constitution, Accountability, Responsibility and Ethics. It sets out a constitutional framework in which Parliament becomes a true debating centre, public office becomes a visible duty of service, and political power can no longer disappear behind party whips, hidden pressure, and layers of fog.
The book explores independent representation, open recorded votes, the replacement of the House of Lords with a Constitutional Observatory, the Centre of Transparency, the National Digital Gazette, education, taxation, housing, immigration, defence, justice, and democratic participation.
At its heart is the belief that transparency is not an optional extra. It is the safeguard that allows citizens to see, question, and judge how their country is governed.
This is a book for readers who believe Britain needs more than another change of leader.
It needs a better way of working.