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  • Article 14: Energy Sovereignty – Owning the Power of the Nation

    We have talked about money, housing, data, and work. But none of these things function without the lights staying on.

    For decades, the UK’s energy policy has been a disaster of privatization and short-term thinking. We sold off our national infrastructure to foreign governments and private equity firms. The result? You pay some of the highest electricity bills in Europe to heat your home, while energy giants post record profits.

    It is time to state the obvious: Energy is not a commodity. It is a fundamental need.

    Article 14 of the COMMONS manifesto is our pledge to take back control of our power. We are establishing Energy Sovereignty.

    The “Common Power” Grid

    The wind that blows off our coast and the rain that fills our reservoirs belongs to no one—and therefore, it belongs to everyone.

    Under Article 14, we are creating Common Power, a new national energy champion.

    • The Mission: To generate 100% of the UK’s electricity from renewable and nuclear sources by 2035.
    • The Ownership: Common Power is 100% publicly owned. It does not answer to shareholders; it answers to you.

    We are ending the madness where British wind farms are owned by the Danish or French governments, subsidizing their citizens while our bills go up. From now on, British resources benefit British families.

    Decoupling from Global Chaos

    Why did your bills spike when gas prices rose globally, even though much of our power comes from cheap wind and solar? Because of a rigged pricing system that ties all electricity prices to the most expensive method (gas).

    Article 14 breaks this link.

    • We are introducing Cost-Plus Pricing.
    • You will pay what it actually costs to generate the energy, plus a small maintenance fee.
    • Because wind and solar are incredibly cheap to run, your bills will collapse. We are insulating the UK economy from global wars and market shocks forever.

    The “Warm Home” Standard

    Generating cheap power is only half the battle. We also need to stop wasting it. The UK has some of the draftiest, dampest housing in Europe.

    Article 14 launches the Great Retrofit.

    • This is a massive deployment of the Civilian Service Corps (from Article 10).
    • Street by street, town by town, we will insulate lofts, upgrade windows, and install heat pumps.
    • The Cost: Free at the point of use. We treat it as national infrastructure investment, just like building a bridge.

    A warm home is a right. It reduces strain on the NHS (fewer respiratory illnesses) and puts money back in your pocket.

    Water is Life, Not Profit

    Finally, Article 14 corrects a historic mistake: the privatization of our water.

    We have seen raw sewage pumped into our rivers while water company bosses take million-pound bonuses. It is an environmental crime and a national embarrassment.

    Article 14 Nationalizes the Water Companies.

    • No compensation for shareholders who have asset-stripped the companies. We will deduct the cost of repairing the sewage system from the purchase price—likely leaving them with zero.
    • We will return our rivers and coastlines to the pristine state they deserve.

    The Engine of the Asset State

    Article 14 ensures that the new economy we are building has the fuel to run.

    • Cheap, clean energy for our businesses.
    • Warm, efficient homes for our families.
    • Clean water for our future.

    This is the foundation upon which the COMMONS are built.

    This is the complete picture. 14 Articles that take us from an anxious, taxed, and divided society to a confident, wealthy, and united Asset State.

    The plan is ready. The team is ready. All we need is you.

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  • Article 13: The Data Commons – Your Digital Life is an Asset, Not a Freebie

    Every day, you generate value. When you search on Google, post on social media, or even walk down the street with your phone in your pocket, you are creating data.

    For the last twenty years, Big Tech companies have mined this resource for free. They have taken your behavior, your creativity, and your personal information, and used it to train Artificial Intelligence models worth trillions of dollars.

    They call it “innovation.” We call it Digital Feudalism. You do the work; they keep the wealth.

    Article 13 of the COMMONS manifesto is our Digital Bill of Rights. It establishes a simple legal principle: Your data is your property.

    The “Data Dividend”

    In the COMMONS economy, we do not allow assets to be extracted for free.

    Under Article 13, we are introducing the National Data License.

    • The Principle: If a corporation wants to train an AI model using the collective data of UK citizens (our language, our images, our health data), they must pay for a license.
    • The Payment: This isn’t a tax; it’s a royalty. The fees paid by Big Tech go directly into the Citizens’ Wealth Trust (alongside the Sovereign Share from Article 2).

    This turns the “AI threat” into an “AI Dividend.” As Artificial Intelligence gets smarter and more profitable, your National Dividend goes up. We are capturing the value of automation for the people who powered it.

    Ownership of Your Digital Self

    We are also giving you back control.

    Currently, you sign “Terms and Conditions” that act like a blank check. Article 13 introduces Unbundled Consent.

    • You will have a legal right to say: “You can use my data to show me ads, but you cannot use it to train your AI.”
    • You will have the right to Data Portability. If you leave a social network, you take your “Social Graph” (your friends and connections) with you. This breaks the monopoly power of the tech giants and allows new British startups to compete.

    The “Algorithmic Audit”

    Algorithms now decide if you get a loan, if you get an interview, or even if you get investigated by the police. But these algorithms are “Black Boxes”—secret and unaccountable.

    Article 13 enforces the Right to Explanation.

    • Any algorithm that makes a significant decision about a citizen’s life must be open to inspection by a new regulator: The Office of Digital Ethics.
    • If the computer says “No,” it must be able to explain why in plain English. If it can’t, the decision is illegal.

    Sovereign Cloud

    Finally, we are protecting national security. Currently, the NHS and the Government store vast amounts of sensitive British data on servers owned by foreign tech giants.

    We are building the Sovereign Cloud.

    • Critical national infrastructure data must be hosted on servers physically located in the UK, subject to UK law, and owned by the Commons.
    • We will not outsource the memory of the nation.

    The Final Frontier

    Article 13 completes our vision of the Asset State.

    We have moved from owning the land (Article 3) to owning the corporate economy (Article 2), and now to owning the digital future.

    We are building a society where technology serves the people, not the other way around. A society where you are not just a “user” to be mined, but a citizen to be rewarded.

    This is the COMMONS Manifesto.

    13 Articles. One vision. A wealthy, free, and fair Britain.

    Ready to make this a reality?

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  • Article 12: Financial Simplification – Ending the Jargon, Securing the System

    Open the financial pages of any newspaper, and you are bombarded with acronyms: ISAs, SIPPs, CDOs, ETFs, Derivatives.

    It feels like a deliberate fog. A language designed to keep you out, while the “experts” in the City gamble with the economy.

    At COMMONS, we believe that complexity is where fraud hides. We believe that a strong economy should be simple, transparent, and boring.

    Article 12 is our “Simplification Act.” It clears away the clutter of the old tax system and shines a light into the darkest corners of the financial world.

    The Bonfire of the Acronyms

    In the old world, the government created dozens of complicated schemes to encourage saving (like ISAs and Private Pensions) because Income Tax was so high.

    But remember Article 1: We have abolished Income Tax.

    This means we don’t need the complicated “wrappers” anymore.

    • No more ISAs.
    • No more SIPPs.
    • No more Capital Gains Tax rules.

    Under Article 12, saving becomes beautifully simple. You earn money. You keep it. You invest it. Any return you make is yours. You don’t need a financial advisor just to navigate the tax code. The entire tax-avoidance industry disappears overnight.

    Banning “Shadow Banking”

    The 2008 crash happened because banks moved risky bets “off the books” into the unregulated shadows. They created complex derivatives that nobody understood.

    Article 12 introduces the Transparency Standard.

    • The Ban: We are banning “Shadow Banking.” If an institution acts like a bank (lending money), it must be regulated like a bank.
    • The Rule: All financial derivatives must be traded on public, transparent exchanges. No more secret deals in back rooms.

    This ensures that we can see risk building up before it becomes a crisis. It protects your job and your home from the gambling of speculators.

    The “Casino Tax”

    While we want to encourage investment in real businesses, we want to discourage high-speed, pointless speculation.

    We are introducing a Financial Transaction Tax (FTT).

    • It is a tiny levy (just 0.1%) on financial trades.
    • For a long-term investor (like a pension fund), it is negligible.
    • For a “High Frequency Trader” (algorithms buying and selling stocks 1,000 times a second), it shuts down their business model.

    This pushes the market back towards sanity. It encourages long-term investment in British industry, rather than millisecond gambling on price fluctuations.

    A System You Can Understand

    Article 12 is the final piece of the economic puzzle.

    It creates a financial system that serves the real economy, not the other way around.

    • Simple Savings.
    • Transparent Markets.
    • Real Investment.

    We are building a country where you don’t need a degree in economics to know your money is safe.

    This concludes our deep dive into the 12 Articles of the COMMONS Manifesto.

    We have laid out a roadmap for a new Britain. A Britain of 0% Income Tax, Shared Wealth, and True Democracy.

    The only question left is: Are you ready to make it happen?

    Subscribe below to join the movement and become a founding member of COMMONS.

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  • Article 11: The “Clean Up” Act – Ending Waste and Closing Loopholes

    We’ve all been there. You buy a washing machine, and three years later, it breaks. The repairman says: “It’s a sealed unit. It’ll cost more to fix than to buy a new one.”

    So you throw it away and buy another one.

    This isn’t an accident. It’s called Planned Obsolescence. It is a cynical business model designed to make you buy things twice. It fills our landfills with junk and drains your bank account.

    Article 11 of the COMMONS manifesto is our “Clean Up” Act. It is a set of common-sense laws designed to fix the throwaway economy and close the tax loopholes that the wealthy hide behind.

    The Right to Repair: Built to Last

    We are ending the era of disposable tech.

    Under Article 11, we introduce the Mandatory 10-Year Warranty.

    • The Rule: If a company sells a durable good (like a fridge, laptop, or car) in the UK, they must guarantee it for 10 years.
    • The Design: We are banning “sealed units.” Batteries must be replaceable. Components must be accessible.

    This changes everything. Manufacturers will be forced to build high-quality products that last, because they are on the hook if they break. It saves you money, and it saves the planet from mountains of electronic waste.

    Closing the “Charity” Loophole

    We all support charity. We support the local soup kitchen, the lifeboat station, and the animal shelter.

    But in the current tax system, “Charity” status is often used as a shield by massive institutions—like wealthy private schools and university endowments—to hoard assets tax-free.

    Article 11 introduces a fairness test.

    • The Threshold: Genuine charities are exempt. But any “Charitable” institution with assets over £5 million is treated as a Corporation.
    • The Tax: They must pay the 2% Wealth Tax on their excess assets.

    This ensures that a University acting like a property developer pays its fair share, just like a business. It stops the ultra-wealthy from parking money in “Foundations” to avoid the Wealth Tax.

    Freelancer Freedom

    Finally, we are cleaning up the bureaucracy for the self-employed.

    In the old system, if you earned a few thousand pounds selling crafts or doing odd jobs, you had to file complex tax returns.

    Because we have abolished Income Tax (Article 1), we can introduce Freelancer Freedom.

    • The Rule: If your revenue is below £200,000, you do not need to report it.
    • The Result: No receipts in shoeboxes. No accountants. You just do the work, get paid, and get on with your life.

    A More Efficient Britain

    Article 11 is about respect for resources. We are stopping the waste of materials (through the Right to Repair) and the waste of public revenue (through the Charity Loophole).

    We are building an economy that is durable, honest, and built to last.

    Next time: We look at how we simplify the financial system further. No more ISAs, no more SIPPs, and the end of Shadow Banking. We explore Article 12: Financial Simplification.

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  • Article 10: Work & Welfare Integrity – Ending Unwanted Unemployment Forever

    Unemployment can be a waste of human potential, a drain on the public purse, and a source of misery for the individual.

    For decades, the welfare system has been a trap. It paid people to do nothing, often making it financially risky to take a job. It created a culture of dependency and resentment.

    At COMMONS, we are replacing the “Welfare State” with an “Opportunity State.”

    Article 10 introduces our boldest social promise: The Job Guarantee.

    The Promise: A Job for Everyone

    We believe that anyone who is willing and able to work should have the right to a job.

    Under the Civilian Service Corps (CSC), the State acts as the “Employer of Last Resort.”

    • If you cannot find a job in the private sector, you do not sign on to the dole.
    • You sign up for the Civilian Service Corps.
    • You are guaranteed a job at the National Minimum Wage, with paid holidays and sick leave.

    These are not “fake” jobs. The Corps will be deployed to do the work the country desperately needs: planting forests, retrofitting homes for energy efficiency, cleaning up our rivers, and supporting community care projects.

    The Deal: Reciprocity

    This offer comes with a condition. We call it Welfare Integrity.

    We are abolishing the idea of “money for nothing.”

    • The Rule: If you are fit to work, and the State offers you a guaranteed job in your local area, you must take it.
    • The Consequence: If you refuse the job, you forfeit your right to cash benefits.

    This is the new social contract. The State guarantees you an income and dignity through work. In return, you guarantee your contribution to society. It ends the stigma of unemployment and ensures that the taxpayer is never funding idleness.

    Protecting the Vulnerable

    We are firm, but we are not cruel. Article 10 includes clear Exemptions for those who cannot work.

    • Carers: If you care for a disabled relative or young children, that is your work. You are supported unconditionally.
    • Medically Unfit: If you are sick or disabled, you are exempt.
    • Transition: We give you a breathing space to find private work before the CSC requirement kicks in.

    Restoring Dignity

    There is no dignity in a handout. There is immense dignity in a paycheck.

    By ensuring that everyone is earning, we stimulate the local economy. By training people in the Civilian Service Corps (remember Article 8 ensures this training counts for qualifications), we prepare them for better jobs in the private sector.

    We are building a nation where no one is left on the scrapheap. A nation of contribution, pride, and purpose.

    Next time: We look at how we tidy up the edges of the economy. From fixing “planned obsolescence” to taxing charities that act like businesses. We explore Article 11: The Clean Up Act.

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