FAQs
A letter to Congress is only received by two senators and one US House Representative from your voting district. You may not be satisfied with the response you get from those three offices.
This WhistleBlower Complaint goes to each of the 535 members of the House and Senate in addition to key committees with responsibility for oversight of the Executive Branch. We also inform the media.
A Letter to your three members of Congress is normally "one and done". If a new concern emerges, a new letter must be started.
This WhistleBlower Complaint is a living People's Complaint document. When new wrongdoings and crimes are committed by the Executive Branch, they are added to the existing citations and then sent again to all members of Congress, key committees, and the media. We will “shake the walls of Congress” until something changes.
Why use the WhistleBlower format vs a normal Letter to Congress?
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Does my signature help - or hurt - Candidates running in the 2026 election for US House or Senate?
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Yes and Yes. Your complaint makes public over two dozen citations of corruption and wrongdoing by the President and Executive Branch, and calls out Congress for failing to do their duty as a check and balance. Consider it a Pass Fail test for every candidate. A candidate who wants change in Congress and to take necessary action will have our document to reference wrongdoing. Any candidate who chooses to ignore our Citations does not deserve your vote. We will share the anonymous number of signatures by voting district with official candidates whenever asked.
When I sign as a WhistleBlower, is my full name or other personal information sent to Congress or anyone else?
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We will never share your full name or any other identifiable information with the grassroots People’s WhistleBlower Campaign. Our system will share the anonymous quantity of signatures for any voting district upon request by a registered candidate for office or member of Congress. We will never use more than first name, first Initial of last name and State for illustration purposes, demonstrating grassroots participation.
What is the difference between a grievance and whistleblowing?
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The whistleblower is not expected to prove the malpractice. They are a messenger raising a concern so that others can address it. This is different from a grievance in that a grievance claims someone has been personally harmed or treated poorly.
What qualifies as whistleblowing?
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A whistleblower is someone who reports what they reasonably believe to be illegal conduct. Whistleblowing means disclosing information that you reasonably believe constitutes evidence of a violation of any law, rule, or regulation; gross mismanagement; gross waste of funds; an abuse of authority; a miscarriage of justice; or a substantial and specific danger to the public.
Are Whistleblowers Protected from Retribution?
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Federal laws protect Whistleblower employees from retribution in most cases, with specific exceptions. The People’s Whistleblower Complaint is a grassroots signature document where employment is not a factor, and therefore neither retribution nor employment has relevance.
Who can be a WhistleBlower?
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Almost anyone who perceives or witnesses' fraud or misconduct can be a whistleblower. You do not have to be a current or former employee of the company or agency that engaged in the fraud or misconduct. You do not need to have witnessed the fraud or misconduct yourself or have documentary evidence of the fraud or misconduct. You do not need to be an American citizen or resident. Whistleblower.org estimates the US government recovers over $1B/yr due to Citizen Whistleblower complaints. If you are a No Kings protester, you ARE a whistleblower.
Who can review the Disclosed Information in a Whistleblower Complaint?
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Disclosed Information, meaning the Citations listed in this complaint is often confidential, but not in the People’s Whistleblower Complaint, where all Citations are widely known and public. Common audiences for Disclosed Information include: ■ Congress; ■ The Office of Special Counsel (OSC)[1]; ■ Offices of Inspectors General[2]; ■ Non-Governmental Organizations; ■ The media.
[1] Currently removed by the President (per Project 2025) for lack of fealty and reinstated by the Supreme Court
[2] Currently removed by the President (per Project 2025) for lack of fealty leaving no independent government oversight
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