A Foreign Policy Rooted in Humanity and the Public Good
Restoring America’s Global Leadership
Strengthen Relationships with Democratic Allies
Rebuild trust with our partners in Europe, Asia, and the Americas. Strengthening alliances is essential to global stability, shared prosperity, and the defense of democracy.
Reestablish Diplomatic Relationships and Multilateral Cooperation
Recommit to diplomacy as our first tool of engagement. Work closely with allies through institutions like NATO and the United Nations, and revitalize programs such as USAID to promote development, democracy, and human rights around the world.
Peace, Accountability, and Human Rights
Israel and Palestine
The U.S. must condition aid to Israel on an immediate end to the genocide in Gaza and the West Bank.There should be no U.S. funding for Israel while it is perpetuating genocide, violating international law, and destroying the infrastructure of Palestine. We stand for peace, accountability, and a lasting resolution that honors human dignity for both peoples.
Ukraine’s Sovereignty
Support Ukraine’s right to self-determination and territorial integrity while encouraging diplomatic solutions that lead to long-term peace and reconstruction.
Democracy and Human Rights Globally
America’s credibility abroad depends on defending democracy, transparency, and press freedom everywhere — and modeling those same values at home.
The Global Public Good
Climate as Foreign Policy
Treat the climate crisis as a central element of foreign policy. Collaborate internationally to reduce carbon emissions, invest in clean energy and technology, and support climate resilience in vulnerable nations.
Development, Not Domination
Lead with compassion, not coercion. Invest in global health, education, and sustainable development rather than endless wars or extractive economics. U.S. leadership should empower nations to grow, not depend.