Social and Cultural Issues

Reform Party Focus:

The Reform Party believes that social and cultural issues (i.e., abortion, gay marriage, end-of-life decisions, and similar topics) should not be our focus as a party. Reform Party members and candidates may hold their own positions, with the understanding that they do not speak for the party on these issues.

To be consistent with our desire for a limited and well-focused government, the Reform Party does not believe that laws and regulations should dictate medical decisions, how relationships are formed, or the activities of groups or individuals that do not infringe on the rights of non-participants.

Some social topics involve constitutional protections, such as privacy, equal treatment, and personal autonomy. The Reform Party may participate in debate on a social or cultural issue in support of constitutional rights.

Get To Know The Reform Party

Go through some of our more popular pages to learn more about the Reform Party, or use our menu to find the topics that interest you.

Read the Latest Articles from Our Blog

Here are three recent blog posts from the Reform Party.

15 May 2022 By NHensley in Uncategorized

Reform Party Seeks to Fill National, State Vacancies

The Reform Party has been able to reorganize and get these committees functional, however the committees are not fully staffed.
14 October 2023 By Nicholas Hensley in Latest Updates

The Reform Party Platform

The Reform Party of the United States has formally adopted this platform on October 7th, 2023 in Baton Rouge, Louisiana. Author Nicholas Hensley View all posts
28 September 2023 By Richard Kasa in Latest Updates

Platform – Election Process

Questioning Simple Plurality Duverger’s Law, a political theory created in the 1950’s by French political theorist Maurice Duverger, holds that simple plurality electoral systems such as the election system used in the US (first past the post) tend to favor the establishment of two-party power structures in politics while more proportional electoral systems foster better
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