Guiding Charter of the New Nationalists of America
Adopted 6/12/2026, to establish the organizational framework for a disciplined, democratic, and durable American movement.
Preamble
We, the New Nationalists of America, in order to form a more perfect union of patriotic citizens, to secure the blessings of popular governance, and to restore the American Republic to its working people, do hereby establish this Guiding Charter.
ARTICLE I - The National Executive
Section 1.1 – The National Directive
The supreme governing body of the NNA shall be the National Directive, a standing council of no fewer than five (5) and no more than ten (10) members. The National Directive shall be internally appointed, meaning that the existing members of the National Directive shall select their successors and additional members by a supermajority vote of two‑thirds or more. Removal should require unanimous vote beyond the party that is being removed. This method will ensure the ideological rigor and national direction of the movement, prevent takeover by hostile factions or outside interests, and avoid the corruption inherent in divisive electoral leadership contests.
Section 1.2 - The Director (Executive)
From among its members, the National Directive shall elect a Director (also referred to as the Executive) by a simple majority vote. The Director shall serve as the chief executive officer of the NNA, with authority to:
Execute the decisions of the National Directive;
Appoint all State Directors, County/Regional Directors, and Large City Directors (as provided in Articles II, III, and IV);
Sign and issue all official statements, charters, and directives;
Represent the NNA in all external matters, unless otherwise delegated;
Convene emergency meetings of the National Directive;
The Director may be removed by a two‑thirds vote of the National Directive. In case of vacancy, the National Directive must elect a new Director from among its members within thirty (30) days.
Section 1.3 - Powers of the National Directive
The National Directive shall have final authority over:
The national strategy, platform, and budget of the NNA;
The admission, suspension, or expulsion of State Directories;
The approval of all amendments to this Charter and to the Members Code of Conduct;
The declaration of national campaigns, boycotts, or actions;
The appointment and oversight of the National Advisory Committee (Article V).
The National Directive shall meet at least quarterly, either in person, or by secure electronic means. All meetings shall be recorded and made available to State Directories, subject to reasonable security redactions.
ARTICLE II - State Directories
Section 2.1 - Establishment
A State Directory may be established in any state of the United States when a State Organizing Committee, appointed by the National Directive, demonstrates a sufficient base of active members. The State Organizing Committee shall be chaired by a provisional State Director appointed by the National Directive.
Section 2.2 - Appointment of State Director
Upon certification of the State Directory, the National Directive shall appoint a permanent State Director. The State Director serves at the pleasure of the National Directive and may be removed for cause or for failure to advance the NNA’s mission. The State Director shall have authority over:
Organizing activities within the state;
Advising the National Directive on the appointments of County and Regional Directors within the state, consistent with Article III;
Submitting an annual report and budget request to the National Directive.
Section 2.3 - State Directive Bodies
Each State Directory may form its own internal advisory committee, but such committees shall have no power to appoint officers. All state‑level officers must be appointed by the National Directive, either directly or through the State Director with the National Directive’s ratification to prevent regional, ideological separation, and to maintain a cohesive national direction which prohibits the formation of entrenched local cliques, as is seen in many other American political bodies.
ARTICLE III - County & Regional Directives (Within State)
Section 3.1 - Regional Boundaries
Recognizing the vast differences between regions within a single state (such as upstate New York versus downstate, northern California versus the Los Angeles basin), County and Regional Directives shall be drawn along meaningful socio-economic lines, not purely by arbitrary county lines. The National Directive, in consultation with the State Director, shall define regions that reflect genuine communities of interest.
Section 3.2 - Appointment of Regional Directors
All County & Regional Directors shall be appointed by the National Directive, after receiving non‑binding advice from the relevant State Director, ensuring that local knowledge informs the choice, despite final authority resting with the national body to prevent factional capture. No regional officer may be elected solely by local members, nor may a State Director unilaterally appoint a regional officer without national confirmation.
Section 3.3 - Geographic Realism
No Regional Director shall be responsible for a territory larger than can be effectively organized by a single full‑time volunteer or staff member. The National Directive may subdivide any region that proves unwieldy. For large metropolitan areas, see Article IV.
ARTICLE IV - Large Cities
Section 4.1 - Definition
A Large City is defined as any municipality with a population exceeding five hundred thousand (500,000) residents, or any city that the National Directive designates as a strategic hub (e.g., a state capital or major industrial center). Large Cities shall have their own City Directories and City Directors, separate from the surrounding county or regional structure.
Section 4.2 - Appointment of City Directors
City Directors shall be appointed directly by the National Directive, after receiving non‑binding advice from the relevant State Director (if any). A single State Director cannot realistically oversee multiple population-dense regions; therefore, City Directors operate with a direct line to the National Directive, ensuring that urban organizing receives focused leadership without being overshadowed by rural/suburban interests.
Section 4.3 - Relationship to State Directories
City Directors shall coordinate with their State Director on matters affecting state‑level legislation or statewide campaigns, but the City Director retains operational autonomy for city‑specific actions. In case of dispute, the National Directive shall resolve the matter.
ARTICLE V – National Advisory Committee
Section 5.1 - Purpose & Composition
To ensure that the National Directive benefits from grassroots perspective without descending into electoral paralysis, there shall be a National Advisory Committee. The Committee shall consist of:
One (1) representative from each State Directory, chosen by that State Directory’s members in a secret‑ballot election conducted annually;
One (1) representative from each Large City Directory, similarly elected annually by the dues‑paying members of that City Directory.
No member of the National Directive, no State Director, and no City Director may serve as a representative to the National Advisory Committee. This separation of powers will prevent the advisory body from becoming a mere rubber stamp.
Section 5.2 - Powers
The National Advisory Committee shall have the authority to:
Advise the National Directive on all major policy decisions, executive actions, and strategic directions;
Propose amendments to this Charter or the Members Code of Conduct by a two‑thirds vote of the Committee. Such proposals are then referred to the National Directive for final adoption;
Convene a special review of the Director’s performance upon a two‑thirds vote of the Committee, triggering a confidence vote by the National Directive.
The Committee’s recommendations are non‑binding on the National Directive. However, the National Directive must issue a public written response to any formal recommendation within sixty (60) days, explaining its acceptance, rejection, or modification.
Section 5.3 – Meetings
The National Advisory Committee shall convene at least twice per year (either in person or electronically). Travel expenses for members shall be reimbursed from national funds, subject to reasonable limits. No member may be compensated for their service beyond reimbursement of actual travel expenses.
ARTICLE VI - Founding State Directories (Organizing Process)
Section 6.1 - State Organizing Committee
No State Directory shall be formed except by a State Organizing Committee appointed and curated by the National Directive. The National Directive shall select the members of the State Organizing Committee based on their ideological reliability, organizational skill, and freedom from conflicting interests.
Section 6.2 - Duties of the Organizing Committee
The State Organizing Committee shall:
Recruit the initial dues‑paying membership in the state;
Hold public organizing meetings;
Identify and vet candidates for the eventual State Director position;
Submit biweekly progress reports to the National Directive;
Operate under a provisional charter that expires after twelve (12) months, renewable once by the National Directive.
Section 6.3 - Transition to Full State Directory
Upon demonstrating a stable membership of sufficient scale, dues‑paying members and a viable operational plan, the State Organizing Committee shall petition the National Directive for recognition as a full State Directory. The National Directive may grant recognition by a simple majority vote. Upon recognition, the National Directive shall appoint a permanent State Director (as per Article II), and the State Organizing Committee shall be dissolved.
ARTICLE VII – Membership & Code of Conduct
All members, officers, and directors of the NNA at every level (national, state, regional, city) are bound by the Members Code of Conduct, which is incorporated herein by reference. The Code of Conduct establishes standards of non‑discrimination, good moral standing, online behavior, and disciplinary procedures. Any violation of the Code may result in suspension or expulsion, with forfeiture of any leadership position. The National Directive shall have final authority over all disciplinary appeals.
No person who holds membership in any other political party or organization whose goals conflict with the NNA (as determined by the National Directive) may serve as a Director at any level. Registering to vote as a Democrat, Republican, or other party is permitted, but holding office, leadership roles, or active membership in another organization is prohibited.
ARTICLE VIII - Amendments
This Guiding Charter may be amended by a two‑thirds vote of the National Directive, followed by a majority vote of the National Advisory Committee. Amendments shall take effect thirty (30) days after the National Advisory Committee’s approval, unless an emergency provision (declared by the National Directive) requires immediate effect.
The National Directive shall publish all amendments to the membership via email and on the official NNA website within fourteen (14) days of adoption.
CONCLUSION
This Charter establishes a structure that is democratic in consultation, executive in action, and disciplined in all matters. The Charter rejects the two great errors of American political organizing: 1) the tyranny of local cliques that cannot see beyond their own parish, and 2) the arrogance of a distant national elite that ignores local community conditions. By centralizing appointment authority in the National Directive whilst providing formal advisory channels for state and city representation, the New Nationalists of America avoids both factionalism and stagnation.
This Charter stands as the iron core of a movement that will endure beyond any single election or generation.
Adopted this day, 6/12/2026, by the founding members of the New Nationalists of America.
Forward to the American Millennium.