Corporate power is threatening our democracy—and we’re running out of time to stop it. Fifteen years after the Supreme Court handed down the Citizens United decision, corporations continue to wield disproportionate influence over our political system. That ruling gave corporations the ability to spend unlimited amounts in elections, effectively allowing the wealthiest interests to drown out the voices of everyday people. But the deeper issue is this: corporations are being treated like people under the law. This dangerous legal fiction allows them to claim constitutional rights intended to protect real human beings. And under President Trump, the implications have only grown more extreme—he even issued a presidential pardon to a corporation convicted of fraud. While individuals face harsh penalties for minor offenses, corporations dodge accountability by exploiting these so-called rights. They use them to resist regulations, attack workers' rights, and protect profits at any cost. This imbalance of power erodes public trust, undermines justice, and silences the people who are supposed to be at the center of our democracy. It doesn't have to be this way. A growing national effort is demanding a constitutional amendment to overturn Citizens United and reject the false premise that corporations are people. This is about restoring the basic principle that the government should serve the public—not corporate shareholders. With both chambers of Congress controlled by Republicans who benefit from this broken system, it’s going to take a massive show of public demand to force change. That starts with speaking out—together. Sign now to demand Congress pass a constitutional amendment to end corporate personhood and return power to the people.