John Eagleton
My name is John Eagleton, and I started the Truth Party for one simple reason:
I no longer believe the American people are being told the truth.
Not the whole truth.
Not the honest truth.
Not the difficult truth.
We are living in a time where two political parties spend more energy protecting power than solving problems. Every issue becomes theater. Every election becomes a war. Every citizen is expected to pick a side and defend it no matter what.
Meanwhile, ordinary Americans — Republicans, Democrats, Independents — are left carrying the weight of a system that feels increasingly disconnected from reality.
The Truth Party was not created out of anger.
It was created out of clarity.
I believe most Americans are exhausted by division. I believe they are hungry for honesty, accountability, humility, and common sense. I believe people are tired of being manipulated by fear, outrage, algorithms, donors, lobbyists, and endless political branding.
Most importantly, I believe the truth still matters.
Truth matters even when it’s uncomfortable.
Truth matters even when it challenges our own beliefs.
Truth matters because without it, trust disappears — and without trust, a nation cannot hold together.
The Truth Party is not built around one personality, one ideology, or one class of people. It is built around a principle:
That government should serve citizens instead of corporations, donors, and political machines.
We believe in transparency.
We believe in personal freedom balanced by personal responsibility.
We believe in economic fairness without destroying innovation.
We believe disagreement should not make us enemies.
And we believe Americans are far more capable of unity than the current system wants us to believe.
This movement is intentionally different.
We are rejecting the idea that political influence should belong only to billionaires and special interests. That is why we support small-dollar participation and limit the power of large donors. If this movement succeeds, it will succeed because ordinary people decided they wanted something better.
I did not start the Truth Party because I wanted to become a politician.
I started it because I watched people lose faith in each other, in institutions, and in the future itself. I started it because I believe millions of Americans feel politically homeless. I started it because truth — actual truth — has become revolutionary.
This is not about left versus right.
It is about honesty versus manipulation.
Citizens versus systems.
Future versus decline.
The Truth Party is an invitation.
An invitation to think independently.
To speak honestly.
To listen again.
To rebuild trust.
To reject cynicism.
To participate in democracy instead of simply consuming it.
We may not agree on everything. In fact, we shouldn’t. Healthy nations are built through debate, accountability, and diverse perspectives. But we can agree that the current system rewards conflict more than solutions — and that Americans deserve better than permanent outrage.
The future of this country will not be saved by slogans.
It will be saved by courageous people willing to tell the truth, hear the truth, and live the truth.
That is why this movement exists.
And if you have ever felt like there has to be a better way forward — you are not alone.
Welcome to the Truth Party.