USexit
Minnesota — Minnesota

Minnesota · Self-Determination

On a fair ballot, Minnesota is within reach of a majority.

There is no organized movement for it in Minnesota yet, and that is exactly what we are here to change.

Minnesota state flagMinnesota
On a fair ballot
1.9 million

adults in Minnesota would back independence when the question is asked the way a ballot asks it: calm, binary, and peaceful. That's about 43% of the state.

Even the understated abstract poll counts 569,000 (13%). How we get this number →

YouGov 2024, adjusted for how a ballot asks. Applied to US Census adult population.

Minnesota · Texas Nationalist Movement

Minnesota, if it stood alone

32nd

largest economy on Earth

$501 billion, ahead of Vietnam.

5.8M

people

More than the whole of Ireland. A nation-sized population, governed from elsewhere.

10of 535

seats in Congress

The other 525 are chosen by people who don't live here.

Economy: BEA 2024 vs World Bank 2024. Population: US Census vs UN. Congress: 2020 apportionment.

The only question that matters

Minnesota is already a nation in all but name.

If Minnesota were already a self-governing nation, with its own border, its own money, its own defense, everything two hundred other nations control, and the vote in front of you was not whether to leave, but whether to join the United States on the terms it offers today, would you vote yes?

Cast your vote

Minnesota built its politics on the town meeting, where people show up, argue in the open, and settle their own affairs face to face. That instinct runs deep here, and it points somewhere specific. Put independence on a ballot the way a real vote is put, calm and binary and peaceful, and about 43 percent of Minnesota would vote to leave the union. That is roughly 1.9 million adults, close to half the state.

The 43 percent is the honest number because it measures the actual decision. A ballot is a yes or a no, decided in private, with no confrontation and no fight. Asked that plain way, support runs about 30 points above the abstract poll, and that puts Minnesota within reach of a majority. The 13 percent floor came from an offhand survey question. The real question is the one voters answer when it counts.

What Minnesota is missing is not the will. It is each other. We bring the playbook and the connections that link you to organizers doing the same work in other states. We do not run your group and we do not take your money. You decide what Minnesota's movement looks like, and you build it.

Cast your vote

Count Me In, Minnesota

Be findable. When the next person from Minnesota reaches out, we connect you. That is how it starts.

I want to

We don't take your money and we don't run your group. What we share is the playbook, the standard, and the connections.

We don't run your group. We don't take your money. We bring the playbook, the standard, and the connections. What you build is yours.

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