
Nebraska · Self-Determination
Asked plainly, most of Nebraska votes to leave and govern itself.
There is no organized movement for Nebraska independence yet. That is exactly what we are here to change.
Nebraskaadults in Nebraska would back independence when the question is asked the way a ballot asks it: calm, binary, and peaceful. That's about 55% of the state.
Even the understated abstract poll counts 367,000 (25%). How we get this number →
Nebraska, if it stood alone
largest economy on Earth
$185 billion, ahead of Morocco.
people
More than the whole of Latvia. A nation-sized population, governed from elsewhere.
seats in Congress
The other 530 are chosen by people who don't live here.
in beef production
Processes more beef than any state, ahead of Texas and Kansas.
Nebraska standoutThe only question that matters
Nebraska is already a nation in all but name.
If Nebraska 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
Nebraska is the only state that runs its lawmaking through a single unicameral chamber, a deliberate break with how everyone else does it, chosen because Nebraskans trusted their own judgment more than the inherited design. That instinct is still here. On a fair, plainly worded ballot asking whether Nebraska should leave the union and govern itself, about 55% of Nebraska adults would vote yes. That is roughly 808,000 people.
That 55% is the honest number because a ballot is a real decision, not a hypothetical. It is binary and it is peaceful: you mark yes or no, and nothing violent follows. When the question is put that calmly, support runs about 30 points above the abstract poll, and even that abstract YouGov poll already sets the understated floor at 25%. Add the 30-point gap and Nebraska sits at a majority. Nebraska leaned Republican in 2020, which tells you self-determination is not a red or a blue question. It is a question about who decides.
What Nebraska is missing is not the numbers. It is each other. The 808,000 have never been in the same room. USexit brings the playbook and the connections that turn scattered agreement into an organized effort. We do not run your group and we do not take your money. You decide what Nebraska's movement looks like, and we help you build it.
Cast your vote
Count Me In, Nebraska
Be findable. When the next person from Nebraska reaches out, we connect you. That is how it starts.
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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