Every head of state and government, tracked in real time from official sources. No editorializing — party, term start date, and role only.
Elections are the only moment citizens formally hold power over their governments. Every scheduled election worldwide — not just the ones your media thinks matter.
Laws being made right now — across multiple legislative bodies simultaneously. Most people only see one country's legislature. Power operates across all of them at once.
The questions that don't make it into the press briefing. Figures from Oxfam, IMF, World Bank, and official government disclosures. Not political commentary — arithmetic.
Economic growth is measured by GDP — a metric that counts the total value of goods and services produced, not how that value is distributed. Tax policy, written by elected officials and lobbied for by those who fund their campaigns, has systematically shifted the tax burden from capital to labor over 50 years. Capital gains taxes are lower than income taxes in almost every developed country. This is not an accident. It is legislation.
The average US Senator enters office with a net worth of $1.1 million and leaves with $3.5 million — having never disclosed a single private investment decision. The original idea of republican governance was citizen legislators who served briefly and returned home. That system created accountability because the legislator lived under the laws they made. Career politicians do not.
The IMF imposes economic conditions on 137 nations — required cuts to public health, education, and welfare — as terms for loans. Not one person who leads the IMF has ever been elected by the populations most affected. When the IMF tells a country to privatize its water system or eliminate food subsidies, that affects millions who had no vote, no representation, and no recourse.
The outlets that cover politics are owned by the same category of investor that funds political campaigns. There is no conspiracy required — the incentive structure produces the outcome. Outrage drives engagement. Policy details drive readers away. A media business optimizing for revenue cannot also optimize for civic education.
Most transparency platforms are siloed by country, underfunded, and accessible only to people with time and technical literacy. ProPublica covers the US brilliantly. OpenSecrets tracks American political money. These exist. But they require you to already care, already know what to look for, and already have 45 minutes to dig.
NeuraWeb is different because it's not a transparency project — it's a permanent identity platform. Every user has a Nexus Passport. That passport knows where they live. When you open politics.nw, your representatives are already there — their donor list, their votes, their net worth trajectory, in the same interface you use for everything else. For free. Without tracking you.