Write-In Candidate, South Carolina District 1
November 3, 2026
Both Republicans and Democrats have failed us. The American Congress Party is for the Americans neither party speaks for.

These are the most urgent issues facing Charleston, Berkeley, Beaufort, and the surrounding Lowcountry communities.
Charleston homeowners are watching premiums double, triple, or get dropped entirely. Flood plus wind/hail coverage runs $5,000+ per year on top of a mortgage that is already squeezing them.
Clayton's answer: Lowcountry Resilience, Stop Endless Wars, Open Books, Affordable Housing
Read moreMedian Charleston home prices have nearly doubled in a decade. Tourism workers, teachers, first responders, and multi-generation Lowcountry families are being pushed to North Charleston, Summerville, Hanahan, and beyond.
Clayton's answer: Affordable Housing, No Federal Income Tax, Free Medication, Free Food for All Americans
Read moreJoint Base Charleston deploys constantly. Charleston, Berkeley, Beaufort, and Colleton families have lost children to wars they did not ask for and cannot justify.
Clayton's answer: Stop Endless Wars, Honor First Responders & Veterans, Open Books
Read moreLifelong Republicans are exhausted by MAGA chaos. Lifelong Democrats are exhausted by establishment betrayal.
Clayton's answer: Open Books
Read moreClayton Cuteri lives in Mount Pleasant, pays the same insurance premiums you do, and watches the same neighbors get priced out of the Lowcountry every year. He is not a career politician. He is an entrepreneur, content creator, and co-founder of the American Congress Party who built a following of over 700,000 people by saying what both parties refuse to say.

A record number of Americans now identify as political independents. Both parties profit from keeping you angry at each other while they serve the same donors. The American Congress Party is the structural alternative: a real party with a real platform for real people.
Clayton serves as ACP Secretary General. This campaign is not about left or right. It is about the common people versus the connected few.
