The Peoples' Union Manifesto: 35 Steps to a USA That Works for Everyone by Ray Gross wants to reform the US from corruption through 35 concrete reforms. The book proposes to make compulsory insurance, energy companies and pharmaceutical companies non-profit. The book wants to introduce Medicare for all, universal basic income, and free or low-cost higher education. It also proposes that religious organizations should pay taxes. It wants to create pragmatic housing solutions and federalize women's rights and K-12 education. It wants politicians' campaign financing to be done with public funds. The manifesto advocates Keynesian economics to regulate big business, counter monopolies and create an egalitarian economy. Inspired by FDR's Economic Bill of Rights, the book emphasizes the need for a society that works for everyone.
Ray Gross is the book's author and a passionate activist and author. Despite living with a debilitating pain disorder called CRPS, Gross continues to champion a world of pragmatism and harm reduction.
I haven't read the book, but what I've read about it sounds good.
Or like in the story of the rats who wanted to hang a bell around the cat's neck - who will do it?
Incidentally, Bo Rothstein has written interestingly about how Sweden got rid of corruption in the middle of the 1800th century. Until then it had been so corrupt that people bought government positions for their minor children or bought university degrees and had someone else write the thesis. But the governments of the 1850s and 60s put an end to that through a "big bang" approach, says Rothstein, see https://www.gu.se/sites/default/files/2020-05/2007_3_Rothstein.pdf. After that, even Strindberg could not accuse officials of being corrupt.
But probably it was that even the forward-thinking bourgeoisie wanted to get rid of corruption then, they wanted a level playing field at that time, with no advantages for anyone. That's not how it is in the US now.