The Most Voted Laws to Abrogate First
A running repeal list of the laws visitors keep pushing to the top of the Abrogate.org leaderboard.
The most voted laws on Abrogate.org are more than internet curiosities. They are a public signal that people want lawmakers to stop adding rules long enough to clean out the ones that no longer make sense. A law can be outdated, duplicative, impossible to explain, or written for a world that no longer exists, and still remain on the books for decades.
A repeal leaderboard gives citizens a simple way to sort the legal clutter. Instead of arguing in the abstract about βtoo many laws,β visitors can point to a specific statute, read the source, vote to abrogate it, and share it with others. That creates a clearer target for journalists, candidates, state legislators, city councils, and reform groups.
The highest-ranked laws are not automatically the worst laws in America. They are the laws the public can see, understand, and rally around. That matters because repeal campaigns usually fail when they are buried in technical language. Abrogate.org turns those hidden sections into plain-English repeal targets.
Frequently Asked Questions
What does it mean to vote to abrogate a law?
It means you believe that law should be repealed, annulled, modernized, or removed from the books through the proper legal process.
Are the top-ranked laws automatically unconstitutional?
No. A law can be lawful and still be outdated, unnecessary, confusing, or a poor use of government power.
How should lawmakers use the leaderboard?
They can treat it as a public priority list for repeal bills, code cleanup hearings, sunset reviews, and plain-language reform.