JESSICA DENSON
RELENTLESS IN THE AGE OF EXCUSES
Jessica Denson doesn’t do performative politics. She does results.
Her name first appeared in the public record as a plaintiff, not a pundit. In 2016, she worked inside Trump’s campaign. When she reported harassment and discrimination, the campaign responded with a $1.5 million arbitration demand designed to bury her. It didn’t. Representing herself, she challenged the campaign’s NDA, won, and freed hundreds of former staffers who’d been forced into silence.
That case could have been her curtain call. Instead, it became her starting gun.
In 2025, Denson has remained one of the most persistent presences in Washington’s ongoing standoff between power and accountability. Her activism isn’t built on outrage—it’s built on procedure, law, and follow-through. She’s been in the streets since January: organizing, lobbying, and pressing lawmakers to enforce the Constitution they swore to defend.
She works alongside coalitions such as FLARE (For Liberation And Resistance Everywhere), the 24-hour protest encampment outside Union Station. She didn’t found it, but she’s helped it endure—keeping the message focused, the energy disciplined, and the movement coordinated. Her goal never wavers: restoration of the rule of law and lawful removal of the regime violating it.
And every Friday night at 7 p.m. ET, she shifts from the pavement to the broadcast. Her show, Lights On, is the week’s legal and political debriefing stripped of pretense. It’s not punditry; it’s precision—case law, constitutional context, and concrete ways to act. Viewers tune in to understand, not to be entertained.
As the founder of the Removal Coalition, she’s the organizing force behind Remove the Regime, the three-day convergence demanding accountability and constitutional enforcement. The event unites veterans, creators, lawmakers, and citizens for coordinated rallies, congressional visits, and a main-stage gathering headlined by the Dropkick Murphys.
Her coalition’s strategy is deliberate: lawful pressure, organized presence, and an unbroken chain of civic participation. Every march, every training, and every call to action leads toward the same objective — restoring the rule of law and ending the lawless occupation of American government.
Denson will be there, as always—on the ground, in the briefings, and behind the strategy sessions—making sure the movement stays lawful, focused, and impossible to ignore. For her, November 22 isn’t a rally date. It’s a checkpoint in a campaign that won’t end until the law does what it was written to do.
Persistence is the method. Accountability is the goal. Jessica Denson has made both her daily practice.
Lights On airs Fridays at 7 p.m. ET on YouTube.
Remove the Regime: Washington, D.C., November 20–22.
https://www.removetheregime.com





I really respect Jessica Denson truly a leader!
She was one of the first to speak publicly, without hesitation, of the children dying in Gaza. One of the first to urge us to hold 2 thoughts at once...and she was sidelined for it :(