The appropriate response is The Magna Carta. It guaranteed the insurance of chapel rights, assurance for the noblemen from unlawful detainment, access to quick equity, and constraints on medieval installments to the Crown, to be actualized through a committee of 25 aristocrats.
The Magna Carta, or "Great Charter," affirmed that everyone is subject to the law -- even the king. It was an agreement between King John and the nobility in 1215, but provided instrumental founding principles for the wider establishment of rights for all citizens in the centuries following -- including the rights guaranteed in the Constitution of the United States.
The party's platform built on Roosevelt's Square Deal domestic program and called for several progressive reforms. The platform asserted that "to dissolve the unholy alliance between corrupt business and corrupt politics is the first task of the statesmanship of the day".