Organizing your own virtual town hall is a great way to connect with your Member of Congress and we’re here to help! Here are 6 simple steps to organizing your Virtual Town Hall event.
Indivisible staff, leaders, and members in this movement are responsible for holding ourselves and each other accountable to living our values and transforming our day-to-day practices.
Every once in a while, there are moments when thousands of new, potential activists are actively looking to take action. Here are our best tips for recruiting new activists in this unique moment.
In an increasingly tense political climate, Indivisible activists need proactive safety measures. This guide provides essential strategies to protect your personal safety, data, and right to assemble. Covering event planning, online privacy, legal rights, and handling harassment, this resource equips you and your group to anticipate and address potential risks. Share it widely to ensure safe, effective advocacy in your communities.
A note on accessibility: Indivisible Project staff will work with you to meet Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG) 2.0 if you would like to embed external content or request additional functionality.
This planning guide is intended to help group leaders take stock of the current iteration of their groups and to support group leaders in setting goals, strategies, and, most importantly, tactics to build a successful, sustainable electoral plan for 2022.
Are you an Indivisible group leader who is excited to be a grassroots partner in our national strategy to win progressive victories and build lasting movement power– in your local community and nationwide? We invite you to join our monthly Grassroots Leadership Network Call!
If you’re reading this guide, it’s most likely because you’re part of an Indivisible group who is somewhere along the path of working with other Indivisibles to build a statewide structure - a network, coalition, or other intentional system for working together to build power across the state.