An endorsement is a formal way of signaling and mobilizing your Indivisible group’s support for a candidate. Powerful endorsements are not empty statements, but real commitments that promise concrete actions by your group and members.
This chapter goes deeper on what a candidate endorsement is; what the campaign gets from your endorsements; and what your Indivisible group can achieve by using endorsements.
The Three Features of a Powerful Group Endorsement
Candidates receive endorsements from a wide variety of sources—community organizations, celebrities, labor unions, business leaders, and even other candidates. So what exactly does an endorsement mean?
A powerful endorsement is three things:
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A public, definitive, stated preference. Endorsements are a stated preference for one candidate over any other, despite whatever disagreements your group may have with the candidate. Once you endorse, you must stand behind your candidate. If you endorse a candidate and then break with them later, you’ll find your endorsements are less meaningful in the future.
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A commitment of tangible support. Powerful endorsements come with a commitment from your group and members to actually do something meaningful in support of the candidate. If your endorsement is just words on a page, you’ll quickly find that nobody cares about it. Support here doesn’t mean money; Indivisible has shown that our foremost power is in our people.
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A distillation of your group’s values. Endorsements aren’t just about the candidate -- they’re also about what your Indivisible group stands for. A powerful endorsement requires that your group clarify your own values, and evaluate how those values line up with different candidates and campaigns.
Six Big Things Your Group Achieves by Endorsing Candidates
By flexing your political power through endorsements, you’re developing and growing a muscle. Affirmatively getting behind candidates has several benefits for your Indivisible group and, well, the basic functioning of our democracy (thanks!). These include:
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Creating meaningful pressure for your preferred policies. By endorsing, you’re rewarding candidates who share your values and policies -- and creating incentives for the ones who don’t to change their approach. And elections aren’t just about the person on the ballot today, they’re about everyone who holds elected office. When elected officials know they are going to be challenged electorally, they alter their approach to better respond to that challenge. If you want a non-responsive elected to change her position on an issue or hold a town hall, a great way to achieve that is by very publicly announcing that you’ll only support candidates that meet your standards on those fronts.
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Building stronger relationships with electeds. Do you know who electeds are eager to meet with and work with? People who showed up in the last election. If your group endorsed a winning candidate in the last election, they’ll view you as a friendship to be nurtured. This is true even if you endorsed someone else in the primary -- if you wound up endorsing them in the general and showed up in support at the end of the day, you’ll have a stronger relationship with them when they’re in office. And that makes it easier to hold them accountable; they want to make sure you show up for the next election.
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Energizing your members and building your group’s shared purpose. Engaging as a group in an election gives your members a collective goal to work towards and interesting new challenges to take on. On the flip side, if you don’t get involved in elections, it’s possible that a lot of your members will end up doing so on their own anyways -- diverting energy outside of your group.
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Contributing to the functioning of democracy. Look, democracy is all about choices. If 95% of races with incumbents only give voters a single choice, it’s not much of a democracy. Give people an actual debate, an actual discussion, an actual say in who their elected officials are, and you’ll be strengthening democracy. When you endorse candidates, you help foster that debate.
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Having fun. Campaigns are fun! They’re a great way to meet new people, take on new challenges, and learn new skills. After months of advocating for your electeds to listen, you get to wield electoral power and make them listen. It’s a blast.
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Possibly winning. Well duh, right? Your group’s endorsement very well may put your candidate over the top. Especially in local elections and primaries -- and sometimes even in statewide elections -- small groups of people can absolutely alter the outcome of the race. Winning can come with a whole host of additional benefits. You can say you were part of a winning coalition and build your group’s leverage. Elected officials, including your endorsed candidate, will take note of your group’s people power when hearing your concerns in the future.
But there’s a reason winning is at the bottom of the list. Don’t count on it. Winning is great! But it’s far from the only reason for your Indivisible group to get engaged. Even if you don’t win, you might force Republicans to spend time and money defending a seat, turn out voters for other races on the ballot, or set up your candidate for a win next time around. Endorsements make you a player, whether you put somebody in office or not. That’s pretty cool.