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First, a little history. Indivisible (as a nationwide grassroots movement) arose after Trump was elected in 2016. It consisted of a Google doc written by former congressional staffers - and now married co-leaders - Leah Greenberg and Ezra Levin, as a practical guide to resist the Trump agenda. Today, Indivisible as a national movement has more than a million members taking regular and increasingly complex actions to resist Trump/MAGA, the GOP's agenda, elect local champions, and fight for progressive policies.
Now, it's time to resist again, and the national Indivisible team has updated The Indivisible Guide to reflect our new reality and rethink our strategies. Below is an op-ed from Co-founders Ezra Levin and Leah Greenberg talking about the new guide, a link to the new guide itself, and a link to the webinar explaining its importance, its changes, and how local groups can use it. It offers:
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A short-term strategy for the next two years (the mid-term elections)
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An on-ramp for new folks
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A set of tactics and tips
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A start - it is to be adapted, expanded and innovated by all of us.
The Guide to Fighting Back
Against Trump 2.0
By Leah Greenberg, co-founder and co-executive director of Indivisible and Ezra Levin, co-founder and co-executive director of Indivisible.
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If there’s one universally accepted truth in the modern age, it’s that sequels suck. And Trump 2.0 will be no exception. Trump takes office with a plan to institute the worst parts of Project 2025. He’ll be enabled by a judiciary packed with right-wing ideologues and congressional majorities stacked with MAGA foot soldiers. He intends to take full advantage of the impunity the Supreme Court has given him.
But Trump winning with under 50% in a single election does not give him the right to govern as a dictator, nor does it mean American democracy is dead. Ordinary people can organize themselves to block Trump’s attacks, break MAGA’s political strength and build a winning majority coalition.
Fascists and their ilk want us to believe we’re alone and powerless.
We know because we’ve seen it before. In 2016, we wrote the Indivisible Guide to demystify how Congress works and help folks organize locally to fight back against the Trump agenda. It went viral and inspired thousands of “Indivisible” groups that would go on to help save the Affordable Care Act. In the 2018 elections, those groups helped take back the House of Representatives with the largest popular vote margins for a midterm in the history of the republic.
Many Americans are upset and scared — and perhaps even taking a break from the news. But they are also determined. They want to do their part to protect their family, their neighbors and democracy. While Trump 2.0 and the world are different, we’ve learned a lot from working with the Indivisible movement over the last eight years, so here’s our advice to those Americans on where to begin.
We start by coming together. Fascists and their ilk want us to believe we’re alone and powerless. As historian Timothy Snyder recently observed, “They want you to be alone. Nobody is going to fix this alone. That’s not how this works.” Even the most capable individuals lack the power local, organized groups possess. Forming or joining local volunteer associations of like-minded Americans where we live, like an Indivisible group, is the basis for everything else we can hope to achieve in this period.
‘Safeguarding democracy’: Governors across the country coalesce to combat Trump’s extremism
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Once your group is established, it’s time to pick your targets. Trump wants us to believe that the presidency is all-powerful, but that’s false. Political power overlaps between local, state and federal elected officials, all of whom need votes to get re-elected. No matter the region, at least some of these officials will be ripe targets for influence. Your groups’ power comes from your ability to either support or be a real pain in the butt to those elected officials. That power can be wielded to get them to hold off the harms of Trump 2.0 or face political consequences.
What, more specifically, can we hope to achieve? As we lay out in our new guide, there are four big things:
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First, we can stop, stall or blunt some of the worst of what’s to come from Congress and the White House.
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Second, we play hardball in the cities and states where Democrats have power to fight back and protect our communities.
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Third, we can protect election infrastructure in swing states to make sure a 2028 election actually takes place.
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Fourth, we can limit some of the harm that is coming for us, our neighbors and our families.
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