We’re writing this book because we believe American democracy is facing an existential threat, and we believe it can be saved.1
If you’ve picked up this book, you’re probably worried about Donald Trump. And you should be! Trump has done previously unimaginable damage to our country. But Trump is not the source of the existential threat to our democracy. Trump is a symptom—a bulbous, bile-spewing symptom, but nonetheless just a symptom of a much more dangerous disease.
You might be skeptical. You might think Trump is a fluke, the product of Russian election tampering and James Comey’s spectacularly bad judgment. And, sure, in the 2016 election, these factors helped tip the scales for Trump. But the only reason Putin or Comey mattered was because Donald Trump had already won a major party’s nomination and was within striking distance of the presidency. And in a healthy, functional democracy, there is just no way that someone like Trump—openly racist, brazenly misogynist, proudly ignorant, clearly unqualified to lead—gets anywhere close to that point.
If we had a society that valued the lives and dignity of all its people, Trump’s campaign would have been over on his first day, when he attacked immigrants as rapists and drug-carrying criminals. Or when he attacked a pair of grieving Muslim Gold Star parents. Or when fourteen women accused him of sexual assault. That didn’t happen. His support never collapsed. In fact, his bigoted appeals drew on deep currents of racism, sexism, and xenophobia that powered his rise.
If we had a healthy Republican Party, Trump would have never won the nomination. Or, when he did, his campaign would have faced defections from Republican elected officials appalled by his incendiary rhetoric, clear disrespect for democratic norms, and obvious unfitness to act as commander in chief. That didn’t happen. Instead, once he was nominated, nearly every major Republican institution and officeholder lined up to elect Trump.
If we had a healthy political system, no one would have treated Clinton and Trump as comparable. Instead, Clinton was subjected to a barrage of wildly sexist coverage, Republicans lined up behind Trump, and the American public was treated to months of “both sides” back-and-forth media coverage. Clinton’s email practices somehow ended up being framed as the equivalent of Trump’s open racism, pathological lying, and authoritarian attacks on the press and his opponents.
If we had a functioning government with checks and balances, leaders of both parties would have reacted with bipartisan horror at the possibility of Russian interference in our elections and demanded answers. Trump would have been impeached after he fired FBI director James Comey, or in response to his ceaseless acts of flagrant corruption. That didn’t happen. Instead, Republican members of Congress rallied to protect Trump from oversight or accountability.
In short, a healthy democracy would have fought off Trump the same way a healthy body fights off a virus. That didn’t happen. The hard reality is that whatever part of our political system we’ve been counting on to protect us—the media, the political parties, the “elites,” some sense of bipartisanship or national interest or common decency, some popular aversion to bigotry—all of it failed in 2016.
That means we can’t just hope for the best in 2020. Getting Trump out of office is not going to fix the problems that allowed him to rise. Our political system is staggering from crisis to crisis, from one kind of dysfunction to the next, unable to address our society’s problems. The Republican Party has been captured by an unholy alliance of white nationalists, Christian fundamentalists, and corporate interests—and they’re systematically undermining democracy in order to consolidate their power. After Trump is gone—defeated, imprisoned, or both—these wounds will continue to fester. American democracy will not be healed unless we heal it.
But we’re not writing a book because we’re afraid. We’re writing a book because we have hope that we can change this course. We’re not hopeful in a warm and fuzzy Disney movie hero-inevitably-triumphs-over-evil kind of way. There’s nothing inevitable about this story. It depends on overcoming entrenched, dangerous forces that are just fine with things as they are, thank you very much. Our hope is messier. It’s the grit-your-teeth kind of hope rooted in experience, in a belief that, as bad as things are, there’s still something we can do about it.
The “we” in the paragraph above includes you. It has to if we’re going to win.
You’re worried about American democracy. You know that it’s under threat from Donald Trump and his enablers. Maybe you’ve marched, or called your member of Congress, or volunteered for a campaign. Maybe you’ve heard about this “Indivisible” movement or even been part of leading in your own community. Maybe you haven’t done any of that. Maybe you don’t yet know what to do or how to get involved. But you know something is very wrong with American politics and you want to be part of making it right.
We’re with you, and this book explains how we can do this work together.
We believe the next few years will determine whether we have a truly inclusive democratic America, or something else—a continued descent into racist authoritarianism. We believe the only way to avoid that “something else” is to create a broad and lasting movement devoted to fixing our broken democratic norms and institutions. And we know we’ll only win this fight if people all over the country understand the threats to our democracy, and how they can be part of saving it.
So we’re writing this book to grow and strengthen a pro-democracy movement in America before it’s too late. That movement is called Indivisible.
We’re not academics. We’re not investigative journalists. We’re not members of Congress. We’re not running for president.2 Our story is a bit weirder than that.
In 2016 we launched the Indivisible movement when we published a strategy for anti-Trump resistance, the Indivisible Guide.3 To our amazement, thousands of locally led grassroots “Indivisible” groups formed and adopted our strategy. In red states, blue states, and purple states—in fact in every congressional district in the country—these new Indivisible groups began harnessing local power to stop Trump. By early 2017, Indivisible had become a nationwide phenomenon, the largest anti-Trump “resistance” operation in the country. As cofounders and co–executive directors of Indivisible, we’ve spent the past two years working directly with these grassroots leaders who joined the fight to stop Trump after his election in 2016. It’s been a wild ride, and it’s given us a unique vantage point into American politics and power in the late teens of the twenty-first century.
This was not a path we planned on taking. As of the 2016 election, we were a married couple steadily building our careers inside the Beltway. We were both former Capitol Hill staffers4 turned do-gooder policy advocates, one of us working on poverty, one of us on human trafficking. But like so many folks around the country, the 2016 election threw us into the five stages of grief. We knew that an incoming Trump administration would threaten not just the issues we worked on but also everything else we cared about.
This put us out of step with some of our colleagues in polite professional circles of Washington, D.C. Immediately after the election, a lot of the political establishment seemed to be trying very hard to pretend that everything was normal. Policy wonks were hastily reworking the “transition memos” they’d prepared for the Clinton administration to deliver to Trump instead. Everyone was trying to track down the emails of the Trump staffers leading the transition so they could make contact. There was the usual speculation about who’d join the cabinet. Congressional Democratic leadership talked about it being their duty to find compromise with Trump.5
We knew we weren’t alone in believing that this moment demanded not compromise but resistance. And as dark as the clouds on the horizon were, there was a silver lining: people around the country weren’t just grieving. They were organizing. We were already starting to see it in the rapidly forming Women’s March and a dozen new “resistance” Facebook groups in our own network of previously apolitical friends. They were pulling together protests. They were calling Congress. They were sharing homemade guides to resisting fascism and to evading surveillance. They were treating Trump like the threat he was, and they were looking for ways to stop him.
We wanted to help those people make their voices heard. Two policy wonks couldn’t change what was happening in Washington, but maybe they could.
But how? As former congressional staffers, we didn’t have many applicable skills, but we knew how Congress worked.6 And we knew that local, organized pressure could have a powerful effect on Congress, because we’d seen it used against us by the Tea Party years before.7 We could share that knowledge. We would write a quick, easy-to-share Google Doc laying out a strategy for how Americans could organize to block Trump’s agenda. We could demystify Congress and show people how scaring the crap out of their own representatives was their most effective tool for resisting Trump.8
So, while home with family in Texas for Thanksgiving, we bailed on all our social plans and hammered out a draft guide.9 We started passing it around to our friends and former congressional colleagues for thoughts. Some offered edits.10 Some told us our careers in Washington would be over if we published it. Some did both. We tried very hard to get some of the people who worked on the initial draft to list themselves as coauthors, just so we’d have a little extra cover. Almost all declined. There were good reasons to be nervous about being attached to this publicly. The guide urged obstruction as a virtue; it flew in the face of everything “smart” establishment Democrats in D.C. were saying about working with the incoming Trump administration.
We had no idea how our bosses would react to it. We might end up being trolled by right-wingers and Breitbart. We might end up tanking our careers. We seriously considered just releasing it anonymously. But we also didn’t want to create some sort of mystery around authorship; we wanted people focused on the strategy. So in the end we said “Screw it” and just went ahead and put our names on it. Only two former staffers agreed to do the same: Angel Padilla and Jeremy Haile.
After a few weeks of edits, we gave it a name: Indivisible: A Practical Guide for Resisting the Trump Agenda, and we tweeted out a link to the Google Doc to our handful of Twitter followers. It was twenty-three pages long and full of typos, and within a matter of hours it would completely upend our lives.11
At its heart, the Indivisible Guide was a short civics textbook with a snarky edge. It made one central claim: nothing that happens over the next four years will happen because of Trump; it’ll happen because of what Congress does or doesn’t do. And our members of Congress answer to us, which means we have power.
We recommended that readers form a local group of like-minded friends, neighbors, or random folks and pressure their own members of Congress, much like the Tea Party did. We were so bold as to suggest that readers call their local group “Indivisible,” but we left it up to them. It was a basic plan: organize locally and pressure Republicans and Democrats alike. Make yourselves a constant presence in your elected representatives’ lives. Show up at congressional district offices, pack their town halls, flood offices with calls, and never give an inch. It was simple, really.
Now, usually when you write a political manifesto and put it on the Internet, nothing happens. And that was pretty much what we were expecting. We hoped our friends would read it and share it with their families when they went home for Christmas. We thought that sometime in the next few months we might get an email from someone, somewhere in the country, saying they’d used the guide to ask a question at a town hall, and that would make us feel great.
Instead, two unexpected things happened pretty much immediately after we posted it.12
First, the Indivisible Guide went viral. A flood of web traffic crashed the Google Doc. Journalists and celebrities were finding it and sharing it online. Robert Reich posted it to his Facebook page. George Takei tweeted it out. We were flooded with media interview requests. Our Twitter accounts exploded with new followers. Our bosses found out. (Fortunately for us, they were very nice about it.)
Second, and much more important, people around the country started putting the Indivisible Guide into action. We could tell because they were flooding our in-box by the thousands—with excitement, and thanks, and follow-up questions. We’d tapped into a massive surge of local organizing that was already beginning to take shape in towns and communities around the country. We hadn’t aspired to create the playbook or the umbrella name that so many new grassroots leaders would adopt, but here we were.
We had to somehow deal with this barrage of incoming messages from people all over the country, and so we pulled in friends, coworkers, and every grieving campaign staffer we could find. In a matter of days, we had gathered dozens of people at our house and started organizing them into teams.13 The web and design team created an online map of the United States and asked people to register if they wanted to create an Indivisible group. New group leaders had to commit to three things: resist Trump’s agenda, uphold progressive values, and put the Indivisible Guide into action through local advocacy. In those early days, we got an email ping each time one registered: Indivisible Greenville, Indivisible Concord, Indivisible Front Range Resistance.14 The first day we got about two hundred groups; within a few weeks we had thousands.
The Indivisible national team kept expanding. We drafted a former Obama campaign staffer, Julia Fox, who assembled a field team of volunteers assigned to cover each state and respond to the groups reaching out to us. We created a team of policy wonks who feverishly analyzed the latest news from Congress and turned their findings into activist-ready strategic updates. We created an enormous volunteer email team dedicated just to replying to the thousands of incoming questions and requests. Other teams were translating the Indivisible Guide into Spanish, organizing and filing stories coming in from around the country, and finding a lawyer to confirm that none of this was going to get us in any legal trouble. Anyone with press experience was helping us triage reporters and connect them to local groups. A guy who happened to have a Twitter account was put in charge of social media.15
We didn’t sleep. We bought donuts and pizza for the volunteers now camped out at our house, but we were too scared and too amped to eat. Trump was taking office, and the world was terrifying. But something beautiful was coming together across the country, and we were right in the middle of it from our living room in D.C. By February 2017, there were Indivisible groups in every single congressional district in the country, from the bluest blue district to the reddest red.
And these newly formed Indivisible groups had a lot of follow-up questions. They needed ways to connect with other people interested in resisting Trump in their communities. They wanted to know what was happening in Congress, how to respond to the Muslim ban, how to cope with the flood of information coming at them, how they could be most strategic right this minute. They were reporting back as they took actions, sending us video clips and priceless stories that we turned around and pitched to national media. They were asking us how to do stuff, from renting meeting space to getting legal support to building their membership to raising money.
We had no idea who to connect them to. Whose job is it to help fuel a social movement?
As it turned out, it was ours. We couldn’t just put the Indivisible Guide and a few follow-up resources online and walk away. The future of our democracy was on the line. We had catapulted ourselves into the center of a nascent grassroots political movement and had an obligation to do everything we could to help it grow.
So we built up a national operation to support, coordinate, and uplift this burgeoning movement. We reluctantly and awkwardly sent out an email asking our growing email list for money to start an organization.16 The response was overwhelmingly enthusiastic: donations poured in from across the country, often from the very folks who were also building their own Indivisible groups.17 In early 2017, we quit our jobs and started hiring our first staff. For more than two years now, we’ve been the co–executive directors of Indivisible. Our mission has been simple: to support the local Indivisible groups all over the country that are working to stop Trump, and to build progressive power.
And we’ve seen that work up close. We’ve traveled the country, meeting with thousands of Indivisible members (affectionately called “Indivisibles”) in hundreds of local Indivisible groups, from Oregon to Tennessee to Massachusetts. We’ve knocked on doors with Indivisibles in Wimberley, Texas; we’ve spoken to crowds of Indivisibles in Prescott, Arizona; we’ve held trainings for Indivisibles in Atlanta, Georgia; we’ve gotten drunk with the Indivisibles of New Jersey and Pennsylvania. In blue states, red states, and purple states, we’ve conspired with the local Indivisible leaders pushing the limits of what is politically possible in the Trump era.
We’ve seen what it looks like when people power lands in Washington, D.C. We’ve orchestrated pressure campaigns targeting Republican and Democratic members of Congress alike. We’ve been in closed-door meetings with congressional leadership, imploring them to listen to their grassroots base and fight back against Trump. We’ve been uninvited from these meetings in retaliation for our advocacy, and we’ve been welcomed back in recognition of the movement’s power.
We’ve been there for the victories, defeats, and stalemates. We’ve seen where this local power has worked and where it hasn’t, and the reasons why. We’ve worked with local Indivisible groups across the country to kill the repeal of the Affordable Care Act, stand in solidarity with the communities under threat from Trump’s white supremacy and xenophobia, turn the Trump tax scam into a political liability, and build a historic wave election in 2018.
Through it all, we’ve learned, led, and been led by the local Indivisible leaders across the country. We’ve watched as they’ve grown from shell-shocked gatherings of friends and neighbors into political powerhouses. We’ve heard the stories of men and women moving from despair to action: finding their voices, building their power, and changing the political world.
We’re not done yet. The movement is evolving. The challenge that lies before us is not just to stop Trump. It’s to stop Trumpism—the forces that allowed Trump to rise and take power. It’s to demand a democracy that finally, truly represents the people—all the people. We’ve seen where Indivisible and the anti-Trump resistance has been, and we have a sense of where it’s going. That’s our expertise.
The book is part movement memoir, part civics how-to guide, and part blueprint for doing away with Trump and building a real representative democracy after he’s gone. That’s a lot, so we split it into three sections.
Section 1 is “What We’re Up Against.” Before we can talk about how we’ll cure what ails our democracy, we’ve got to understand the disease itself. It’s dangerous to treat Trump like a complete aberration or to put all the blame on him.18 American democracy is in crisis not just because of Trump but because of real structural flaws in our system and a long-term campaign by powerful reactionary forces to undermine representative rule. Trump has benefited from this campaign, and he has accelerated it, but he did not invent it.
In Chapter 1, we describe the forces that are causing our political system to come apart at the seams. We’ve got to face a hard truth: the representative democratic system that the Founding Fathers gave us is quite simply not built to handle ideologically polarized parties playing constitutional hardball. Every other country in the world with a presidential system of democracy like ours has eventually collapsed into gridlock, dysfunction, hyperpolarization, and escalating crisis.
Sound familiar?
This structural problem is being exacerbated by another hard truth: one of the parties has fallen off an ideological cliff. The Republican Party has been taken over by white nationalists, Christian fundamentalists, and corporate interests. And these reactionary elites are not stupid: they read the same demographic data we do. They understand the country is getting more diverse and more unequal. They know that, given the chance, this changing electorate will reject their reactionary policies. And so they have worked tirelessly for decades to sabotage our democracy and rig it in their favor. From packing the courts with ideologues to gerrymandering themselves into safe districts to gutting voting rights and disenfranchising voters—especially voters of color—to filibustering to death popular proposals, these elite reactionaries have done incalculable damage to American democratic institutions. And the frightening thing is that it’s working.
So what do you do when a radical minority is systematically undermining democracy to entrench their power? The only solution for what ails our democracy is more democracy—and the only thing that gets us that is constituent power. Because while our political system is bruised and battered, it hasn’t totally collapsed yet. We still have power—if we’re prepared to use it.
Chapter 2 explains what this “constituent power” thing is and what we’re going to need: mass civic engagement to pressure and replace our elected officials. It describes the role of constituent power in American political history and the historical precedents that make us believe this is possible, from the local civic engagement institutions of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries to, ironically enough, the Tea Party.
We all know by now that the Trump era has sparked an upsurge in American civic engagement. Indivisible and grassroots groups in communities all across the country, led largely by people who were never involved in politics before, are putting a modern spin on an age-old American tradition. It’s been decades since the country has seen this sort of wide-scale, locally led, nationally networked civic engagement infrastructure. The multi-decade decline of civic engagement may have reached an inflection point. Indivisible is here for the upswing.
Which brings us to Section 2 of the book: “How We Win.” It describes, well, how we win. It’s a practical guide to building and harnessing constituent power. This section is rooted in our firsthand experience with Indivisible: leading and being led by local Indivisible groups that are building power and changing politics. This is partly our own narrative and partly based on interviews and surveys of hundreds of Indivisible leaders from across the country.
The first years of the Trump era have been packed with political intrigue: clashes between political parties, clashes within parties, and clashes between an aging Washington establishment and a burgeoning grassroots movement that was—and is!—fed up with fecklessness and failure. But Section 2 is more than storytelling: this section of the book is intended to be practical and actionable. To that end, throughout the narratives, we draw out key lessons for building power locally. We outline nineteen “Indivisible Lessons,” to be precise,19 from models for building local groups to tactics for getting earned media to strategies for holding friends and opponents accountable.
We split Section 2 into three action-oriented chapters: how to make Congress listen, how to build power together, and how to make waves.
Chapter 3 is where the real-world magic begins. We dive back into the world of the Indivisible Guide to explain how your elected officials think and how to use what they care about to make them listen to you.20 We go over the practical principles of organizing locally to have an impact nationally. And then we put it into action, telling the story of the Indivisible movement’s explosive growth and desperate effort to defeat Trump’s top legislative priority of his first year in office: repealing the Affordable Care Act. From congressional town halls to die-ins to late-night confrontations on the Senate floor, this was a legislative battle with many twists and turns—and a bunch of lessons about how to effectively apply constituent power.
In Chapter 4, we talk about building power the Indivisible way—and that means talking about privilege, responsibility, and partnership. We discuss what it means to get political and organize in the age of Trump and what standing in solidarity with the people under attack means—especially for those of us who bring real personal privilege and power to the fight. We draw out these lessons by telling the story of how Indivisible showed up after Trump launched his attack on immigrant youth and the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) program.
In Chapter 5, we answer the question: What should you do when your electeds just won’t listen? The answer is: Get busy replacing them. That’s what Indivisible did in building the blue wave that gave Democrats control of the House in 2018. The sweeping progressive wins of the midterms didn’t happen in a vacuum but were instead the result of painstaking political work carried out over two long years. This chapter tells the story of how the grassroots won, and what we’ll need to do to build waves and retake power in the years to come.
But where are we going, and what do we do after the next blue wave? We answer that in Section 3, “A Blueprint for Democracy.” Chapter 6 closes the book with a reform agenda for American democracy after Trump, a democracy that actually represents the people. That means breaking the gridlock in Washington, then moving on a bold agenda to reform our national institutions, from Congress to the Supreme Court to voting rights to the media. It’s an agenda to make democracy inclusive and functional, rooted in the radical belief at the heart of Indivisible: in a representative democracy, your representative ought to represent you.
The best part is that every part of this agenda could be introduced on day one of the new Congress in 2021. A simple majority vote by Congress and signature from the (new) president is all that’s necessary. No need for constitutional amendments or revolutionary overthrow. Just good old-fashioned legislation that could remake our political system to actually respond to the will of the people. And it all could be enacted in 2021. This isn’t some far-off vision of utopia. This is a world we can build—and build faster than you might think.
This book is meant to stand on its own as an engaging take on the role of power in American politics and the potential future for our democracy. We hope it’s a good read, but that’s just the start. Indivisible is, most of all, defined by action. We want you in this movement, and that means doing more than just reading a book.
It doesn’t matter if you have just an hour a month or an hour a day: you can be part of saving American democracy. There’s valuable work you can do in this movement. We need you. Here are three immediate action items to take between reading this introduction and starting the rest of the book:
We will not save American democracy if we rely on political elites to change the system out of the goodness of their hearts. Most of them have been doing just fine under the rigged rules. They like things the way they are, and they’re going to fight like hell to keep them that way, regardless of political party.
That’s where we come in. We’re building something new together. Indivisible is an ongoing nationwide experiment. It’s constantly growing and changing in response to the realities of the moment and the leadership of real people on the ground who own and build their local Indivisible groups. If you’re reading this, you qualify to participate in this experiment. You can be an Indivisible leader, and in fact we need you to be.
Together we can make our representatives represent us, and we can replace them when they fail to perform that basic function. Our goal is to build a more perfect union, a democracy that really represents the American people. It’s not what we have now, but it’s something we have the power to build. And the way we will build it is with local groups of constituent power in every community in the country. If we stand indivisible together, we will win. This books shows how.
1. On a lighter note, we also know that saving democracy is a lot of fun, and we want more people doing it. Also, this is the first of many footnote asides, so buckle up. (If you’re looking for citations, they’re in the back of the book. There are lots of them because we’re nerds.)
2. Seriously.
3. It’s available on our website, if you’d like to start at the beginning: indivisible.org/guide.
4. We started dating the weekend the Affordable Care Act passed the House in March 2010, when we were both House staffers for progressive members of Congress. Pretty solid weekend.
5. In fact, the same week in mid-November that a Trump lackey cited America’s Japanese internment camps of World War II as a potential model for dealing with American Muslims, the incoming Democratic Senate minority leader Chuck Schumer explained to the New York Times that his plan was to find common ground with Trump on infrastructure. It seemed there was a looming bipartisan future in which there were would be no potholes on the roads to America’s new internment camps.
6. If you ever wonder why so many congressional staffers become sellout lobbyists, this is mostly why: that’s where the biggest demand is for their skill set. Also the money: they want the money.
7. The Tea Party was super-racist and sometimes violent, but the early iteration of the movement was smart about strategy and tactics. They focused on their own elected officials locally, and they relentlessly fought back against President Obama’s agenda.
8. Our first draft literally opened with “The key to stopping Donald Trump is scaring the crap out of your member of Congress.” (We meant it in a totally nonviolent-resistance sort of way.)
9. Leah: Much to the annoyance of Ezra’s Texas family, who kept trying to get us to close our laptops and interact with them like normal people.
10. While we got edits from a half dozen or more people, nobody contributed more substantive and substantial edits than Matt Traldi, a longtime friend and labor organizer. Early strategy sessions for what would become Indivisible were always in our living room or Matt’s. He would go on to be instrumental in building the Indivisible national operation, becoming chief operating officer.
11. Ezra: I’ll never forget Liz Ramey, who would eventually join the Indivisible national staff, coming over to our house a couple of days later with a printed-out, marked-up copy helpfully pointing out all the typos we’d missed.
12. Actually, the first thing that happened is we were overwhelmed with emails, many of which said something to the effect of “This guide is full of typos.” Turns out if you want something copyedited, a good strategy is just to put it online and let strangers have at it.
13. We spread the volunteers across fifteen working groups, each with their own set of leaders, helpers, and approvers: Legal, Financial, Partnerships, Email Response, Field, Story Collection, Volunteer Management, Data Management, Press, Social Media, Web, Design and Brand, Congressional District Targeting, Congressional Demystification, and Guide Updates/New Content. If this sounds like a chaotic mess to you, you should have seen our living room in early 2017.
14. We’d put a throwaway line in the “How to Form a Group” chapter recommending that people give their groups a name that made clear they were local, offering as the example “Springfield Indivisible Against Hate,” and adding “You are also 100 percent welcome to pick up and run with the Indivisible name if you want, but we won’t be hurt if you don’t.” People used the word.
15. He was removed shortly afterward when it turned out he wasn’t actually very good at Twitter. He helped out in other ways. Thanks, Chad!
16. Casey Hogle, who had been volunteering for the nascent Indivisible effort since the guide launched, had been trying to convince us for weeks to do this. We were embarrassed to ask for money, but she was right. We needed resources to make the effort sustainable, and the best way to fuel a grassroots movement was with grassroots dollars. Casey would go on to become Indivisible’s national development director.
17. This became particularly ironic a few months later when right-wing media tried to discredit us by saying that we were paying people to protest around the country. We could honestly say that the reverse was happening: the protestors were actually funding us.
18. By all means, though, put a ton of blame on Trump. He’s a sleazy walking blob of corruption and racism whose most grotesque acts are matched in scale only by his staggering incompetence. We’re not fans.
19. You might say there are an indivisible number of Indivisible lessons, but you’d be a nerd if you said that.
20. Spoiler: They wake up every morning thinking about reelection. That’s basically it.