The CaPA Connector is an interactive platform that profiles hundreds of community-rooted organizations that are engaging voters and advocating for climate, social, racial and/or economic justice. For donors who seek to deploy funds strategically in targeted geographies, with high-impact yet low-profile community organizations, the CaPA Connector dynamic database offers a powerful tool of discovery. This database is constantly updated and can be filtered by geography, constituencies, engagement actions, and other criteria.
How do I add or edit my organization’s profile?
Fill out this Card Creation Form to add your organization to the CaPA Connector. If you are already listed on the CaPA Connector and would like to update or remove your information, find your organization’s card below and click the Update This Information button.
How can I contribute?
CaPA offers resource pooling services completely free of fiscal fees and overhead charges. With a single contribution to CaPA you can specify dozens of groups you would like to support on your behalf, or you can give unrestricted funds which will be guided to the most important financial gaps identified by CaPA’s staff. You can also reach out and give directly to the organizations directly via their website or listed contact.
Disclaimers
While this database contains more than 500 entities, it is not a complete list of the thousands of organizations doing impactful work. Organizations are invited to fill out this Card Creation Form to be added to the CaPA Connector.
Most of the CaPA Connector data is self-reported by the organizations and CaPA has not completed a 3rd party assessment of accuracy.
CaPA evaluates where programs are fielded within a State by using congressional district boundaries. An org delivering engagement actions within the boundaries of a congressional district does not necessarily mean that group is engaging in a congressional district race.
Action for the Climate Emergency (ACE) will register 100,000+ voters via field canvass and layered digital. ACE focuses on registering young people by tabling in high-traffic areas (campuses, concerts, community centers), phone and text-banking, door knocking, and cost-effective digital engagement.
Action for the Climate Emergency (ACE) has a mission to educate, inspire, and support young people to lead the fight for their future. We ensure they have everything they need to understand the science and advocate for solutions to the climate emergency. We achieve our mission by reaching tens of millions of young people with our programs each year, training a new generation of leaders, amplifying youth voices to shift the narrative, and increasing diverse youth participation in our democracy.
Budget Size: Large: Previous year budget > $3M
CaPA States Covered: AL, AZ, CA, GA, KS, LA, MI, MN, MS, MT, NV, NC, OH, OK, PA, TX, VT, VA, WI
Geographic Focus: Rural, Suburban / Ex-urban, Urban - Small city (<100k), Urban - Large city (>100k), Other
Core Constituencies: Black, Youth and Students (aged 17-35), Adults (aged 35-65)
Organization Leadership: BIPOC-led, Women-led
Staff and Volunteer Balance: Volunteer boosted - <50% of the programmatic activities are executed by volunteers
Lead Contact: Alex WeeksSenior Director of Philanthropyalex@acespace.org
Priority Issues: We focus on organizing youth around issues pertaining to the climate emergency. Central to our voter engagement approach is ongoing, consistent civic organizing and engagement with young people in order to ensure the highest impact on registration and turnout during both national and local election cycles. Our state-based field canvass operations leverage evolving talking point strategies that shift from a voter registration focus to turnout and then onto broader election awareness education. For example, our paid canvass voter registration program in Wisconsin this spring was focused on registering new young voters and turning them out for the state Supreme Court race—canvassers included educational messaging about why civic engagement in down-ballot, off-cycle elections is important. We then convert our voter registration operations into voter turnout messaging. At the same time, our digital voter engagement strategies use creative marketing tactics to drive conversions—leveraging issue organizing and online trends to attract folks who are not easily engaged through basic voter registration messaging. At ACE, we also know that the environment and climate change are top issues driving young people to the polls. As such, our year-round youth organizing and power-building focuses on engaging young people in climate action opportunities that build this civic muscle. In fact, this fall ACE ran a pre-2024 Election Youth Survey with our research partners at CIRCLE at Tufts University to poll eligible youth voters, revealing key findings that include: The youth vote has the potential to be a powerful force in 2024: 57 percent of youth polled expressed that they are “extremely likely” to vote in 2024 and another 16 percent say they are “fairly likely,”—meaning 2024 could elicit the highest youth voter turnout in recent history. Concern for climate drives voting: Climate was identified as a top three voting issue among youth—and those who selected climate as a top issue were 20 points more likely to say they’ll vote in 2024. Engaging our nation’s youngest citizens is critical for building lifelong voting habits: We know from prior research that voting is a “sticky habit,” and this poll underscores that finding—with 86 percent of young people who voted in 2022 reporting that they are “extremely likely” to vote again in 2024. Many youth—particularly marginalized youth—feel unprepared to vote: Less than 1 in 5 young people have heard about politics and issues this year from organizations like ACE (14 percent). Black youth, young People of Color in rural communities, and young people without a college degree are receiving even less information—and simultaneously report that they are less likely to vote. This year our key issue advocacy areas of focus for this work include: stopping new fossil fuel industry expansion (particularly in the Midwest, Ohio River Valley, and Gulf South); softening the ground for clean energy permitting locally to seize siting opportunities via federal climate investments like the Inflation Reduction Act (IRA); accelerating IRA implementation and popularizing its benefits with consumers; and putting pressure on elected officials to advance policies and regulations that protect the environment and surrounding communities including fracking regulatory reforms in Pennsylvania. Further, fossil fuel corporations are currently outspending the clean energy sector 13 to 1 in political contributions. It’s clear the fossil fuel lobby has a stranglehold on U.S. politics and is successfully manipulating our political system to its benefit. However, we also know that an achievable increase of just a few percentage points in youth turnout in local elections can have a major impact on state Supreme Courts, City Councils, County Commissioners, Port Commission seats, and Public Utility Commission elections—all of which have the power to decide the fate of fossil fuel and renewable energy projects. ACE mobilizes young voters around these local, down-ballot elections—so far this year, we registered and turned out young voters in the lead-up to key local races in North Carolina, Pennsylvania, and Wisconsin, and educated our network in Ohio on the Issue 1 special election that had a pivotal impact on democracy in the state. Both ACE and CEA focus on organizing youth around issues pertaining to the climate emergency. Central to our voter engagement approach is ongoing, consistent civic organizing and engagement with young people in order to ensure the highest impact on registration and turnout during both national and local election cycles. Our key state-based field canvass operations leverage evolving talking point strategies that shift from a voter registration focus to turn out and then onto broader election awareness education. For example, while our recent paid canvass voter registration program in North Carolina was principally focused on registering new young voters of color and building excitement for the 2024 election—if a voter was registering in a Charlotte district, canvassers shifted to education about the upcoming local Charlotte City Council races and why civic engagement in down-ballot, off-cycle elections was important. At the same time, our digital voter engagement strategies use creative marketing tactics to drive conversions—leveraging issue organizing and online trends to attract folks who are not easily converted through basic voter registration messaging. At ACE, we also know that the environment and climate change are top issues driving young people to the polls. As such, our year-round youth organizing and power-building focuses on engaging young people in climate action opportunities that build this civic muscle. This year our key issue advocacy areas of focus for this work include: stopping new fossil fuel industry expansion (particularly in the Midwest, Ohio River Valley, and Gulf South); softening the ground for clean energy permitting locally to seize siting opportunities via federal climate investments like the Inflation Reduction Act (IRA); accelerating IRA implementation and popularizing its benefits with consumers; advancing 100% renewable energy state-based agendas; and holding utilities like Southwest Energy, Duke Energy, NW Naturals, and Arizona Public Services accountable. Further, fossil fuel corporations are currently outspending the clean energy sector 13 to 1 in political contributions. It’s clear the fossil fuel lobby has a stranglehold on U.S. politics and is successfully manipulating our political system to its benefit. However, we also know that an achievable increase of just a few percentage points in youth turnout in local elections can have a major impact on state Supreme Courts, City Councils, County Commissioners, Port Commission seats, and Public Utility Commission elections—all of which have the power to decide the fate of fossil fuel and renewable energy projects. ACE mobilizes young voters around these critical local, down-ballot elections—so far this year, we registered and turned out young voters in the lead-up to key local races in North Carolina, Pennsylvania, the Wisconsin Supreme Court race, and educated our network in Ohio on the Issue 1 special election that had a pivotal impact on democracy in the state.
On-site voter registration in high traffic areas and events and relational organizing targeting Latino Men, Youth, and other BIPOC sub-groups in cities and suburbs in Arizona, Nevada, and Pennsylvania
Focus on Local and State-level strategies to change the policy landscape for our diverse families and communities across America.
On-site voter registration in high traffic areas and events and relational organizing targeting Latino Men, Youth, and other BIPOC sub-groups in cities and suburbs in Arizona, Nevada, and Pennsylvania
Focus on Local and State-level strategies to change the policy landscape for our diverse families and communities across America.
We build power for APIs across Pennsylvania by providing culturally competent, linguistically accessible messaging in 20 languages, ensuring our communities are knowledgeable about issues and candidates. Focusing on Democracy Defense, Climate Equity, Save Chinatown, and Justice for Christian Hall, we‘ll educate and empower our people to vote for progressive candidates.
Asian Pacific Islander Political Alliance’s (API PA) mission is to build long-term power for APIs in Pennsylvania by coordinating political, electoral, and legislative work to hold our elected officials accountable; engaging in culturally competent and linguistically accessible direct voter contact with our communities; and building solidarity with other aligned communities of color across the state.
Budget Size: Large: Previous year budget > $3M
CaPA States Covered: PA
Geographic Focus: Rural, Suburban / Ex-urban, Urban - Small city (<100k), Urban - Large city (>100k)
Core Constituencies: Immigrant, AAPI (Asian American Pacific Islander)
Comprehensive multilingual voter registration and education effort focussed largely on immigrant populations
Asian Americans Advancing Justice-Atlanta is the first nonprofit legal advocacy organization dedicated to protecting the civil rights of Asian Americans, Native Hawaiian, Pacific Islander (AANHPI) and Arab, Middle Eastern, Muslim, and South Asian (AMEMSA) communities in Georgia and the Southeast. Through our work, we envision a social movement in which communities of color are fully empowered, active in civic life, and working together to promote equity, fair treatment, and self determination for all.
Budget Size: Large: Previous year budget > $3M
CaPA States Covered: GA
Geographic Focus: Rural, Suburban / Ex-urban, Urban - Small city (<100k), Urban - Large city (>100k)
Priority Issues: Voter Registration and Voter Misinformation with a 15-language canvassing team capacity; Voter Purging vigilance; Engaging and preparing diverse/immigrant youth as civic engagement leaders; Connecting to other needed services and educational needs; community linkages across the state to build infrastructure across immigrant communities in Georgia.
Comprehensive multilingual voter registration and education effort focussed largely on immigrant populations
Asian Americans Advancing Justice-Atlanta is the first nonprofit legal advocacy organization dedicated to protecting the civil rights of Asian Americans, Native Hawaiian, Pacific Islander (AANHPI) and Arab, Middle Eastern, Muslim, and South Asian (AMEMSA) communities in Georgia and the Southeast. Through our work, we envision a social movement in which communities of color are fully empowered, active in civic life, and working together to promote equity, fair treatment, and self determination for all.
Budget Size: Large: Previous year budget > $3M
CaPA States Covered: GA
Geographic Focus: Rural, Suburban / Ex-urban, Urban - Small city (<100k), Urban - Large city (>100k)
Priority Issues: Voter Registration and Voter Misinformation with a 15-language canvassing team capacity; Voter Purging vigilance; Engaging and preparing diverse/immigrant youth as civic engagement leaders; Connecting to other needed services and educational needs; community linkages across the state to build infrastructure across immigrant communities in Georgia.
Battleground New York will engage a diverse coalition often overlooked as low-propensity voters, including young people, voters of color, and new registrants. We will reach them on their doorsteps and in their communities, informing them on policy, educating them on voting by mail, and persuading them to turn out.
Battleground New York (BGNY) is an unprecedented coalition uniting many of New York's leading organizations, unions, and movements for a common cause- taking back the House and making Rep.Hakeem Jeffries Speaker. We are launching the largest field and organizing campaign in the state's modern history to reach New Yorkers at their doorsteps, on their phones, and in their neighborhoods.
Priority Issues: We will focus on the issues that matter to working families in New York including, but not limited to: environmental justice, reproductive rights, workers’ rights, healthcare, and retirement security.
Blueprint NC is a partnership of over 80 organizations building towards inclusive and anti-racist democracy by working to engage and turnout North Carolina BIPOC voters. Tactics include texting, phonebanking, mailers, door-to-door canvassing, events, and canvassing in high traffic areas, with special focus on high schools to register 16 and 17 year olds.
Blueprint NC is a progressive ecosystem of nearly 60 formal partner organizations and an expanding web of network allies committed to building independent power for an anti-racist, inclusive democracy. We believe that inclusive democracy requires open, reflective, and responsive governing institutions.
CASA’s voter registration is primarily site-based, with our field team of canvassers engaging with the community at public locations amenable to registering our target voters, such as shops, groceries, places of worship, etc. Our canvass team are at least trilingual, comprising a mix of team members who speak English, Spanish, and French.
With over 155,000 lifetime members across 46 US states, CASA is a national powerhouse organization building power and improving the quality of life in working-class: Black, Latino/a/e, Afro-descendent, Indigenous, and Immigrant communities. CASA creates change with its powerbuilding model blending human services, community organizing, and advocacy in order to serve the full spectrum of the needs, dreams, and aspirations of members.
Geographic Focus: Rural, Urban - Small city (<100k), Urban - Large city (>100k)
Core Constituencies: Immigrant, BIPOC (Black; Indigenous and/or People Of Color), Latinx
Organization Leadership: BIPOC-led, Women-led
Lead Contact: Ankur RazdanDevelopment Manager for Politics & Civic Engagementarazdan@wearecasa.org
Priority Issues: We do not focus on specific issues when collecting voter registrations, as that would put the non-partisan nature of the program in jeopardy. We do focus on the importance of voting for the registrants’ community having a voice and say in local, state, and federal democracy.
CASA in Action will be engaging in:
-State-based advocacy in GA, MD, PA, VA
-Non-partisan voter engagement around state and local elections in VA and PA. This will include GOTV, VBM pushes, and, in all our states, deep canvassing.
-Partisan voter engagement in the same state, especially focused on the Gubernatorial General Election in Virginia.
CASA in Action turns out voters based on democracy-defense organizing, non-partisan voter canvassing, partisan voter canvassing to advocate for our member-endorsed candidates, and community-tailored communications. Our strength lies in community trust, cultural competency, and the leadership provided by our working-class, immigrant membership.
By mobilizing Black and brown voters, CASA in Action, and its 155,000+ members, play a powerful role in electing progressive change leaders who can produce the justice our members seek.
Community Organizing & Leadership Development
Clean & Green Campaign: Secure resources that prioritize the investments our community and environment need most in Electric Vehicle public transit and infrastructure, urban green spaces, and complete streets.
Clean Energy
Public Lands Access
Democracy: continue large-scale voter mobilization, transformational community organizing, and structural democracy reform.
Chispa AZ PAC is running a strategic and robust statewide campaign focused on the Arizona State Legislature, Arizona Corporation Commission, and board of county supervisors, targeting New American and climate voters through investing in a field program (250k doors), a bilingual digital campaign, radio ads, billboards, and earned media.
Chispa Arizona is organizing within our Latinx communities to grow political power and civic engagement for environmental justice in Arizona, as a program of the League of Conservation Voters. We build the capacity of Latinx families to influence policymakers and pressure polluters to protect communities’ rights to clean air and water, healthy neighborhoods, and a safe climate for generations to come. We are growing the infrastructure and leadership necessary for Latinx families to hold polluters and decision-makers accountable, demanding environmental justice and equity for our communities.
2024 nonpartisan GOTV programs target low propensity voters, college students, BIPOC voters, currently/previously incarcerated voters, and voters who speak Spanish, Vietnamese, Karen, or Arabic. We engage voters at their doors, with calls, texts, and at community events. We provide resources in several languages and tailor activities to our audiences.
Civic Nebraska creates a more modern and robust democracy for all Nebraskans. Our programs span Voting Rights work, Civic Health initiatives, and Youth Civic Leadership programming.
Priority Issues: Our primary focus is to engage with voters in face-to face conversations to discuss any questions they have about their voting process and to motivate them to cast their ballot in the upcoming election., , Polling has indicated that voters are more motivated by ballot initiatives and issues rather than candidates (BISC 2022 Post-Election Research & Analysis: https://1drv.ms/b/s!AmtCR8ilEnXXgc0pJds2K349IJYalA?e=wi2h3F). We remind voters to review their down ballot races/issues and the impact of local elections and citizen-led ballot issues., , Grassroots power building and activating voters to participate in our democracy in a variety of entry points.
Clean Water Action will knock on 200,000 doors, in Philadelphia, surrounding suburbs, and Allegheny County where turnout will decide the election. Voter engagement will focus on defending our right to clean water and clean air, especially in BIPOC and lower income neighborhoods burdened with illness from pollution and climate change.
To protect our environment, health, economic well-being and community quality of life. Clean Water Action organizes strong grassroots groups and coalitions, and campaigns to elect environmental candidates and to solve environmental and community problems.
Clean Water Fund protects the environment and community well-being, focusing on issues of Environmental Justice, Pollution Protection, Voting Rights, and Community Empowerment. Tactics include door-to-door canvassing, targeted mail, and community tabling, integrating voter registration into events for community empowerment and environmental justice.
Clean Water Fund's mission is to develop strong grassroots environmental leadership and to bring together diverse constituencies to work cooperatively for changes that improve their lives, focused on health, consumer, environmental and community problems.
Cobalt is a trusted leader in the Colorado reproductive health movement. We will use a variety of tactics to reach our established supporters throughout Colorado. We will also use a variety of tactics to expand our reach. We have an organizing team based in target communities throughout Colorado.
We envision a world where your health decisions are free from stigma, politics and systemic barriers. We actualize policies, structures and attitudes that secure unassailable reproductive autonomy and abortion access.
Priority Issues: We work to educate about complex reproductive health issues including abortion access. We also work to reduce stigma about who gets abortions and why. We utilize our medical advisory community made up of abortion providers and others who care for those needing abortion services in our education, outreach and advocacy efforts which have proven to be highly effective. Building unfettered access to a full spectrum of reproductive healthcare; collaborating with partners within and outside of our movement and expanding partnerships with labor, economic justice, and environmental groups. One highlight is the digital partnership with Conservation Colorado for municipal elections in Pueblo in 2023. Cobalt plans to expand this work in the key area of Pueblo and affiliated communities (CD3),
Deep Canvassing Program to spread accurate, pro-democracy messaging to voters often marginalized by traditional electoral paradigms, and in turn elect more pro-democracy candidates in North Carolina — especially a pro-civil rights seat on the state Supreme Court. Tactics will include door-knocking (both paid and volunteer), phone-banking, and paid GOTV mailers and digital.
Common Cause (501c4) advocates and organizers work in 25 states to pass pro-democracy, pro-voter laws to make it easier to participate in our elections. We have lobbied for and won common sense solutions like expanding vote-by-mail, making ballots available in multiple languages, extending early voting periods, automatic voter registration, and much more. We are also a leading organization in the fight to end partisan gerrymanders and have won multiple campaigns to put redistricting power in the hands of the people, not partisan legislators.
Budget Size: Large: Previous year budget > $3M
CaPA States Covered: NC, OH, MI, GA, AZ, CO, WI
Core Constituencies: BIPOC (Black; Indigenous and/or People Of Color), Youth and Students (aged 17-35)
Our target universe will emphasize low-propensity voters of color, ages 18-45. Our deep canvassing tactics will include door-knocking (both paid and volunteer) in our three priority counties and neighborhoods surrounding HBCUs; phone-banking in the same target geographies; and paid GOTV mailers and digital.
Common Cause Education Fund (CCEF) engages in national, state, and local efforts to strengthen our democracy and push back against attempts to suppress the participation of disenfranchised groups, particularly people of color, returning citizens, young adults, and low-income citizens in our elections; to ensure that the redistricting process is equitable and fair; and to promote policies that expose and reduce the influence of special interest money in politics. We also promote ethics and transparency in our democracy and advocate for a fair, free, and independent media.
Budget Size: Large: Previous year budget > $3M
CaPA States Covered: NC, OH, MI, GA, AZ, CO, WI
Core Constituencies: BIPOC (Black; Indigenous and/or People Of Color), Youth and Students (aged 17-35)
Looking ahead, in 2025 and beyond, Common Defense will continue prioritizing ongoing base-building activities, providing members with the training and education necessary to hone their organizing skills, leverage the power of their voice, and participate in our current and future electoral, democracy, immigration and climate campaigns. We are looking forward to scaling up our direct voter contact campaigns in 2026 and reaching even more voters during the midterms.
Common Defense is uniting veterans across party lines to ensure Vice President Kamala Harris becomes the next President of the United States. This is the only veteran-led effort with a track record of reaching voters through high-impact grassroots organizing, earned media, and visibility actions. In the remaining phase of the election, Common Defense will target voters in five key states which will determine the White House and control of Congress and use our twelve organizing staff and our “Corps” of 670 existing trained in-state super-volunteers to mobilize military veterans to support the Democratic ticket using an array of tactics. We aim to persuade the critical constituency of swing voters especially suburban, patriotic, working class and middle class voters who are a decisive component of reconstructing the anti-MAGA coalition.
Founded in 2016, Common Defense is the nation’s largest grassroots organization of US military veterans and the only one that invests in the leadership of its members through training and deployment in campaigns that connect directly to their history of service, including voting rights, climate justice, and anti-militarism.
Budget Size: Large: Previous year budget > $3M
CaPA States Covered: AZ, CA, GA, MT, NE, NY, NC, PA, TX
Geographic Focus: Rural, Suburban / Ex-urban, Urban - Small city (<100k), Urban - Large city (>100k)
Core Constituencies: Multi-racial (including white), Adults (aged 35-65), Other
Organization Leadership: BIPOC-led, Queer-led, Women-led, Other
Staff and Volunteer Balance: Volunteer powered - >50% of the programmatic activities are executed by volunteers
Looking ahead, in 2025 and beyond, Common Defense will continue prioritizing ongoing base-building activities, providing members with the training and education necessary to hone their organizing skills, leverage the power of their voice, and participate in our current and future democracy, immigration and climate campaigns.
Founded in 2016, Common Defense is the nation’s largest grassroots organization of US military veterans and the only one that invests in the leadership of its members through training and deployment in campaigns that connect directly to their history of service, including voting rights, climate justice, and anti-militarism.
Budget Size: Large: Previous year budget > $3M
CaPA States Covered: AZ, CA, GA, MT, NE, NY, NC, PA, TX
Geographic Focus: Rural, Suburban / Ex-urban, Urban - Small city (<100k), Urban - Large city (>100k)
Core Constituencies: Multi-racial (including white), Adults (aged 35-65), Other
Organization Leadership: BIPOC-led, Queer-led, Women-led, Other
Staff and Volunteer Balance: Volunteer powered - >50% of the programmatic activities are executed by volunteers
Community Change Action and our grassroots partners will use relational organizing to reach 250,000 Black, Latino, Native, AAPI, immigrant, women, and young voters to support navigating voting systems and mobilize for values-aligned candidates. Relational voter programs are key to engaging hard-to-reach and hard-to-find voters outside the traditional political machine.
Our mission is to build the power and capacity of low-income people, especially low-income people of color, to change the policies and institutions that impact their lives.
Budget Size: Large: Previous year budget > $3M
CaPA States Covered: AZ, GA, MI, NV, NC, OH , CA, NJ, NM, NY, OR, PA, TX, WI
Community Outreach Center, Inc. proposes a program focused in the area of Ramapo, New York to target 2,500 voter registrations forms. Primary targeting women, faith based, youth, and english-2nd language communities. Their program consists of targeted marketing initatives and tableing at community events.
Founded in 1998, the Community Outreach Center is a highly respected 501(c)(3) Community-Based Organization serving the disadvantaged, low-income, ethnic-subculture community residing in the New York metro area. Its mission is to build a stronger community by advancing the health, welfare, and economic status of the target population through the provision of a broad range of social and human services.
CCEF is a statewide organization that works at the intersection of people and policy to advocate for solutions to environmental problems by organizing communities, educating decision-makers, and advocating for policies that protect our environment and communities. We believe that achieving racial, social, and environmental justice are critical to our mission.
Our mission is to protect Colorado's climate, air, land, water, and communities through organizing, advocacy, and education.
Budget Size: Large: Previous year budget > $3M
CaPA States Covered: CO
Geographic Focus: Rural, Suburban / Ex-urban, Urban - Small city (<100k), Urban - Large city (>100k)
Core Constituencies: Other
Organization Leadership: Women-led
Staff and Volunteer Balance: Volunteer boosted - <50% of the programmatic activities are executed by volunteers
Democracy North Carolina focuses on relational organizing, primarily serving BIPOC people, the LGBTQUIA community, low-wealth individuals, and students and young adults. We reach people through community convenings, faith-based organizing, multi-platform education tactics, mobile voter registration sites, and collaborations with grassroots organizations, HBCUs, and community colleges.
To strengthen democratic structures, build power among disenfranchised communities, and inspire confidence in a transformed political process that works for all.
Engaging low-income Black and Southeast Asian women and queer folks in Wisconsin by tying voter registration to upcoming Bodily Autonomy campaign via mailers, tabling, house parties and cultural events, door knocking. Including content targeted at non-English speakers and focusing on same day registration and voting.
Our mission is to achieve social justice through the coupling of direct services with community organizing. Through leadership development, community mobilization, and advancing community control measures, we will bring about social, political, cultural, and economic change, resulting in the end of violence against women, gender-non-conforming folks, as well as youth within our communities.
Priority Issues: Freedom, Inc.’s (FI) Civic Engagement organizers and field team members are focused on advancing our organization’s Bodily Autonomy campaign. Our campaign is comprehensive in that it includes and fights for all of our diverse community members’ right to choose what is best for their own bodies and lives. This campaign will organize community members to address attacks on reproductive healthcare and abortion rights, anti-trans legislation, gender-affirming healthcare, affordable housing, childcare, safe education, and divestment from policing and militarization in order to invest in community centered programs and resources.
In 2025 and beyond, we see our rights to speak out against injustices, and to advocate for our communities come under attack. In the face of state repression, we will mobilize Black and Southeast Asian folx to move past fear and into the streets to challenge this oppressive administration. We will also politicize our base and enlist their help in strengthening existing mutual aid networks and community funded alternatives to government aid.
Engaging low-income Black and Southeast Asian women and queer folks in Wisconsin by tying voter registration to upcoming Bodily Autonomy campaign via mailers, tabling, house parties and cultural events, door knocking. Including content targeted at non-English speakers and focusing on same day registration and voting.
Freedom, Inc. is a Queer organization working to end violence within and against Black and Southeast Asian communities in Madison, WI and surrounding areas. We accomplish this by coupling direct services with grassroots organizing campaigns aimed at the root causes of interpersonal and state violence.
GALEO is involved in increasing civic participation of the Latinx community and developing prominent Latinx leaders throughout Georgia. The GALEO Institute for Leadership builds future leaders in the Latino community. Our Georgia Latino Vote program supports voter registration efforts throughout the state.
GALEO’s mission is to increase civic participation by educating and empowering the Latino community and to develop Latino leaders through strategic leadership programs throughout the state of Georgia
Vision: GALEO strives for a better Georgia where the Latino population is engaged and building community, their contributions are respected, and policy measures reflect their values.
Budget Size: Large: Previous year budget > $3M
CaPA States Covered: GA
Geographic Focus: Rural, Suburban / Ex-urban, Urban - Small city (<100k), Urban - Large city (>100k)
Core Constituencies: Immigrant, Latinx, Puerto Rican
HeadCount is a 501(c)3 organization that drives participation in democracy through music, popular culture and digital media. We work with popular talent to turn their fans into voters, activists and leaders. Our model is to meet young voters where they are, at concerts, festivals, cultural events and online.
Our vision is long-term, lasting change where participation in Democracy is ingrained in youth culture and high voter turnout is the norm, no matter what's on the ballot.
Budget Size: Large: Previous year budget > $3M
CaPA States Covered: CA, CO, CT, GA, IL, IN, MI, MN, NC, NJ, NM, NV, NY, OH, OR, PA, TX, VA, WA, WI
Geographic Focus: Suburban / Ex-urban, Urban - Large city (>100k), Urban - Small city (<100k)
Core Constituencies: Youth and Students (aged 17-35)
Organization Leadership: BIPOC-led, Women-led
Staff and Volunteer Balance: Volunteer powered - >50% of the programmatic activities are executed by volunteers
Lead Contact: Tappan VickerySenior Director of Programming and Strategytappanv@headcount.org
Respect My Vote! educates and mobilizes 18 - 40-year-old BIPOC voters through online, field, and event-based organizing, and advocates on democracy issues, including voting rights, disenfranchisement and discrimination. We also educate returning citizens (people with felony records) on their voting rights and eligibility.
Our mission is to use the power of our cultural expression to empower communities who are first and worst impacted by injustice.
Budget Size: Large: Previous year budget > $3M
CaPA States Covered: GA, NC, PA
Geographic Focus: Suburban / Ex-urban, Urban - Small city (<100k), Urban - Large city (>100k)
Core Constituencies: Women, BIPOC (Black; Indigenous and/or People Of Color), Youth and Students (aged 17-35)
Priority Issues: Hip Hop Caucus engages voters through an intersectional approach that places racial, climate, social and economic injustice at the forefront of our organizing and voter mobilization efforts. Our Respect My Vote! campaign also platforms: , - Policies that support the full and equitable participation of all voters, such as Early Voting advocacy, youth and young adult voter education, and advancing the rights of formerly incarcerated members of our communities, - Elimination of voter suppression, intimidation, and deceptive practices that disproportionately seek to disenfranchise BIPOC communities, - Expanded voting rights and access to the ballot for current and formerly incarcerated persons,
Respect My Vote! educates and mobilizes 18 - 40-year-old BIPOC voters through online, field, and event-based organizing, and advocates on democracy issues, including voting rights, disenfranchisement and discrimination. We also educate returning citizens (people with felony records) on their voting rights and eligibility.
Our mission is to use the power of our cultural expression to empower communities who are first and worst impacted by injustice.
Budget Size: Large: Previous year budget > $3M
CaPA States Covered: GA, NC, PA
Geographic Focus: Suburban / Ex-urban, Urban - Small city (<100k), Urban - Large city (>100k)
Core Constituencies: Women, BIPOC (Black; Indigenous and/or People Of Color), Youth and Students (aged 17-35)
Priority Issues: Hip Hop Caucus engages voters through an intersectional approach that places racial, climate, social and economic injustice at the forefront of our organizing and voter mobilization efforts. Our Respect My Vote! campaign also platforms: , - Policies that support the full and equitable participation of all voters, such as Early Voting advocacy, youth and young adult voter education, and advancing the rights of formerly incarcerated members of our communities, - Elimination of voter suppression, intimidation, and deceptive practices that disproportionately seek to disenfranchise BIPOC communities, - Expanded voting rights and access to the ballot for current and formerly incarcerated persons,
Leaders Igniting Transformation focuses on fostering local leadership, enhancing access and opportunities, and advocating for equity by mobilizing young leaders. Their GOTV efforts involve diverse strategies such as door-to-door canvassing, phone banking, relational text banking, mailer programs, and digital ads.
We work to build homegrown leadership, expand access and opportunity, and promote an equitable society by engaging and organizing the leadership of young people.
Budget Size: Large: Previous year budget > $3M
CaPA States Covered: WI
Geographic Focus: Rural, Urban - Small city (<100k), Urban - Large city (>100k)
Core Constituencies: BIPOC (Black; Indigenous and/or People Of Color), Youth and Students (aged 17-35)
Fostering local leadership, enhancing access and opportunities, and advocating for equity by mobilizing young leaders. Their GOTV efforts involve diverse strategies such as door-to-door canvassing, phone banking, relational text banking, mailer programs, and digital ads.
We work to build homegrown leadership, expand access and opportunity, and promote an equitable society by engaging and organizing the leadership of young people.
Budget Size: Large: Previous year budget > $3M
CaPA States Covered: WI
Geographic Focus: Rural, Urban - Small city (<100k), Urban - Large city (>100k)
Core Constituencies: BIPOC (Black; Indigenous and/or People Of Color), Youth and Students (aged 17-35)
The League, through its massive volunteer network, works to engage, educate, and turn out voters through our VOTE411.org platform, candidate debates and forums, and in-person registration efforts across diverse communities, from students on high school and college campuses, to immigrants at citizenship ceremonies, and everyone in between.
The League of Women Voters is a nonpartisan, grassroots organization working to protect and expand voting rights and ensure everyone is represented in our democracy. We empower voters and defend democracy through advocacy, education, and litigation, at the local, state, and national levels.
Budget Size: Large: Previous year budget > $3M
CaPA States Covered: AK, AZ, CA, CO, CT, GA, IA, IL, IN, ME, MI, MN, MT, NC, NE, NH, NJ, NM, NV, NY, OH, OR, PA, VA, WA, WI, TX, FL
Geographic Focus: Rural, Suburban / Ex-urban, Urban - Small city (<100k), Urban - Large city (>100k)
Core Constituencies: Multi-racial (including white), Women, Youth and Students (aged 17-35)
Organization Leadership: BIPOC-led, Women-led
Staff and Volunteer Balance: Volunteer powered - >50% of the programmatic activities are executed by volunteers
Lead Contact: Kim Lan GroutSenior Director of Advancementklgrout@lwv.org
The League, through its massive volunteer network, works to engage, educate, and turn out voters through our VOTE411.org platform, candidate debates and forums, and in-person registration efforts across diverse communities, from students on high school and college campuses, to immigrants at citizenship ceremonies, and everyone in between.
The League of Women Voters is a nonpartisan, grassroots organization working to protect and expand voting rights and ensure everyone is represented in our democracy. We empower voters and defend democracy through advocacy, education, and litigation, at the local, state, and national levels.
Budget Size: Large: Previous year budget > $3M
CaPA States Covered: AK, AZ, CA, CO, CT, GA, IA, IL, IN, ME, MI, MN, MT, NC, NE, NH, NJ, NM, NV, NY, OH, OR, PA, VA, WA, WI, TX, FL
Geographic Focus: Rural, Suburban / Ex-urban, Urban - Small city (<100k), Urban - Large city (>100k)
Core Constituencies: Multi-racial (including white), Women, Youth and Students (aged 17-35)
Organization Leadership: BIPOC-led, Women-led
Staff and Volunteer Balance: Volunteer powered - >50% of the programmatic activities are executed by volunteers
Lead Contact: Kim Lan GroutSenior Director of Advancementklgrout@lwv.org
LUCHA will be targeting 588,548 voters. The universe includes New American Majority voters (people of color, single women, millennials), swing district independent voters, high turnout + low turnout democratic voters. We aim to reach 10,000 voters through long term relational organizing.
Living United for Change in Arizona (LUCHA) organizes low- and moderate-income and minority families to take action on the issues most important to them and advance the cause of social and economic justice for all. Working in collaboration with its sister organization, ACE, LUCHA incorporates leadership development with grassroots issue-based campaigns, advocacy, and civic engagement to create an Arizona in which every resident has an equal voice in determining the policies and shaping the decision-making bodies that will govern our communal life.
In-person programming with events in high traffic locations and doorknocking, working in multiple counties in New York and Pennsylvania with a goal $15,855 Voter registrations cards. Their constituencies are the immigrant, BIPOC, youth, and working class communities.
Make the Road Action (MRA) builds political power rooted in working-class Latinx communities, promotes policy solutions that improve the lives of all working-class and low-income people, and strengthens the movement for justice through electoral and grassroots organizing to advance progressive political and policy change.
Make the Road Action in Nevada (MRA-NV) will continue to build grassroots political power by engaging working-class and immigrant communities in voter education, mobilization, and issue advocacy. Through year-round organizing, member leadership development, and robust electoral programs, we will ensure our communities influence elections and policy decisions. We will expand our reach in rural areas, strengthen relational organizing, and drive legislative advocacy to protect immigrant rights, economic justice, and democracy in Nevada.
Join Make the Road Action Nevada at the ballot box! In 2024, Nevada holds key electoral sway. We aim to safeguard pivotal state legislature seats, enhance member mobilization, expand rural outreach, and prioritize down-ballot races. Be part of a movement driving transformative change!
Through tailored conversations on local governance, MRA-NV is revolutionizing voter engagement in Nevada, partnering with experienced leaders in key regions such as Clark and Washoe Counties. We set new benchmarks for success and drive transformative change through this strategic approach and a history of exceeding state turnout and engagement averages.
Make the Road Action NY will mobilize its base to make sure that they are heard at the polls during this pivotal election year. We will use proven to work tactics to reach the most voters and ensure that they know the important issues being voted on down the ballot.
Make the Road Action (MRA) is a 501c4 organization that builds political power rooted in working-class Latinx communities, promotes policy solutions that improve the lives of all working-class and low-income people, and strengthens the movement for justice through electoral and grassroots organizing to advance progressive political and policy change. MRA focuses its work on mobilizing our base to vote and become active participants in the civic process.
Priority Issues: MRA NY has prioritized civic engagement work since our founding. A significant portion of our civic engagement work is dedicated to year-round issue identification and campaign development. Our staff conducts outreach in our communities and works to engage members in the political process and in our issue areas such as, immigrant justice, health equity, tenant’s rights, youth empowerment, LGBTQ rights, environmental equity, policing and criminal justice, education, and economic justice. We hold weekly general member meetings to ensure that knowledge is shared across the organization and so committees can be informed on how to best support one another. We also strive to develop community leaders who can become experts on a particular issue, take on key roles in actions/events, and act as liaisons between committees. This allows us to avoid siloing and builds power within our membership. Because we are consistently engaging our base, we are quick to identify and prioritize needs as they arise and respond accordingly.
Join Make the Road Action Nevada at the ballot box! In 2024, Nevada holds key electoral sway. We aim to safeguard pivotal state legislature seats, enhance member mobilization, expand rural outreach, and prioritize down-ballot races. Be part of a movement driving transformative change!
Make the Road Action Nevada (MRA-NV) is member-led and member-focused. We center our work around the needs identified by our base and build the power of Latine and working class communities of color to achieve dignity and justice through organizing, policy innovation, and transformative education. Our vision for Nevada is centered around improving the quality of life for working-class immigrant communities across the state. We do this by informing, empowering, and mobilizing our community to take action on important issues that directly affect their families and loved ones.
Priority Issues: MRANV has prioritized civic engagement work from our inception. A large portion of this work is dedicated to year-round issue identification and engagement. As our team conducts outreach, they work together to engage the community on specific issues including immigrant justice, health equity, tenant’s rights, youth empowerment, reproductive rights, LGBTQ rights, environmental equity, and economic justice, while introducing them to the broader issue areas on which MRANV works. Along with our regular issues committee meetings, our general membership weekly ensures knowledge is shared across committees and identifies ways they can support one another. We also strive to develop leaders who can become experts on a particular issue, take on key roles in actions/events, and act as liaisons between committees. This allows our committees to avoid siloing and ensures our membership grows in numbers, strength, and membership. Because we are continually engaging our base, we are able to identify and prioritize needs as they arise and respond quickly to the needs of our base.
Make the Road NJ engages low income, immigrant and BIPOC voters to build power. Make the Road NJ will continue to engage thousands of voters, including voters of color, new citizen voters and youth voters across the district.
Make the Road Action NY will mobilize its base to make sure that they are heard at the polls during this pivotal election year. We will use proven to work tactics to reach the most voters and ensure that they know the important issues being voted on down the ballot.
Priority Issues: MRA NY has prioritized civic engagement work since our founding. A significant portion of our civic engagement work is dedicated to year-round issue identification and campaign development. Our staff conducts outreach in our communities and works to engage members in the political process and in our issue areas such as, immigrant justice, health equity, tenant’s rights, youth empowerment, LGBTQ rights, environmental equity, policing and criminal justice, education, and economic justice. We hold weekly general member meetings to ensure that knowledge is shared across the organization and so committees can be informed on how to best support one another. We also strive to develop community leaders who can become experts on a particular issue, take on key roles in actions/events, and act as liaisons between committees. This allows us to avoid siloing and builds power within our membership. Because we are consistently engaging our base, we are quick to identify and prioritize needs as they arise and respond accordingly.
Make the Road States proposes a program consisting of in-person programming with events in high traffic locations and potentially doorknocking. They will be working in multiple counties in New York and Pennsylvania with a goal $15,855 Voter registrations cards. Their constituencies are the immigrant, BIPOC, youth, and working class communities.
Make the Road States (MRstates), a 501(c)(3) organization is the national home for the second-generation Make the Road family of organizations that serves to uplift the voices of working-class, immigrants, women, LGBTQIA people, and people of color.
Mi Familia California’s 2024 programs include year-round voter engagement: Turnout voters by knocking on in-language doors, phones/texts; engage and educate eligible voters through our civic engagement workshops and youth program; turnout college students by partnering with universities; Engage Latinos through our social media accountability campaigns.
Mi Familia Vota Education Fund (MFVEF) is a national 501(c)(3) non-profit organization that unites Latino, immigrant, and allied communities to promote social and economic justice through increased civic participation by promoting leadership development, citizenship, issue organizing, voter registration, and voter participation.
Mi Familia Georgia's 2024 initiatives target empowering Latino low-propensity voters and new Americans through the Latino Electorate Engagement Fellowship, focusing on environmental justice, the SYCLAC program for civic engagement among Spanish speakers, a voter registration drive reaching 8,000+ community members, and the #MerecemosMejorGA digital campaign against misinformation.
Mi Familia en Acción’s mission is to build Latino power, through activation of the community and year-round investment in local infrastructure, to advance our priorities.
Budget Size: Large: Previous year budget > $3M
CaPA States Covered: GA
Geographic Focus: Rural, Suburban / Ex-urban, Urban - Small city (<100k), Urban - Large city (>100k)
Core Constituencies: Immigrant, Latinx, Youth and Students (aged 17-35)
Priority Issues: MFVEF Georgia focuses on the following issues when collecting voter registrations: Environmental Justice, Immigration Rights, Voting Rights
Mi Familia North Carolina’s 2024 programs include year-round voter engagement: Turnout voters by knocking on doors; Engage and educate eligible voters through our civic engagement workshops and environmental program; Turnout college students by attending events; Engage Latinos through our social media accountability campaign #MerecemosMejor.
Mi Familia en Acción’s mission is to build Latino power, through activation of the community and year-round investment in local infrastructure, to advance our priorities.
Mi Familia Nevada’s 2024 programs include year-round voter engagement: Turnout voters by knocking on doors; Engage and educate eligible voters through our civic engagement workshops and environmental program; Turnout college students by attending events; Engage Latinos through our social media accountability campaign.
Mi Familia en Acción’s mission is to build Latino power, through activation of the community and year-round investment in local infrastructure, to advance our priorities.
MFVEF California’s 2024 programs include year-round voter engagement: Turnout voters by knocking on in-language doors, phones/texts; engage and educate eligible voters through our civic engagement workshops and youth program; turnout college students by partnering with universities; Engage Latinos through our social media accountability campaigns.
Mi Familia Vota Education Fund (MFVEF) is a national 501(c)(3) non-profit organization that unites Latino, immigrant, and allied communities to promote social and economic justice through increased civic participation by promoting leadership development, citizenship, issue organizing, voter registration, and voter participation.
Mi Familia Vota Georgia's 2024 initiatives target empowering Latino low-propensity voters and new Americans through the Latino Electorate Engagement Fellowship, focusing on environmental justice, the SYCLAC program for civic engagement among Spanish speakers, a voter registration drive reaching 8,000+ community members, and the #MerecemosMejorGA digital campaign against misinformation.
Mi Familia Vota Education Fund (MFVEF) is a national 501(c)(3) non-profit organization that unites Latino, immigrant, and allied communities to promote social and economic justice through increased civic participation by promoting leadership development, citizenship, issue organizing, voter registration, and voter participation.
Budget Size: Large: Previous year budget > $3M
CaPA States Covered: GA
Geographic Focus: Rural, Suburban / Ex-urban, Urban - Small city (<100k), Urban - Large city (>100k)
Core Constituencies: Immigrant, Latinx, Youth and Students (aged 17-35)
Priority Issues: MFVEF Georgia focuses on the following issues when collecting voter registrations: Environmental Justice, Immigration Rights, Voting Rights
Mi Familia Vota North Carolina’s 2024 programs include year-round voter engagement: Turnout voters by knocking on doors; Engage and educate eligible voters through our civic engagement workshops and environmental program; Turnout college students by attending events; Engage Latinos through our social media accountability campaign #MerecemosMejor.
Mi Familia Vota Education Fund (MFVEF) is a national 501(c)(3) non-profit organization that unites Latino, immigrant, and allied communities to promote social and economic justice through increased civic participation by promoting leadership development, citizenship, issue organizing, voter registration, and voter participation.
Budget Size: Large: Previous year budget > $3M
CaPA States Covered: NC
Geographic Focus: Rural, Suburban / Ex-urban, Urban - Small city (<100k), Urban - Large city (>100k)
Core Constituencies: Immigrant, Latinx, Youth and Students (aged 17-35)
Priority Issues: MFVEF North Carolina focuses on the following issues when collecting voter registrations: Immigrant Justice, Economic Justice, Environmental Justice
Mi Familia Vota Nevada’s 2024 programs include year-round voter engagement: Turnout voters by knocking on doors; Engage and educate eligible voters through our civic engagement workshops and environmental program; Turnout college students by attending events; Engage Latinos through our social media accountability campaign.
Mi Familia Vota Education Fund (MFVEF) is a national 501(c)(3) non-profit organization that unites Latino, immigrant, and allied communities to promote social and economic justice through increased civic participation by promoting leadership development, citizenship, issue organizing, voter registration, and voter participation.
MOVE Texas plans to amplify its impact in 2025 through organizing, member-led advocacy, and leadership development, empowering young Texans to engage in the political process. With the 89th Texas Legislative session underway, we are rolling out key initiatives including our "Get Sh*t Done" Agenda, Youth Capitol Takeover, and Anti-Lege Lege Club to mobilize young people to take bold action against restrictive policies on climate, reproductive rights, and democracy. Our evergreen civic engagement efforts will focus
We will operate 25 campus chapters focused on civic engagement and issue advocacy, register 7,000 new voters, roll out an endorsement process, expand access to voting (campus polling locations, countywide polling), launch voting rights, climate, and gender justice issue campaigns to engage young issues-first voters, and conduct leadership development programs to grow youth-led power building capacity. Up until the election, we will follow up with registered voters to ensure that they are informed and prepared to vote.
MOVE Texas is a grassroots, nonpartisan, nonprofit organization dedicated to building the power of young people in underrepresented communities through civic engagement, leadership development, and issue advocacy. Young Texans possess the appetite and the energy to influence the decisions and processes that impact their lives and communities, positioning them to make waves in the Texas political landscape and beyond. We invest in and engage young people to become agents of change who harness their power to hold elected officials accountable and champion progressive policies. Through intentional coaching and support, we empower young people to build a responsive, accountable, and equitable democracy.
MOVE Texas plans to amplify its impact in 2025 through organizing, member-led issue education, and leadership development, empowering young Texans to engage in the democratic process. With the 89th Texas Legislative session underway, we are rolling out our "Get Sh*t Done" Agenda to guide our work around key issues like climate, reproductive rights, and democracy. Our evergreen civic engagement efforts will focus on voter registration and municipal elections, and we will be working to expand
We will operate 25 campus chapters focused on civic engagement and issue advocacy, register 13,000 new voters, expand polling access (campus polling locations, countywide polling), launch voting rights, climate, and gender justice issue campaigns to engage young issues-first voters, and operate leadership development programs to grow capacity for youth-led organizing and power building. Up until the election, we will follow up with registered voters to ensure that they are informed and prepared to vote.
MOVE Texas is a grassroots, nonpartisan, nonprofit organization dedicated to building the power of young people in underrepresented communities through civic engagement, leadership development, and issue education. Young Texans possess the appetite and the energy to make their voices heard in the decisions and processes that impact their lives and communities, positioning them to make waves in Texas and beyond. We invest in and engage young people to become agents of change who harness their power to engage their peers in the democratic process to champion progressive values. Through intentional coaching and support, we empower young people to build a responsive, accountable, and equitable democracy.
Organization focused on enhancing the quality of life for economically disadvantaged families will register voters through face-to-face engagement, tabling, and events.
NCLCVF programs, PowerUp, Power the Vote, and Power Boards & Commissions, operate at the intersection of environment, economics, racial and economic justice. We make it a priority to build civic participation programs that emphasize year-round engagement, leadership development, and a goal of shifting the balance of power to historically disenfranchised communities of color, often the first and worst impacted by environmental injustices, to enact equitable policies that protect the environment and our communities.
NCLCVF believes that voting is the most important thing you can do for the environment, and has registered 120,000 voters since 2014. Our Power the Vote program prioritizes year-round civic engagement, registering and turning out voters in BIPOC communities/schools, engaging through relational organizing, and promoting our Forever Vote pledge.
NCLCV Foundation connects and engages people to protect our natural environment and promote the well-being of our communities. We turn environmental values into NC priorities by engaging people in the democratic process, organizing in communities to connect environmental policies to people’s daily lives, cultivating environmental leaders, and advocating for policies at the state and local level that protect the health and quality of life for all North Carolinians, with an intentional focus on systematically excluded communities of color.
600 canvassers throughout Georgia knocking doors to register BIPOC and young voters.
New Georgia Project (NGP) is to build power with and increase the civic participation of the New Georgia Majority—Black, Latinx, AAPI, and young Georgians—and other historically marginalized communities through nonpartisan voter registration, organizing, and advocacy on the issues important to our communities.
Budget Size: Large: Previous year budget > $3M
CaPA States Covered: GA
Geographic Focus: Rural, Suburban / Ex-urban, Urban - Small city (<100k), Urban - Large city (>100k)
Core Constituencies: Multi-racial (including white), Women, BIPOC (Black; Indigenous and/or People Of Color)
Priority Issues: Cancel Loans for Education and Reparations - C.L.E.A.R - Agenda for Young Georgians (AYG) leads this campaign to mobilize college students and Georgians with student loan debt to demand the full cancelation of all student loan debt. The C.L.E.A.R Campaign believes that the cost of education should not be a barrier to financial well-being and that cancelling all federal student loan debt will increase the wealth and social power of Black and brown communities. Black M.A.M.A.S. - NGP’s Reproductive Justice organizing campaign will be focused this year on mobilizing Georgians around Meaningful Action for Maternal Advocacy and Safety. We Want All the S.M.O.K.E. - NGP’s V.I.B.E. (Voting Initiative and Brother’s Engagement) campaign has a goal of giving Georgia that S.M.O.K.E. this year, meaning we will be Spreading Marijuana Opportunities and Knowledge Everywhere. This campaign’s focus is on Marijuana legalization, decriminalization, and entrepreneurship. My Community, My Hospital - GACares leads this campaign with the goal of opposing hospital closures in locations with no viable treatment options within a 45-minute drive. Nah, We Want 20! - GARaise leads this campaign with the goal of raising the minimum hourly wage – which currently stands at $5.15 – to a livable wage of $20. My Utilities. My Power! - Black + Green Agenda (B+GA) leads this campaign focused on the intersections of racial, environmental, and economic justice. B+GA will also be continuing work around building the Black Farmers Network in 2023. Quality Childcare Pays - Nurture Georgia’s campaign in 2023 is focused on raising pay for care givers throughout the state to provide younger generations with the system they need to thrive while bettering the standard of living for those that work in that system. Stop Tha Squeeze- GA Home will also be embarking on a new campaign in 2023 focused on lifting Georgia voices in the fight against overpriced housing. We have a firm belief that if you build up your community you have a right to stay in it! GA Ignite – In addition to the eight issue organizing campaigns, Georgia Ignite aims to activate a network of grassroots, self-starting organizers and activists in communities across Georgia. The GA Ignite team will work with folks in local communities to provide support, training, guidance, and assistance on how to develop and execute their organizing campaigns focused on the issues that matter to Georgians. Faith in Georgia - In 2024, NGP will be explore the viability of helping develop a multi racial, statewide, faith-based power building organization that is committed to untethering faith from white supremacy and reclaiming the prophetic voice and role of Georgia faith leaders who are committed to the expansion of democracy and liberation of oppressed people.
600 canvassers throughout Georgia knocking doors to register BIPOC and young voters.
New Georgia Project (NGP) is to build power with and increase the civic participation of the New Georgia Majority—Black, Latinx, AAPI, and young Georgians—and other historically marginalized communities through nonpartisan voter registration, organizing, and advocacy on the issues important to our communities.
Budget Size: Large: Previous year budget > $3M
CaPA States Covered: GA
Geographic Focus: Rural, Suburban / Ex-urban, Urban - Small city (<100k), Urban - Large city (>100k)
Core Constituencies: Multi-racial (including white), Women, BIPOC (Black; Indigenous and/or People Of Color)
Priority Issues: Cancel Loans for Education and Reparations - C.L.E.A.R - Agenda for Young Georgians (AYG) leads this campaign to mobilize college students and Georgians with student loan debt to demand the full cancelation of all student loan debt. The C.L.E.A.R Campaign believes that the cost of education should not be a barrier to financial well-being and that cancelling all federal student loan debt will increase the wealth and social power of Black and brown communities. Black M.A.M.A.S. - NGP’s Reproductive Justice organizing campaign will be focused this year on mobilizing Georgians around Meaningful Action for Maternal Advocacy and Safety. We Want All the S.M.O.K.E. - NGP’s V.I.B.E. (Voting Initiative and Brother’s Engagement) campaign has a goal of giving Georgia that S.M.O.K.E. this year, meaning we will be Spreading Marijuana Opportunities and Knowledge Everywhere. This campaign’s focus is on Marijuana legalization, decriminalization, and entrepreneurship. My Community, My Hospital - GACares leads this campaign with the goal of opposing hospital closures in locations with no viable treatment options within a 45-minute drive. Nah, We Want 20! - GARaise leads this campaign with the goal of raising the minimum hourly wage – which currently stands at $5.15 – to a livable wage of $20. My Utilities. My Power! - Black + Green Agenda (B+GA) leads this campaign focused on the intersections of racial, environmental, and economic justice. B+GA will also be continuing work around building the Black Farmers Network in 2023. Quality Childcare Pays - Nurture Georgia’s campaign in 2023 is focused on raising pay for care givers throughout the state to provide younger generations with the system they need to thrive while bettering the standard of living for those that work in that system. Stop Tha Squeeze- GA Home will also be embarking on a new campaign in 2023 focused on lifting Georgia voices in the fight against overpriced housing. We have a firm belief that if you build up your community you have a right to stay in it! GA Ignite – In addition to the eight issue organizing campaigns, Georgia Ignite aims to activate a network of grassroots, self-starting organizers and activists in communities across Georgia. The GA Ignite team will work with folks in local communities to provide support, training, guidance, and assistance on how to develop and execute their organizing campaigns focused on the issues that matter to Georgians. Faith in Georgia - In 2024, NGP will be explore the viability of helping develop a multi racial, statewide, faith-based power building organization that is committed to untethering faith from white supremacy and reclaiming the prophetic voice and role of Georgia faith leaders who are committed to the expansion of democracy and liberation of oppressed people.
We will have a multi-layered voter contact program that includes face-to-face canvassing, phone calls, text messages, and mail pieces tailored to the issues they care about. In addition to these contacts, we will coordinate a robust digital program that will reach people through social media and websites with high traffic among our targeted voters.
New Virginia Majority (NVM) builds power on our path for racial and social justice through year-round community organizing and voter mobilization in communities of color--communities that drive social justice reforms in Virginia. We work to create a powerful multi-issue, multi-racial movement to transform Virginia through large scale civic engagement, issue advocacy, and strategic communications and community organizing.
NextGen is the largest youth mobilization organization in the country. We empower young people ages 18-35 to become civically engaged, in order to build a government representative of the most diverse voting bloc in history. Our holistic program consists of field organizing, distributed, digital, and paid ads.
NextGen Education Fund (NextGen) is one of the nation’s leading youth civic engagement organizations, educating and empowering millions of young people to elevate their voices in our country’s democratic process. We are a multi-issue and multi-racial organization that positions young people to make transformational change and solve the challenges earlier generations have failed to address, including historical failings on climate and racial justice. At NextGen, we are investing in the power of young people. NextGen Education Fund’s mission is to strengthen our democracy through the education, leadership development, and empowerment of young Americans.
Budget Size: Large: Previous year budget > $3M
CaPA States Covered: AZ, MI, NC, NH, NV, PA, VA
Geographic Focus: Rural, Suburban / Ex-urban, Urban - Small city (<100k), Urban - Large city (>100k)
Core Constituencies: Women, BIPOC (Black; Indigenous and/or People Of Color), Youth and Students (aged 17-35)
NextGen Education Fund is a youth civic engagement organization focusing on issues like climate change and racial justice. In 2024, they aim to register and turn out 18-35-year-olds, educate on key issues through high-traffic canvassing, door knocking, distributed organizing, and digital campaigns to strengthen democracy and empower young Americans.
NextGen Education Fund (NextGen) is one of the nation’s leading youth civic engagement organizations, educating and empowering millions of young people to elevate their voices in our country’s democratic process. We are a multi-issue and multi-racial organization that positions young people to make transformational change and solve the challenges earlier generations have failed to address, including historical failings on climate and racial justice. At NextGen, we are investing in the power of young people. NextGen Education Fund’s mission is to strengthen our democracy through the education, leadership development, and empowerment of young Americans.
Budget Size: Large: Previous year budget > $3M
CaPA States Covered: AZ, MI, NC, NH, NV, PA, TX, VA
Priority Issues: We understand that young people are not monoliths in how they view issues or in what they are most passionate about, which is why NextGen conducts comprehensive focus groups and polling. Based on this polling, we know that the specific issues young people care most about include: Climate change, Racial justice, Economic justice, Student debt, Abortion access and reproductive rights, Democracy, and Human Rights. Engaging and educating young people on the issues they care most about in an intersectional way is critical to growing the civic engagement and education of youth. We meet young people where they are at through these issues to further their overall capacity to build change in their communities. NextGen collects voter registrations in a neutral and nonpartisan manner in compliance with Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code. NextGen staff does not advocate for issues or policies while collecting voter registration applications, but does engage with young people on issues of importance to them in other contexts. NextGen was founded on the idea that only the courage and imagination of young people could solve our country’s most pressing issues, from climate change to racial and economic equality. By building infrastructure rooted in issues-education for young people ages 18-35, NextGen helps ensure their consistent civic engagement and leadership. NextGen is one of only a few national organizations dedicated exclusively to educating and engaging young people to vote in order to strengthen our democracy. We understand that young people are not monoliths in how they view issues or in what they are most passionate about, which is why NextGen conducts comprehensive focus groups and polling. This polling is intended to allow for segmented universes and messaging based on factors like geography, gender, race, college/no college and stage of life, which is key to engaging young people effectively. Based on this polling, we know that the specific issues young people care most about include: Climate change Racial justice Economic justice Student debt Abortion access and reproductive rights Democracy Human Rights Engaging and educating young people on the issues they care most about is critical to growing the civic engagement and education of youth. We meet young people where they are at through these issues to further their overall capacity to build change in their communities and participate in our democratic process.
Org focused on enhancing the quality of life for economically disadvantaged families will register voters through face-to-face engagement, tabling, and events.
In 2025, the Ohio Organizing Collaborative will focus on advocating for fully funded early education through the Care Economy Organizing (CEO) Project; supporting public education by organizing parents and communities to promote fair school funding and prevent closures via the All In For Ohio Kids initiative; pursuing criminal justice reform by working to end collateral sanctions that hinder formerly incarcerated individuals from accessing employment/education opportunities through Building Freedom Ohio (BFO); empowering student leaders.
Statewide org that unites student associations, faith organizations, labor unions and policy institutions will register voters through community hotspotting, campus organizing, relational organizing, doors, phones, text and mail.
Formed in 2007, the Ohio Organizing Collaborative (OOC) is a grassroots organization uniting community groups, student associations, and faith organizations with policy institutes and labor unions across Ohio. It is our mission to organize membership bases of everyday Ohioans for racial, social, and economic justice in our state.
Supporting partners to collect voter registrations through site-based canvassing and door-to-door efforts, with follow-ups via doors, phones, and text, primarily in Black, multi-racial, and BIPOC communities.
Our mission is to support and grow the ecosystem of non-profit, non-partisan organizations doing year-round civic engagement with underrepresented communities in order to win progressive governance that will improve people’s lives.
Priority Issues: We do not have a plan to focus on particular issues currently, but if the VR work lines up with other partner priorities it is possible that work would be open to it.
Our c3 partners in Arizona are committed to a powerful Get out the Vote campaign. They aim to knock on over 1 million unique doors, make over 1.2 million phone calls, and send over 700,000 texts to mobilize Latinx, Black, AANHPI, Native American, youth, and women communities.
In the wake of SB 1070, four immigrant rights organizations came together with the goal of registering 12,000 Latino voters. Shortly afterwards, One Arizona was born. More than a decade later, One Arizona is made up of 30 organizations active all over Arizona. We are completely nonpartisan, focused on improving the lives of Arizonans, especially people of color and young people, by building a culture of civic participation.
We will conduct voter registration and peer-to-peer voter programs with at least 300,000 young, low-wage unlikely voters of color in MI, OH and AZ using the issue that young voters and voters of color have named as their top priority: living wages.
One Fair Wage is a national organization led by women of color that is engaging workers, employers and consumers to raise wages and working conditions in the service sector and end all subminimum wages in the United States.
Budget Size: Large: Previous year budget > $3M
CaPA States Covered: AZ, AR, CA, CO, CT, DC, ID, IL, MD, MA, MI, MS, NY, OH, PA, WA
Organized Power In Numbers works at the intersection of worker power and modern digital and data-driven organizing to help our movements reach millions of people, invite them into movement, and level up campaigns that win for workers, their families, and their communities. We utilize online and offline base building and organizing strategies, comprehensive campaigns, strategic litigation and communications, and policy advocacy to win concrete demands that improve the conditions of workers’ lives and promote civic engagement at the local, state, and national levels.
Growing Our Power:
Immigrant Worker Defense: OPIN is working to ensure that labor is positioned to defend their current and potential future immigrant members, and to strengthen the overall infrastructure in our region to protect and defend all immigrants.
Take Back Our Homes: We push for housing justice in Phoenix and across the state of Arizona through base building, policy advocacy, and building an eviction defense network.
Mass Engagement and Absorption: We help seed and grow key organizing efforts led by labor and community partners through list building and 1:1 digital outreach.
Relational organizing and trusted messengers are the keys to meeting the moment and building a larger, better-informed, and more engaged universe of voters.
In 2025, we will use our unique ability to communicate with challenging communities of voters and our existing network of 3 million people, launching a year-round relational organizing program to maintain engagement, build trust, and drive action leading up to the next election.
Organizing Empower Project has launched a multi-state paid relational program to build the largest incentivized relational organizing program in history in 10 high-profile states to reach voters not typically reachable by other means and leverage the power of relational organizing to maximize impact.
Empower Project is a communications, organizing, and technology non-profit that is a leader in relational organizing - leveraging the power of trusted messengers by having community members build lists of friends and family to communicate and influence behavior, promote informed decision-making, and increase meaningful civic engagement.
We recruit and manage the trusted messengers, build the technology, coordinate with partner organizations, organize trainings, and direct the strategy that allows this sophisticated approach to communications to happen.
Budget Size: Large: Previous year budget > $3M
CaPA States Covered: AZ, NV, MT, WI, MI, MN, OH, PA, NC, GA, NY
Relational organizing and trusted messengers are the keys to meeting the moment and building a larger, better-informed, and more engaged universe of voters.
In 2025, we will use our unique ability to communicate with challenging communities of voters and our existing network of 3 million people, launching a year-round relational organizing program to maintain engagement, build trust, and drive action leading up to the next election.
Organizing Empowerment Fund is offering training and technology support for organizations that are using relational organizing, especially in underrepresented communities like communities of color, youth, immigrants, and rural areas.
Empower Project is a communications, organizing, and technology non-profit that is a leader in relational organizing - leveraging the power of trusted messengers by having community members build lists of friends and family to communicate and influence behavior, promote informed decision-making, and increase meaningful civic engagement.
We recruit and manage the trusted messengers, build the technology, coordinate with partner organizations, organize trainings, and direct the strategy that allows this sophisticated approach to communications to happen.
Budget Size: Large: Previous year budget > $3M
CaPA States Covered: AZ, GA, MI, MN, MT, NE, NV, NC, PA, WI
Black-led organization registering voters in high traffic areas (e.g. libraries, shopping centers, and community colleges), tabling at community events and partner with churches and schools to hold voter registration drives in three largest AZ counties.
Our Voice, Our Vote - Arizona is a member-led organization, committed to advocating for sustainable progressive public policies that address the most pressing issues in our communities. We build power by mobilizing voters, training the next generation of leaders, electing champions into office, and holding elected officials accountable. We work to empower our communities by putting people first to ensure all voices are heard.
Our mission is to build a sustained progressive voting bloc of Latinxs in Arizona, California, Florida, Georgia, Texas, and Washington. We do this by leading an integrated voter engagement program where all aspects of voter engagement, issue-based campaigns, leadership development, voting reform and protection, and narrative change form a continuous cycle of political consciousness.
Poder Latinx is a civic and social justice organization. Our vision is to build sustained civic engagement across the Latinx community, to become decision-makers by participating in our country’s democracy. We do this by running a non-partisan voter engagement program, issue-based campaigns, leadership development, voting reform and protection initiatives, and narrative change work in Arizona, California, Georgia, Florida, Texas, and Washington State. Through our work, we empower and equip the Latinx community to become agents of change now. With operations across six states and plans to expand into North Carolina, our mission is to cultivate sustained civic engagement, ensuring the Latinx community's voice is heard in every election.
Poder Latinx is strategically positioned to empower the Latinx community, fostering a resilient progressive voting bloc through our Integrated Voter Engagement (IVE) framework. This model is grounded in six pillars: recruiting community members, fostering professional and leadership growth, executing comprehensive voter engagement throughout the electoral cycle, refining Latinx voter databases, achieving issue-based victories, and pioneering narrative and cultural shifts.
Poder Latinx targets 57,000 new and low-propensity Latinx voters through a canvassing program including door knocks, calls, and texts. Our leadership development program focuses on cultivating 25 new Latina leaders and our community organizing aims to expand our base by 5,200 members.
Poder Latinx is a civic and social justice organization. Our vision is to build political power for the Latinx community to become decision-makers in our country’s democracy and win on economic, immigrant, and environmental issues. Our mission is to build a sustained voting bloc of Latinxs in Arizona, California, Florida, Georgia, Texas, and Washington. We do this by leading an integrated voter engagement program where all aspects of voter engagement, issue-based campaigns, leadership development, voting reform and protection, and narrative change form a continuous cycle of political consciousness. Through our work, we empower and equip the Latinx community to become agents of change now.
Power to the polls knocked on over
675,000 doors, engaging in nearly 94,000 conversations with voters. We deployed over 300 community organizers, and our digital, radio, and streaming advertisements were
seen over 59,000,000 times.
Thanks in part to these efforts, turnout in Milwaukee actually increased in 2024 vs 2020,
and Milwaukee was the #1 city in the United States for voter turnout percentage.
Power to the Polls was created to fundamentally change the way we approach organizing in BIPOC communities. We are doing that in 3 key ways:
1. Year Round Organizing & Communication Infrastructure
2. Recruiting Organizers With Deep Roots in the Community
3. Using The Latest Tools, Technology, & Targeting - including digital, social media, influencers, radio, and relational organizing.
Power to the Polls is a Black-led 501c4 and 527 organization created by civil rights leaders, faith leaders, labor unions, and activists across Wisconsin. Our goal is to fundamentally change the way we organize and mobilize Black, Brown, and working-class communities in Wisconsin, remove barriers to the ballot box, and give
power back to people who are all too often left behind.
Budget Size: Large: Previous year budget > $3M
CaPA States Covered: WI
Sub-State CaPA Priority Geographies Engaged: Milwaukee, Green Bay, Racine, Kenosha, Sheboygan, Appleton.
Geographic Focus: Urban - Small city (<100k), Urban - Large city (>100k)
ProGeorgia is a statewide civic engagement collaborative with 61 of the state’s leading organizations in their respective fields. ProGeorgia runs an online and in-person voter registration campaign throughout Georgia including quality control of registrations and follow up calls to registrants. Targeting immigrants, young voters, LGBTQ voters, justice-impacted citizens, voters with disabilities and rural voters.
ProGeorgia is the state’s progressive civic engagement table. We are a diverse collaborative that champions an equitable and inclusive democracy, for and with traditionally underrepresented communities. Our vision is to cultivate people of color, immigrants, women, young people and low- income communities in Georgia into a powerful, unified electorate—the New American Majority (NAM).
Budget Size: Large: Previous year budget > $3M
CaPA States Covered: GA
Geographic Focus: Rural, Suburban / Ex-urban, Urban - Large city (>100k)
Core Constituencies: BIPOC (Black; Indigenous and/or People Of Color), Latinx, MASA (Muslim; Arab; South Asian)
Priority Issues: ProGeorgia has prioritized six groups of marginalized voters: immigrants, young voters, LGBTQ voters, justice-impacted citizens, voters with disabilities and rural voters. These groups represent critical populations within our universe of people of color in Georgia and face the greatest hurdles in voting. They face the greatest hurdles in voter, yet they are also the faces and voices powering the issues that ProGeorgia partners are advancing such as utilities justice, gender-affirming care, sentencing reform, and access to Medicaid.
POW is leading the outdoor movement for climate action, through training, advocacy and education powered by the world’s most inspirational athletes, artists, scientists and brands. We advocate for transformative policy solutions to tackle the climate crisis head-on. Leading with our Alliance members, we are committed to building the power of the Outdoor State to protect public lands and drive the clean energy transition at the local, state and national levels. Our vision for a future with clean air, clean water and a healthy planet can only be achieved when all communities speak up for the places and experiences we love.
In 2025, we are launching a new grassroots program that will empower community organizing for climate in key geographies across the U.S., and we are creating new trainings and educational resources to inform and inspire our entire community to engage with our campaigns to protect public lands and accelerate decarbonization in the U.S. We will continue to train, elevate and expand our superpower Alliances whose stories reach broad audiences and inspire more individuals to see themselves as climate champions.
Budget Size: Large: Previous year budget > $3M
CaPA States Covered: AK, AZ, CO, ME, MT, MV, NH, NM, OR, UT, WA, WY
Core Constituencies: We do not target any specific demographics and/or it is difficult to say who we may reach
Organization Leadership: Women-led
Staff and Volunteer Balance: Staff powered - Little to no volunteers involved in executing programs, Volunteer boosted - <50% of the programmatic activities are executed by volunteers
Citizen Action of New York is a statewide multi-issue organization organized in seven regions. We connect grassroots power to electoral power holding representatives accountable by engaging BIPOC communities through direct voter outreach like door to door, phone, and deep canvassing with the express purpose of addressing economic and racial inequalities.
To achieve our vision, we fight for social, racial, economic and environmental justice. We are battling against the forces of capitalism and racism that show themselves through inequality and bigotry, and work together to oppress most people. Greed, racism, patriarchy and other systems of oppression permeate the fabric of our lives - through economics, education, housing, technological advancements, health care, the environment, and our criminal legal system.
Priority Issues: Our focus with voters will be on building a just economy. We will focus on childcare, healthcare, climate jobs, and housing issues. We will also focus on fair taxation with an emphasis on getting rich people to pay what they owe.
Rise's nonpartisan get-out-the-vote program, centered on students being trusted messengers, unleashes the youth wave by mobilizing paid student organizers for voter registration through campus outreach and tabling, relational organizing and, canvassing. Rise leverages community power and relationships to engage peers civically.
Rise is a student- and youth-led nonprofit working to make higher education free and help all young people participate in democracy.
Rise's nonpartisan get-out-the-vote program, centered on students being trusted messengers, unleashes the youth wave by mobilizing paid student organizers for voter registration, campus canvassing, and GOTV outreach targeting 18-29 year olds. Rise leverages community power and relationships to engage peers civically.
Rise is a student- and youth-led nonprofit working to make higher education free and help all young people participate in democracy.
Budget Size: Large: Previous year budget > $3M
CaPA States Covered: NC, AZ, PA, WI, NV, GA
Geographic Focus: Rural, Suburban / Ex-urban, Urban - Small city (<100k), Urban - Large city (>100k), Other
Core Constituencies: BIPOC (Black; Indigenous and/or People Of Color), Youth and Students (aged 17-35), LGBTQ+
SURJ organizes white voters to block white supremacy; build progressive power; and grow our base to millions taking anti-racist action. We target rural, poor, and working-class people using a shared interest approach through canvassing, phone banking, text, and educational campaigns that pave a pathway to engagement for white voters.
Showing up for Racial Justice (SURJ) unites millions of white people, especially those who are rural, poor, and working-class, to organize toward a multiracial movement for economic, racial, and disability justice across the nation.
Budget Size: Large: Previous year budget > $3M
CaPA States Covered: AZ, GA, MI, MN, NC, NV, NY, OH, PA, WI
Priority Issues: SURJ knows that talking about the relevant issues directly impacting people’s lives is the way to move and motivate voters. We largely prioritize organizing around economic issues such as housing, healthcare, education, and abortion access. We use the race/class narrative approach, which names the issues that the right tries to use to divide us, to inoculate voters from the racist messaging of the right and we have found great success in this approach. ,
SURJ organizes white voters to block white supremacy; build progressive power; and grow our base to millions taking anti-racist action. We target rural, poor, and working-class people using a shared interest approach through canvassing, phone banking, text, and educational campaigns that pave a pathway to engagement for white voters.
Showing up for Racial Justice (SURJ) unites millions of white people, especially those who are rural, poor, and working-class, to organize toward a multiracial movement for economic, racial, and disability justice across the nation.
Budget Size: Large: Previous year budget > $3M
CaPA States Covered: AZ, GA, MI, MN, NC, NV, NY, OH, PA, WI
Priority Issues: SURJ knows that talking about the relevant issues directly impacting people’s lives is the way to move and motivate voters. We largely prioritize organizing around economic issues such as housing, healthcare, education, and abortion access. We use the race/class narrative approach, which names the issues that the right tries to use to divide us, to inoculate voters from the racist messaging of the right and we have found great success in this approach. ,
Nevada progressive c3 civic engagement table coordinates and supports partner organizations' voter registration programs targeting BIPOC, youth, and historically marginalized communities. Canvassers placed at high traffic locations, citizenship naturalization ceremonies, high schools, the parole office, and community events.
Silver State Voices (SSV, a fiscally sponsored project of NEO Philanthropy, Inc.) was founded in 2012 as a civic engagement coordination hub amongst progressive 501c3 organizations in Nevada. It is our mission to create a more robust democracy by centering our work with historically underrepresented and marginalized communities because we know that when we uplift the silenced and marginalized, we uplift the entire community. SSV develops infrastructure, fosters collaboration among diverse entities, and employs new tools and technology.
Sister District Advocacy Network (SDAN) furthers the common good and general welfare of the community through programs designed to achieve the following goals: educating Americans about the role of state legislatures and the potential for state legislative policy to impact the lives of individuals and communities, increasing public trust in state legislatures, promoting greater representativeness of state legislators, and building opportunities for community-centered civic engagement. By increasing trust, representativeness, and civic engagement, SDAN will improve the quality of public policy passed by state legislatures and the trust in state government, to the benefit of all Americans.
Our narrative change and storytelling program creates, measures, and disseminates compelling content and messages about the power and promise of state policy. Our research program investigates, measures and reports on crucial trends at the state legislative level, including the composition and reflectiveness of state legislatures, voter participation in state elections, and state legislative electoral outcomes over time. Our State Bridges program will raise funds for 501(C)(3) organizations running year round nonpartisan organizing programs in their local communities.
Supports Democrats running for competitive state legislative seats, where precision investments can close narrow margins and win entire chambers. We “sister” our local volunteers with endorsed candidates, bringing capacity for phonebanking, fundraising, and more. We complement this with campaign services, rooted in research and tailored to the district.
Sister District builds enduring progressive power in state legislatures. We do this by supporting candidates, mobilizing volunteers, empowering lawmakers, and educating voters.
Budget Size: Large: Previous year budget > $3M
CaPA States Covered: AZ, MI, MN, NV, NH, NC, PA, VA, WI
In three communities, we will resource and train canvass leads to run targeted canvasses in our communities focusing on queer and trans Black and brown people. Through this door-to-door and relational contact, canvass leads will invite folk to town halls to discuss critical issues impacting their lives, including the solutions they envision.
SONG is a home for LGBTQ liberation across all lines of race, class, abilities, age, culture, gender, and sexuality in the South. We build, sustain, and connect a southern regional base of LGBTQ people in order to transform the region through strategic projects and campaigns developed in response to the current conditions in our communities. SONG builds this movement through leadership development, intersectional analysis, and organizing.
Priority Issues: Queer and trans liberation, housing and land rights, fighting criminalization and militarization, democracy and governance, feminism and bodily autonomy, racial and economic justice, immigration and climate justice,
Southern Vision Alliance (SVA) is a justice centered values-based “grassroots intermediary” organized to provide incubation, infrastructure, capacity building, coaching, and technical assistance to frontline organizing projects, leadership programs, and collaborations led by directly-impacted communities in the US South. We are an anchor for frontline groups and leaders to disrupt and transform power for collective liberation.
SVA supports groups, projects and campaigns working for environmental justice, anti-racism, women’s rights, youth empowerment, LGBTQ rights, worker’s rights, civil rights and disability rights that address social change through community organizing.
Southern Vision Alliance provides fiscal-sponsorship to groups, projects, and campaigns that have a long-term vision for equity social justice and have alignment around core values and principles.
Movements Labs is fiscally sponsored by Southern Vision Alliance. Movement Labs uses technology and experimentation to stop fascism and build power for underserved communities and people.
Budget Size: Large: Previous year budget > $3M
CaPA States Covered: AK, AZ, AR, CA, CO, CT, GA, IL, IN, IA, ME, MD, MI, MN, MT, NE, NV, NH, NJ, NM, NY, NC, OH, OR, PA, SC, VA, WI
Geographic Focus: Rural / Suburban / Small city (<100k), Urban - Large city or suburb of large city (>100k)
Core Constituencies: Black, LGBTQ+, People with disabilities
Organization Leadership: BIPOC-led, Queer-led
Staff and Volunteer Balance: Volunteer boosted - <50% of the programmatic activities are executed by volunteers
With three decades of organizing experience, TFN has an established track record of effectively engaging, registering and turning out BIPOC youth (18-29). Through a down-ballot strategy and consistent engagement, we are harnessing the power of Texas’ rapidly-growing populations of youth and people of color to transform our state.
Texas Freedom Network is a statewide grassroots organization that is building an informed and effective movement working toward equality and social justice.
Statewide member-led coalition of immigrant and refugee organizations will provide community-based groups with funding, training and technical support to register immigrant and historically disenfranchised women and families.
The New York Immigration Coalition (NYIC), a state-wide, member-led coalition of immigrant and refugee organizations, works to transform the lives of all New Yorkers by strengthening and building our members' power, organizing and educating our communities and the public, and using our collective voice to advocate for opportunity and justice.
Geographic Focus: Rural, Suburban / Ex-urban, Urban - Small city (<100k), Urban - Large city (>100k)
Core Constituencies: Immigrant, Refugee
Organization Leadership: BIPOC-led
Staff and Volunteer Balance: Staff powered - Little to no volunteers involved in executing programs
Lead Contact: Emily KniesSenior Director of Developmenteknies@nyic.org
Priority Issues: In our voter registration efforts, our primary focus revolves around the needs and concerns of the immigrant community. We address the specific challenges and circumstances faced by immigrants, working to engage them in the voting process. As studies continue to show, there remains an ongoing underrepresentation of women, Black, Indigenous, people of color, and New American/naturalized immigrants in both electoral processes and decision-making institutions. To address this civic engagement and representation gap, the NYIC launched its voter engagement program to reimagine civic engagement through lenses of long term capacity building. The program provides community-based organizations with funding, training, technical support, and strategic partnership to effectively engage, educate, and activate immigrant and historically disenfranchised women and families in civic matters. By leveraging established voter and civic engagement tactics, we adopt a holistic approach to reshape the electorate and political influence. While maintaining an essential role in community engagement, we recognize the importance of addressing specific issues and obstacles inherent in working with our communities. Language Barriers For non-english speaking voters, it is essential to ensure ballot and voter registration materials are translated accurately and reflect the true intended meaning of the text. The NYIC and its partners are committed to delivering in-language livestreams, digital toolkits, and virtual workshops to assist with absentee ballot applications, communicating these crucial changes in at least seven different languages. Aligning with our City and State priorities, we actively support legislation aimed at expanding language access, particularly at the polls. The NYIC sits on the New York City Civic Engagement Commission’s Language Access and Participatory Budgeting Advisory Board and our Executive Director is a Commissioner of the Civic Engagement Commission. Unfamiliarity or Distrust in the Process The voting process can often appear complex and corrupt to immigrant voters due to unfamiliarity or distrust in the systems that have often not supported their interests or needs. It is essential that our efforts focus on empowering communities through education and fostering trust with our partner organizations who are working on the ground with our communities. The NYIC leverages its extensive statewide network to build a foundation of trusted messengers to bring immigrants and communities of color into the electoral process. Our partnerships enable a coordinated effort, amplification of messaging, and opportunities for capacity building within the vital network of immigrant-serving organizations across the state. By partnering closely with our base of members, which include grassroots and nonprofit community organizations, religious and academic institutions, labor unions, and legal and socioeconomic justice organizations, the NYIC integrates extensive people power and diverse grassroots connections into our National Voter Registration Day programs.
UNITE HERE Action Fund will promote and increase the electoral participation of low propensity voters – primarily working class and people of color – in Virginia and New Jersey by having UNITE HERE union members canvass them to identify issues and key challenges facing them, draw out what messages are most motivating, and educate them on how to vote.
The hospitality workers union, UNITE HERE Action Fund, is launching an ambitious field program in 2024 in Nevada, Arizona, Pennsylvania, and Ohio. UNITE HERE operates the nation’s largest labor-led canvassing program, with canvassers who are union members—workers talking to working-class voters about their fight to protect their livelihoods and their country.
The purpose of the UNITE HERE Action Fund is to assist hospitality workers, other working people and their families to achieve economic, social, and racial justice through education and advocacy, leadership development, and full participation in civic life. UNITE HERE Action Fund and Workers Vote are closely aligned with UNITE HERE, a hospitality workers union.
UFR's civic engagement program integrates online/offline organizing to boost voter turnout from a low-wage, majority women and BIPOC voting bloc of 2 million people across urban, rural, and suburban geographies. We move our base through deep relationship building into action, and leverage persuasion messaging to turn out low-propensity voters.
United for Respect envisions a world where all workers have the power, the time, and the money to lead full, free, empowered lives, and where they power a multiracial economic and political democracy that benefits all. It’s our mission to build an economy where corporations respect working people and support a democracy that allows americans to live and work in dignity.
Priority Issues: United for Respect (UFR), a national grassroots organization, is building a movement rooted in the innovation, power, and leadership of working people in retail, particularly women and BlPOC people. Spread across urban, rural, and suburban areas, retail workplaces employ 16 million people. Organizing and activating this multiracial, multi-generational workforce is critical to transforming workplaces, our economy, and democracy as our communities face increased polarization, the impact of a devastating global health pandemic, and economic recession. , , , UFR is uniquely positioned to reach, agitate, and mobilize this critical low wage worker base of dropoff voters, moving them to take action in their workplace to fight for better wages, access to healthcare and paid leave, safe and healthy working conditions, and ultimately a voice in workplace solutions and their communities. This key constituency’s fight for workplace democracy is the first step to a pathway in civic engagement and participation where they become trusted messengers and influencers among their peers, local communities, and elected officials. Their personal stories and testimony shape the narrative around public policy and legislation, delineating the bright line for politicians to choose between big corporations driving economic and democratic inequalities or working people. Combined, people working in retail low-wage jobs could transform our democracy by using the power of their 16,000,000 voices to decide elections in their local communities, statewide, and across the country. Our education and persuasion work focuses our RESPECT agenda that includes family sustaining wages, safe workplaces, and communities where working families can thrive. Our RESPECT agenda includes: , , , - Right to Organize, including expanding workers' rights to organize in their workplace, fight back against obstacles to organizing, especially retaliation in the workplace. , - Essential worker voice in decisions that impact their lives that increases worker power in the workplace and the ability to hold employers accountable., - Safe workplaces and communities, and more protection for worker people from injury and violence in the workplace., - Pay living wages, severance pay, and good work hours that improve economic security for workers through increased and reliable pay when working and after layoffs., - End invasive surveillance and harmful tech/automation that disrupt the trend of technological monitoring in the workplace and of our bodies. , - Comprehensive health benefits and paid family & medical leave. , - Tougher rules to protect workers from corporate greed that increase regulation to prevent corporations from exploiting financial rules that allow them to pursue profits at the expense of working people.
Vet Voice Foundation’s direct mail program, targeting approximately 7.1 million households in states with high veteran and military family populations, will increase voter turnout among veteran and military family voters. Additionally, we will layer our mail program with veteran-centric targeted digital ads and rural radio ads in key markets.
Since 2009, the mission of Vet Voice Foundation has been to empower veterans and military families to have a voice in our democracy by providing them with the support, training, and tools to shape policy and impact outcomes in their communities.
Budget Size: Large: Previous year budget > $3M
CaPA States Covered: AL, AK, AZ, AR, CA, CO, CT, DE, DC, FL, GA, HI, ID, IL, IN, IA, KS, KY, LA, ME, MD, MA, MI, MN, MS, MO, MT, NE, NV, NH, NJ, NM, NY, NC, ND, OH, OK, OR, PA, RI, SC, SD, TN, TX, UT, VT, VA, WA, WV, WI, WY
Geographic Focus: Rural, Suburban / Ex-urban, Urban - Small city (<100k)
Core Constituencies: Other
Organization Leadership: Queer-led, Women-led, Other
Staff and Volunteer Balance: Volunteer boosted - <50% of the programmatic activities are executed by volunteers
Lead Contact: Janessa GoldbeckCEO, Vet Voice Foundationjanessa@vvfnd.org
Priority Issues: America’s 28 million veterans and military family members are often overlooked in voter turnout efforts, despite the fact that they are a key constituency, particularly in non-urban areas around the country. While some may stereotype veterans as white, male, and conservative, the reality is that veterans represent the diversity of America. , , Over the past 30 years, racial and ethnic minorities have entered the military in ever-increasing numbers. Women, Black, AAPI, and Latino veterans are the fastest-growing demographics in the veteran community. Currently minorities make up 27% of living veterans and by 2040, they are projected to make up 35.7%. These changing demographics provide an exciting opportunity to bring new voices to the forefront of our democracy. , , In the 2020 Presidential election, there was a notable division among veterans based on age, race, and gender. Data from the 2020 Cooperative Congressional Election Study has emphasized the growing influence of younger veterans with diverse political views, reflecting broader societal changes in political alignments, demographics, and issues of concern., , Vet Voice Foundation’s proprietary Veteran & Military Family Voter File is the first in the nation to use a combination of commercial data, modeling, digital advertising, direct mail, and volunteer-driven outreach to identify veterans and military families and mobilize them to vote.
Washington Conservation Action is leading strategic digital campaigns, building power in
local communities through place-based organizers, and fostering coalitions with partner
organizations to reach 500,000 people across the state with election information. These
efforts strive to reduce barriers and grow participation among Native and Latino voters
in Central and Southwest Washington.
Washington Conservation Action Education Fund’s mission is to develop, advocate, and defend policies that ensure environmental progress and justice by centering and amplifying the voices of the most impacted communities.
Priority Issues: Our organizing and voter engagement is both nonpartisan and issue specific, depending, on the campaign and the geography. When we do engage in issue-specific organizing,, our priority issues include environmental justice, climate change, and access to, democracy.
Down Home is all about building power for working-class communities in North Carolina. We focus on deep organizing, real conversations, and grassroots action to create lasting change. By centering rural and small-town voices, we fight for economic justice, racial equity, and policies that actually support everyday people. Whether it's elections, policy advocacy, or movement-building, our goal is to make sure all North Carolinians - no matter their background - have a real say in shaping their future.
In 2025, we're focused on deepening our base, expanding our reach, and strengthening our foundation. Through the Year of the Member Project, we're investing in our people - developing leaders, building ownership, and making sure members drive our work. The Beyond the Choir Project will bring in new voices, connecting with those who share our values but haven't engaged yet. And to sustain it all, we're strengthening our internal systems - ensuring financial stability, better development tracking, and real accountability. With clear goals, strong support, and the right systems in place, we're building lasting power for working-class communities across North Carolina.
Down Home will engage the multiracial working class over an18-county area larger than the state of New Jersey via an integrated voter contact program including more than 500,000 door attempts. Our program is best-in-class and covers the lowest density, highest opportunity rural turf home to 20% of the state’s population.
Down Home North Carolina (DHNC) is a project to build a multiracial statewide organization of rural and small town communities that advocate for economic, gender, and racial justice. We will move North Carolina toward the values of dignity, safety, and inclusion through leadership development, strategic campaigning, multiracial movement building, and civic engagement to advance real reforms for rural communities.
We use a wide variety of tools and competencies to reach and engage working class people of all races, including texting, phonebanking, door-to-door canvassing, digital ads, mass mail, physical postcards, radio ads, cultural organizing, and strategic partnerships across the state of Georgia.
The Working Families Party is building and sustaining the movement, leadership, and infrastructure to achieve governing power by and for working class people of all races. With every investment, we seek not only to advance our candidates and policies in the near term, but to build toward governing power for the long term.
Budget Size: Large: Previous year budget > $3M
CaPA States Covered: GA
Geographic Focus: Rural, Suburban / Ex-urban, Urban - Small city (<100k), Urban - Large city (>100k)
Core Constituencies: Multi-racial (including white), BIPOC (Black; Indigenous and/or People Of Color)
Priority Issues: The Working Families Party is building and sustaining the movement, leadership, and infrastructure to achieve governing power by and for working class people of all races. With every investment, we seek not only to advance our candidates and policies in the near term, but to build toward governing power for the long term. In Georgia, our focus over the past few years has been on Criminal Justice (through and beyond our work with the Stop Cop City coalition) and on protecting democracy and voting rights in the state.
We use a wide variety of tools and competencies to reach and engage working class people of all races, including texting, phonebanking, door-to-door canvassing, digital ads, mass mail, physical postcards, radio ads, cultural organizing, and strategic partnerships across the state of Georgia.
The Working Families Party is building and sustaining the movement, leadership, and infrastructure to achieve governing power by and for working class people of all races. With every investment, we seek not only to advance our candidates and policies in the near term, but to build toward governing power for the long term.
Budget Size: Large: Previous year budget > $3M
CaPA States Covered: GA
Geographic Focus: Rural, Suburban / Ex-urban, Urban - Small city (<100k), Urban - Large city (>100k)
Core Constituencies: Multi-racial (including white), BIPOC (Black; Indigenous and/or People Of Color)
Priority Issues: The Working Families Party is building and sustaining the movement, leadership, and infrastructure to achieve governing power by and for working class people of all races. With every investment, we seek not only to advance our candidates and policies in the near term, but to build toward governing power for the long term. In Georgia, our focus over the past few years has been on Criminal Justice (through and beyond our work with the Stop Cop City coalition) and on protecting democracy and voting rights in the state.