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.
Aliento will develop content to strengthen connections between school districts, families, and students. For example, Aliento organized large-scale mobilization efforts at Arizona State University, bringing 1,000 students in solidarity with DREAMers facing targeted opposition.
Advocacy efforts focus on protecting legal and educational rights, including Plyler v. Doe and Proposition 308, which grants in-state tuition to DREAMers.
Aliento will continue to implement Know Your Rights (KYR) trainings, college readiness workshops, and arts and healing workshops.
Aliento targets young people (18-35), Latinxs, and immigrant supporters through phone banking, canvassing, relational organizing, and social media and digital ads. Through storytelling, Aliento educates on the importance of voting, candidate knowledge, and stances on immigration issues. Aliento incorporates personal narratives and economic data to engage low-propensity and disenfranchised voters.
Aliento serves undocumented, DACA, and mixed immigration status families to transform trauma into hope and action. We are youth-led and directly impacted people and allies who are invested in the well-being, emotional healing, and leadership development of those impacted by the inequities of lacking an immigration status.
Budget Size: Medium: Previous year budget $1M - $3M
The Alliance for Gun Responsibility works to save lives and eliminate the harms caused by gun violence in every community through advocacy, education, and partnerships.
Budget Size: Micro: Previous year budget < $20,000
The Alliance for Gun Responsibility works to save lives and eliminate the harms caused by gun violence in every community through advocacy, education, and partnerships.
Budget Size: Micro: Previous year budget < $20,000
WIth our voter registration program, we targeted campuses, Asian districts, and east valley areas with high foot traffic. In 2024, we partnered with Free Our Vote and AZ Justice Protect in a mailer program to get newly eligible people to register to vote. We are proud to contribute to expanding a voter block where people feel empowered by their votes.
Number of Voters Registered: 2,182
Number of Free Our Vote Mailers Sent: 42,779
Increasing Asian American Native Hawaiin and Pacific Islander representation through in-person canvassing (and sub-granting to partner organizations for canvassing programs), youth fellowships, volunteer-led relational organizing, digital ads, ethnic media, and text and phone banking.
Arizona Asian American Native Hawaiian and Pacific Islander (AANHPI) for Equity (AZ AANHPI for Equity) is a state-wide Asian American, Native Hawaiian, and Pacific Islander (AANHPI) organization striving for equity and justice by building power through community directed organizing, increasing civic engagement, and empowering young leaders.
Budget Size: Medium: Previous year budget $1M - $3M
Organization that mobilizes undocumented youth and adults, students and LGBTQ individuals will register voters in Maricopa, Pima, Yuma and Santa Cruz counties.
ACE is a 501 (c)3 member-led social justice organization that develops and mobilizes undocumented working youth and adults, students, and LGBTQ individuals to strategically take ownership and responsibility to advance economic, social, and racial justice. By building power through leadership development, citizenship, civic engagement, advocacy and education, we are creating a more inclusive and just standard of equality in the state of Arizona. Income equality, protection of public education, immigrant rights, and health care are just a few of ACE’s priorities in creating a better Arizona for all.
Budget Size: Medium: Previous year budget $1M - $3M
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.
In 2025, our API community faces challenges at local, state, and federal levels. We will focus on member recruitment, research, education, leadership development, and federal defense. Our efforts include community organizing, voter engagement, and coalition work, especially against anti-immigrant sentiment. We'll create an Asian American Environmental Justice Agenda and continue developing leaders through the SEED Fellowship and Unity Grants. To strengthen federal defense, we'll hire a Statewide Community Defense Organizer and leverage our Power Caucus.
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.
API PA is Pennsylvania’s first and only statewide 501(c)(4) organization dedicated to empowering Asian Americans. We build long-term political power by holding elected officials accountable, engaging in culturally competent voter outreach, and fostering solidarity with other communities of color. Serving over 251,000 eligible Asian voters in PA, we address low registration and language barriers, with 78% speaking a language other than English. We combat misinformation and provide multilingual education, ensuring our API communities access critical resources like healthcare and safe spaces for cultural and political expression. Together, we amplify our Asian American voices in PA.
Budget Size: Medium: Previous year budget $1M - $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)
Our goal is to engage 1,250 newly eligible individuals and successfully register 500 voters. Through the It’s Official Campaign, we will provide frequent, accessible, and engaging voter registration clinics in primarily Maricopa County and the surrounding rural areas of Pima and Pinal County.
Black Phoenix Organizing Collective (BPOC/501(c)3) is building a bigger, better, Blacker future in PHX. We practice cultural organizing among inter-generational Black folks that centers queer and trans people, formerly incarcerated, disabled people, and Muslim immigrants and refugees. We prioritize the needs of Black people through two programs: Disability Justice and Reproductive Justice. We believe that supporting mental healthcare, holding, and creating space for vulnerability is a piece of how we free ourselves as abolitionists. We are moving to breaking down harmful systems and building new ones. Over the last year we have also committed ourselves to transformative justice practices even when it’s painful, or uncomfortable in all spaces.
Budget Size: Small: Previous year budget $20,000 - $1M
Lead Contact: Nico DeGalloOperations and Policy Managernico@bpcaz.org
Priority Issues: Our voter registration program is non-partisan. The populations we engage value issues of racial justice, economic justice, reproductive justice, disability justice, and climate/environmental justice.
Our goal is to engage 1,250 newly eligible individuals and successfully register 500 voters. Through the It’s Official Campaign, we will provide frequent, accessible, and engaging voter registration clinics in primarily Maricopa County and the surrounding rural areas of Pima and Pinal County.
Black Political Cultivation Arizona (BPCAZ/501(c)4) is a political organization working to transform the quality of life for marginalized people through electoral change. We are flexing Black political power in elections to fight for the outcomes that are best for the community, as well as hold elected officials accountable. Our goal is to elect Black people to leadership in Phoenix and Arizona who are values-aligned and committed to using political power to 1) realize our goals of community change and 2) transform the quality of life for Black People and people of marginalized identities and backgrounds.
Budget Size: Small: Previous year budget $20,000 - $1M
Lead Contact: Nico DeGalloOperations and Policy Managernico@bpcaz.org
Priority Issues: The populations we engage value issues of racial justice, economic justice, reproductive justice, disability justice, and climate/environmental justice.
Latinx-led Casa Azul de Wilson has gained our community’s trust through direct service programs such as college advising and financial relief for farmworkers. We have done Latinx community voter registration for the past four years and are the experts of our community to do this work.
Casa Azul de Wilson provides a homebase for Wilson’s Latinx families to feel valued so that they may own their power and ascend in their educational, leadership and civic pursuits. We build community through culturally affirming events, programs and campaigns that allow us to celebrate our complex and diverse identities.
Budget Size: Small: Previous year budget $20,000 - $1M
Our top priorities for 2025 are focused on local elections that disproportionately impact immigrant communities through city and county policies. We are specifically looking at the Aurora City Council, which is the origin of rumors that brought hateful rhetoric and then-candidate Trump himself to Aurora. We would also like to build upon our voter engagement efforts in Thornton, Commerce City, and Westminster (CD 08 overlap) from 2021 and 2023. In 2026, our top priority is CD 08 with a focus on engaging voters on the issue of immigration.
In 2024, CIRC Action Fund is planning to lead a nonpartisan and partisan electoral program in Congressional District 8 and Congressional District 3, primarily in Adams, Arapahoe, Denver, El Paso, Jefferson, and Pueblo counties. We will target low-propensity BIPOC voters through door knocking, texts, and mailers.
CIRC Action Fund (501(c)4) was established in 2012 to build a strong and thriving Colorado where all residents are treated with dignity and respect, have equal access to a fair quality of life, and the opportunity to live united with family. Our mission compels us to elect and protect candidates with a history of championing immigrant rights issues and to mobilize an electorate of People of Color and New Americans that reflects the populations where we work.
Budget Size: Small: Previous year budget $20,000 - $1M
In 2024, the Colorado Immigrant Rights Coalition (CIRC) is planning to lead a nonpartisan and partisan electoral program in Congressional District 8 and Congressional District 3, primarily in Adams, Arapahoe, Denver, El Paso, Jefferson, and Pueblo counties. We will target low-propensity BIPOC voters through door knocking, texts, and mailers.
Founded in 2002, CIRC (501(c)3) is a statewide membership-based organization that advocates for all immigrants in Colorado and the United States, regardless of legal status. Our 60+ member organizations lead our coalition and seek to uplift the voices of directly impacted immigrants to create change by and for our community. CIRC’s mission is to build community power through organizing and leadership development within immigrant communities, winning fair and humane public policies, providing legal services and educational workshops, and implementing nonpartisan civic engagement programs.
Budget Size: Small: Previous year budget $20,000 - $1M
Priority Issues: When engaging BIPOC and immigrant voters, we use issue-based messaging and connect critical issues to the lived experiences of BIPOC communities. It aligns voting with tangible outcomes, making it more relevant and resonating with the unique concerns and experiences of BIPOC communities, which is essential. The issues that we prioritize fall under the following categories: immigrant justice, healthcare access, and affordable housing.
Latina women and Independent voters will be the deciding factor in CA 13, 22, 27, and 41. To reach such voters, CNC builds authentic relationships through grassroots organizing, live phone calls, door-to-door canvassing focusing on issues they care about. Issues related to Housing, Access to quality healthcare, Jobs, and the Economy.
Communities for a New California promotes economic prosperity and community health for residents in the rural areas of California. We bring valley residents together to champion the needs of poor and working-class families through community organizing, integrated leadership development, and mass non-partisan voter engagement.
Budget Size: Medium: Previous year budget $1M - $3M
COPAL has developed a network of over 40,000 supporters and 350 Member-leaders who will engage this election in voter activation. COPAL Members will participate in an endorsement process, generate over 125,000 dials, and knock over 10,000 doors. COPAL's media team will create bilingual voter content for social and cultural platforms.
We lead social impact initiatives to improve the quality of life for Latine families. We do this by building collective power, transforming systems, and creating opportunities for a dignified life.
Budget Size: Micro: Previous year budget < $20,000
COPAL has developed a network of over 40,000 supporters and 350 Member-leaders who will engage this election in voter activation. COPAL Members will participate in an endorsement process, generate over 125,000 dials, and knock over 10,000 doors. COPAL's media team will create bilingual voter content for social and cultural platforms.
We lead social impact initiatives to improve the quality of life for Latine families. We do this by building collective power, transforming systems, and creating opportunities for a dignified life.
Budget Size: Medium: Previous year budget $1M - $3M
El Pueblo will continue efforts in GOTV, voter education, and newcomer support. We aim to increase Latine voter registration and turnout in 2026. El Pueblo will also support individuals seeking U.S. citizenship, continuing collaborations with the Mexican Consulate and USCIS. Votemos NC will expand its impact by exploring the transformation of its website into a comprehensive news platform, offering timely updates on legislative sessions and post-primary election results. This initiative enhances civic engagement and voter
EP and LF will educate, engage and get Latine voters to the polls by expanding canvassing efforts, creating and disseminating Spanish-language voter guides to ensure that all Latine voters have access to crucial election information in their language, and by spearheading poll protection initiatives to combat voter intimidation.
El Pueblo - incorporated in 1996, El Pueblo's mission is to build collective power through leadership development, organizing, and direct action so that the Latin American community and other marginalized communities control our own stories and destinies.
Budget Size: Medium: Previous year budget $1M - $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)
Emancipate NC and Emancipate Votes request a Voter Engagement & GOTV grant to support our 2024 Voter Engagement initiatives, which will activate our Justice League–a Fellowship for people directly impacted by incarceration–to lead and support voter education and organizing campaigns in NC-01.
The mission of Emancipate NC (ENC), a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization, is to dismantle structural racism and mass incarceration through community education, leadership development, strategic litigation, and mobilization.
Budget Size: Medium: Previous year budget $1M - $3M
2024 Voter Engagement initiatives will activate our Justice League–a Fellowship for people directly impacted by incarceration–to lead and support voter education and organizing campaigns in NC-01.
The mission of Emancipate Votes, a 501(c)(4) nonprofit social welfare organization, is to support educational and electoral strategies to end mass incarceration and structural racism in North Carolina.
Budget Size: Micro: Previous year budget < $20,000
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
Registering Georgia's Muslim community using deep canvassing, in-person outreach at cultural and mutual aid events and high-traffic areas, and digital tactics including text banking, social media, and relational organizing.
Georgia Muslim Voter Project (GAMVP) is a grassroots organization that builds civic power for Muslims in Georgia by amplifying their voices through nonpartisan voter registration, voter education, voter engagement, and policy advocacy. GAMVP aims to encourage civic participation, not just in Southern Muslim communities, but in all communities under attack and under resourced in the South, in order for us all to live and thrive with dignity.
Budget Size: Small: Previous year budget $20,000 - $1M
CaPA States Covered: GA
Geographic Focus: Rural, Suburban / Ex-urban, Urban - Large city (>100k), Urban - Small city (<100k)
Core Constituencies: Immigrant, BIPOC (Black; Indigenous and/or People Of Color), MASA (Muslim; Arab; South Asian)
Organization Leadership: BIPOC-led, Women-led
Lead Contact: Shafina KhabaniExecutive Directorinfo@gamvp.org
Priority Issues: The Muslim communities of Georgia are diverse and multifaceted; as such, they are impacted by a variety of issues. Through our Community Conversation program surveys (which are conducted at mosques around the state), we have found that the top issues most important to our communities include access to quality/affordable healthcare, quality/affordable education, gun control, and the economy. Other notable issues include immigration, climate change, and religious freedom. GAMVP believes in deep canvassing, so when our Field Organizers are out in the field registering new voter and talking to community members, they take their time to listen to community members needs and concerns and tailor their conversations to each individual community member and to whatever issues are most important to them. Our Field Organizers have been trained to have these conversations in a thoughtful and insightful manner. With the recent rise in Islamaphobia, our communities are also concerned about the targeting of our communities and safety. We often talk about this and note the importance of using our voices through our votes to make sure our interests are taken into account by our elected officials. Building civic power helps fight the hate our community experiences, and we uplift this in all our conversations.
Hispanic Federation will engage 115,000 Latino voters across North Carolina in urban, suburban, and rural areas. We will use culturally competent, Latino “kitchen table” issue area organizing, and tactics that include door knocking, phone banking, texting, and relational outreach. We will also run digital, radio and TV ads.
Hispanic Federation (HF) is the nation’s premier Latino nonprofit membership organization. Founded in 1990, HF seeks to empower and advance the Hispanic community, support Hispanic families, and strengthen Latino institutions through work in the areas of civic engagement, education, health, immigration, economic empowerment, & the environment.
Budget Size: Small: Previous year budget $20,000 - $1M
Priority Issues: HF believes in robust, culturally competent, Latino “kitchen table” issue-focused voter registration drives as the ideal way to engage its largely low-income, Hispanic immigrant, and youth voter population. As such, HF prioritizes in its community and voter outreach discussion of education, health, immigration, economic empowerment and environmental justice issues. As HF believes in inclusivity with regard to the Latinx LGBTQIA population, it also promotes LGBTQIA issue areas and fights against LGBTQIA bias. Our goal is that Latinx voters have all the tools to participate in the elections, while also being knowledgeable about issues that they care deeply about.
Through education, we embolden our community to use their voices and empower them to become leaders of change. ISLA’s non-partisan efforts not only build the Latine communities’ civic knowledge, but also encourage their active engagement to make their voices count.
ISLA builds community and leadership through educational Spanish language and cultural immersion programs.
Budget Size: Small: Previous year budget $20,000 - $1M
CaPA States Covered: NC
Geographic Focus: Rural, Suburban / Ex-urban, Urban - Large city (>100k)
Core Constituencies: Immigrant, Latinx, Youth and Students (aged 17-35)
Priority Issues: ISLA focuses on addressing barriers to Latine voter participation, and provides useful and relevant information in Spanish about elections, candidates, and issues.
We engage lower turnout to high turnout and yet knowledge gaps exist. We will share our Civics Guide for Busy Georgians at the door and digitally, we are writing emails for our members to distribute to their friends and contacts either by email or text.
We are the coalition home of Indivisible groups in Georgia. We meet monthly to train, dissiminate information, find shared efforts and discover ways to support group efforts.
Budget Size: Micro: Previous year budget < $20,000
CaPA States Covered: GA
Core Constituencies: Immigrant, BIPOC (Black; Indigenous and/or People Of Color), Latinx
Organization Leadership: Volunteer-led, Women-led, Other
Staff and Volunteer Balance: Volunteer powered - >50% of the programmatic activities are executed by volunteers
Our mission is to:
Build an intergenerational community of leaders who work together to increase the civic knowledge and participation of the Latine community in North Carolina.
Create a collective agenda that is pro-Black, pro-immigrant, pro-LGBTQ, and pro-reproductive justice.
Work with our base of leaders to generate organic, bilingual content that educates community members and empowers them with the skills and knowledge they need to take action through advocacy and civic engagement.
Our goal is to empower and mobilize voters to participate in the democratic process. Core 2025 programming includes:
Digital organizing - maintain and expand our digital presence, ensuring that our message reaches a broader audience across various online platforms.
On the ground field plan - to register new voters, ensuring that more voices are heard in the electoral process. Our field teams will engage directly with communities to identify the critical issues that matter most to voters, facilitating a deeper understanding of their needs and concerns.
La Fuerza will educate, engage and get Latine voters to the polls by expanding canvassing efforts, creating and disseminating Spanish-language voter guides to ensure that all Latine voters have access to crucial election information in their language, and by spearheading poll protection initiatives to combat voter intimidation.
La Fuerza NC - founded in 2022, La Fuerza is a 501(c)(4) organization in North Carolina that is building collective power through leadership development and organizing. Our state is home to a growing Latinx community: almost one million strong! We focus on educating all Latinx community members in our networks, building relationships with intention, engaging communities in political education, and inspiring community members to get involved in the political process. We work side by side with pro-Black, pro-immigrant, pro-LGBTQ, and pro-reproductive justice partners and allies to lift our collective voices to ensure that we can control our stories and destinies.
Budget Size: Small: Previous year budget $20,000 - $1M
CaPA States Covered: NC
Geographic Focus: Rural / Suburban / Small city (<100k), Urban - Large city or suburb of large city (>100k)
Core Constituencies: Immigrant, Latinx, Youth and Students (aged 17-35)
In addition to 50+ voter registration events, LWVGO will host town halls and rallies to engage and empower voters, answer questions, and discuss Nebraska’s new VOTER ID law and ballot issues. The League will produce a primary and general (bilingual) voters’ guide to distribute to low-propensity voters and make available online.
“Empowering Voters - Defending Democracy” Is the mission of the League of Women Voters Greater Omaha (LWVGO). LWVGO envisions a democracy where every person has the desire, the right, the knowledge, the accessibility and the confidence to participate.
Budget Size: Micro: Previous year budget < $20,000
Lead Contact: Cynde GlismannBoard of Directors - Past Presidentcynde@lwvgo.org
Priority Issues: LWVGO organizers work to ensure voters are empowered: they can navigate Nebraska’s newly implemented voter ID rules, are able to make informed candidate choices, and have easy access to their voting method of choice (by mail or at polls). , Community organizing aims to ensure all people, no matter their race, gender identity, economic condition, age, education, physical appearance or condition, or any other characteristic, are empowered to make decisions that affect their own lives.,
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.
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.
MRAPA builds community power to fight for justice in Latinx and immigrant communities and working-class communities of color. In 2024, we’ll work in 5 counties, focusing in communities that are ignored and rarely targeted by typical Democratic campaigns, yet they are an important voter base that needs to be persuaded.
Make the Road Action (MRA) builds political power rooted in working-class Latinx, Black and communities of color, 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.
Budget Size: Small: Previous year budget $20,000 - $1M
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.
NCAAT in Action is scaling and leading the largest field program targeting Asian Americans in North Carolina. 8 years of working as a trusted messenger with culturally-competent multilingual outreach will allow us to educate, engage, and mobilize with deep canvassing and our new Empower U BIPOC Youth project.
NCAAT in Action is committed to supporting equity and justice for all by building political power among Asian Americans and allies in North Carolina through voter education, progressive advocacy and leadership development.
Budget Size: Small: Previous year budget $20,000 - $1M
NHYM is pledging to vote 10,000 and mobilizing 20,000 young people to vote in New hampshire, focused on college campuses. We will also distribute voter guides, help young people register to vote, and coordinate rides to the polls, and build and grow lasting chapters of young organizers.
Budget Size: Small: Previous year budget $20,000 - $1M
NHYM is pledging to vote 10,000 and mobilizing 20,000 young people to vote in New hampshire, focused on college campuses. We will also distribute voter guides, help young people register to vote, and coordinate rides to the polls, and build and grow lasting chapters of young organizers.
Our mission is to build a movement of young people to transform our political system so it serves and is led by the people it has left behind.
Budget Size: Micro: Previous year budget < $20,000
In 2025 and beyond, NPPEF will continue our programmatic work around voter engagement, to include voter registration efforts and the advancement of a PA State Voting Rights Act; civic education to include state courts education ahead of judicial elections in 2025 and; voter participation to ensure those we engage and provide civic education to overcome voter apathy and fatigue and are mobilized to vote in both the primary and general elections in 2025 and beyond.
The NPPEF is a non-partisan group centered on underrepresented communities, emphasizing civic education and engagement. Their focus areas include voting rights, gun violence, abortion access, and environmental justice. Voter registration tactics involve community outreach, online platforms, partnerships, mobile units, educational campaigns, multilingual materials, youth engagement, collaboration with civic groups, and volunteer networks.
The New PA Project Education Fund (NPPEF) is a non-partisan organization led by community leaders across the Commonwealth dedicated to centering underrepresented and underserved communities to embrace their power. NPPEF ensures full participation in the democratic process through civic education and year-round engagement by centering Black, Indigenous, and other people of color, immigrant communities and the youth - with intention - as they are the least represented and most impacted by decisions our government is making.
Budget Size: Medium: Previous year budget $1M - $3M
In 2025 and beyond, NPP will continue our programmatic work around voter engagement, to include voter registration efforts and the advancement of a PA state voting rights act; civic education to include federal and state courts advocacy ahead of state judicial elections in 2025 and; independent expenditure voter participation programs to mobilize the electorate to the polls in both the primary and general elections, in 2025 and beyond.
NPP, a voting rights organization will engage in community conversations, candidate forums, voting rights protection, expansion and advocacy by meeting our centered communities (Black, Indigenous and other people of color, immigrant communities and the youth) where they are and providing all the necessary civic education needed to expand the electorate.
The New Pennsylvania Project (NPP) is a voting rights organization with a year-round primary focus on voter registration, civic education and mobilization. NPP centers historically disenfranchised and often neglected Black, Indigenous and other people of color, immigrant communities and the youth in our work. Through civic engagement, we ensure all eligible voters feel compelled to exercise their freedom to vote in the Commonwealth.
Budget Size: Medium: Previous year budget $1M - $3M
In 2025, our organization will be shifting strategies to put more focus on our community through grassroots base-building. We aim to narrow in on who our diverse community members are, and what moves them, primarily through the following activities: deep canvassing, focus groups and ethnographic interviews, and potentially moving to a membership model. In regards to organizing, NCAAT/NCAATIA will be expanding our issue work (primarily democracy reform, immigration, language access, and racial justice) to also focus on diversity and inclusivity in K-12 education, which is an area of growing contention in the AAPI community.
North Carolina Asian Americans Together (NCAAT) is scaling and leading the largest field program targeting Asian Americans in North Carolina. On-site canvassing in high schools and college campuses will register AAPI and BIPOC voters, and registrations are paired with pledges to vote.
North Carolina Asian Americans Together (NCAAT) is a nonpartisan, nonprofit organization committed to supporting equity and justice for all by fostering community among Asian Americans and allies in North Carolina through civic engagement, leadership development, grassroots mobilization and political participation.
Budget Size: Medium: Previous year budget $1M - $3M
CaPA States Covered: NC
Sub-State CaPA Priority Geographies Engaged: North Carolina state-wide
Geographic Focus: Urban - Large city or suburb of large city (>100k)
Core Constituencies: Immigrant, AAPI (Asian American Pacific Islander), Youth and Students (aged 17-35)
Organization Leadership: BIPOC-led, Women-led
Staff and Volunteer Balance: Volunteer boosted - <50% of the programmatic activities are executed by volunteers
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.
Budget Size: Small: Previous year budget $20,000 - $1M
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.
We will target Latinx, Filipinx, Korean and other voters of color. Primarily through doors,
phones, texts, emails, and in-language digital and print, the engagement would focus on
20+ federal and local candidate races spanning from the 45th congressional district to a
variety of progressive city council and school board candidates the engagement across
Orange County. Across these districts, voters would be engaged around issues of
immigrant rights, local language access resource, housing affordability, wage / worker
experience, and more.
Orange County PAC builds the political power of our AAPI-Latinx-Labor-Environmental Justice Alliance to pass progressive legislation, elect candidates and co-govern with progressive elected officials to bring forth a progressive transformation in our county. Orange County PAC is a project of OC Action.
Budget Size: Medium: Previous year budget $1M - $3M
We will focus on voter education from the top to bottom of the ticket, working to mobilize our target persuasion and mobilization universe. We will also test our in-language outreach program to newly registered APIA voters in Nevada and unscored voters. We hope to use issue messaging in-language to move persuadable APIA voters.
One APIA Nevada’s mission is to advance the interests of all Asian Pacific Islander Americans in Nevada through advocacy on issues such as access to healthcare, education, and pathways to citizenship.
Budget Size: Medium: Previous year budget $1M - $3M
In 2025 and beyond, we will mobilize communities to oppose anti-trans ballot measures and bolster LGBTQ+ rights by launching public education campaigns that highlight the human cost of transphobia and shift public opinion through real stories from transgender Coloradans. We will organize local training sessions, events, and advocacy toolkit distributions for local elections, build sustained support through statewide advocacy power-building, cross-movement solidarity, and targeted media outreach, to resist harmful policies.
One Colorado exists to secure protections and opportunities for LGBTQ+ Coloradans through grassroots, local, and statewide organizing and lobbying efforts.
Budget Size: Medium: Previous year budget $1M - $3M
OneAmerica Votes builds immigrant voter power in Washington state. We are engaging voters in immigrant-rich southwest and central WA to elect our slate and defeat I-2117 to defend WA’s Climate Commitment Act. Communicating in 4 languages through culturally-appropriate direct voter contact and mail in key districts, we are uniquely situated to contact, inform and persuade voters.
OneAmerica advances the fundamental principles of democracy and justice at the local, state, and national levels by building power within immigrant communities in collaboration with key allies.
Budget Size: Micro: Previous year budget < $20,000
Priority Issues: Our canvassing script engages voters about OneAmerica Votes’ Our Thriving Platform and our vision for making WA State a place where all have what they need, regardless of economic and immigration status. We educate and urge voters to vote No on the group of conservative ballot initiatives, including one that would gut WA’s progressive climate laws; these initiatives would take billions of dollars from our state budget, making it harder to win on our platform. We then dig deeper to find which platform issues matter to them: a universal childcare system in WA state which is accessible, affordable, and quality for all families and pays thriving wages to the majority-immigrant women providers; multilingual education; and a state unemployment program for immigrant workers. , , OneAmerica Votes organizes year-round leveraging our BIPOC, immigrant and working-class base of directly-impacted community leaders to elect people like us who share our values, take that power to the legislature where we fight for our issue campaigns, and work with our base to build power in legislative districts to hold accountable elected leaders at the local, state and federal levels to being immigrant rights champions.
OLÉ will support candidates in the general election, as well as work to re-elect Gabe Vasquez for NM Congressional District 2. Of the 3 US House districts in New Mexico, Vasquez is in the most contentious seat and will rematch against an extremist MAGA candidate, Yvette Harrell. Using a combination of field, digital and mail, OLÉ will engage unlikely BIPOC voters, new citizens, formerly incarcerated voters and Hispanic men as a voting bloc.
OLÉ is a non-profit, grassroots member organization of working families. Since 2009, our members and staff have worked together to strengthen our communities using issue-based campaigns and electoral engagement to ensure that working families are playing a critical role in shaping New Mexico’s future with a united voice. By centering the experiences of people of color, early educators, parents, workers and Immigrants, OLÉ creates a space for people to grow their leadership and create lasting change in New Mexico.
Budget Size: Medium: Previous year budget $1M - $3M
PHB supports an 11/5/2024 ballot measure to repeal the City of Huntington Beach Public Library Parent/Guardian Review Committee for its children's library books for offensive content. Two campaigns will occur: 1. Gather a minimum of 13,000 qualified signatures. 2. Run a campaign to educate voters about this ballot measure.
The Protect HB (PHB) campaign was formed to turn out HB voters in the March 5, 2024 Presidential Primary election to vote NO on three ballot measures A-B-C. PHB is formed to educate Huntingotn Beach voters about local issues that impact their every day lives.
Budget Size: Micro: Previous year budget < $20,000
We will be knocking on thousands of doors in Wenatchee and Omak, Washington to ID and register voters, and engage new and low-propensity voters in a pledge to vote program. We’ll also be running a pledge to vote and mailer program, reaching roughly 10,000 young and BIPOC low-propensity and unregistered voters.
To build an economy that works for rural working people in North Central Washington
Budget Size: Micro: Previous year budget < $20,000
CaPA States Covered: WA
Geographic Focus: Rural, Urban - Small city (<100k)
Core Constituencies: Immigrant, Multi-racial (including white), Youth and Students (aged 17-35)
Priority Issues: Through thousands of conversations with voters, we created a rural working people’s platform that we center across our work, including good jobs, great schools, healthcare and housing for all, fair laws regardless of immigration status, a fair tax system, and the protection of our land, water, and air. This year we’ll be focusing on an attack on our state’s Capital Gains Tax and Climate Commitment Act (CCA). The Capital Gains Tax taxes the wealthiest 1% and provides almost a billion dollars for schools, early education, and communities. The CCA is a carbon tax that reduces greenhouse gas emissions while putting money back into communities experiencing impacts of climate change. We’ll be connecting these issues to our platform issues of better schools, good green jobs, a fairer tax system, and the protection of our environment.
We will be knocking on thousands of doors in Wenatchee and Omak, Washington to ID and register voters, and engage new and low-propensity voters in a pledge to vote program. We’ll also be running a pledge to vote and mailer program, reaching roughly 10,000 young and BIPOC low-propensity and unregistered voters.
To build an economy that works for rural working people in North Central Washington
Budget Size: Small: Previous year budget $20,000 - $1M
CaPA States Covered: WA
Geographic Focus: Rural, Urban - Small city (<100k)
Core Constituencies: Immigrant, Multi-racial (including white), Youth and Students (aged 17-35)
Priority Issues: Through thousands of conversations with voters, we created a rural working people’s platform that we center across our work, including good jobs, great schools, healthcare and housing for all, fair laws regardless of immigration status, a fair tax system, and the protection of our land, water, and air. This year we’ll be focusing on an attack on our state’s Capital Gains Tax and Climate Commitment Act (CCA). The Capital Gains Tax taxes the wealthiest 1% and provides almost a billion dollars for schools, early education, and communities. The CCA is a carbon tax that reduces greenhouse gas emissions while putting money back into communities experiencing impacts of climate change. We’ll be connecting these issues to our platform issues of better schools, good green jobs, a fairer tax system, and the protection of our environment.
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.
Get-Out-The-Vote efforts in Dakota County, Nebraska will engage thousands of underrepresented voters including low-income, new citizens, unmarried women, Latinx, immigrants, and people of color through door knocks, phone banking, marketing, hotspot canvassing, and candidate forums.
Unity in Action’s (UIA) mission is to empower Latinos by promoting workers' rights, civic engagement and justice through education, training, and advocacy.
Budget Size: Small: Previous year budget $20,000 - $1M
Priority Issues: UIA employs a relational organizing method to empower Latinos in the Siouxland region by promoting workers' rights, civic engagement and justice through education, training, and advocacy. UIA's work centers on helping legal residents first navigate the complexities of the citizenship process and then serves to activate them as knowledgeable participants in American civic life. UIA believes engaged voters build a stronger, healthier, and more welcoming community. Through education and support, UIA helps new citizens register to vote, participate in candidate forums, access bilingual services, build healthy lives, and provide leadership development opportunities which ultimately ensures they are integrated, welcomed, and celebrated as part of the community. , , , , As a trust-based community partner, UIA leverages its reputation, active volunteer base, and connection with the community to organize voters. In partnership with the Nebraska Civic Engagement Table, UIA’s community organizer works to identify, support, and engage underrepresented voters including low-income, new citizens, unmarried women, Latinx, immigrants, and people of color. These efforts aim to activate civic engagement around policies that affect their lives. Most recently, UIA has worked to engage voters around the ballot issue of paid sick leave. With a large meatpacking and agricultural worker base, this ballot issue is critical to many lives across Unity in Action’s outreach area. , , , , In non-election years, efforts include community canvassing on issues vital to the community. By listening to concerns, raising awareness, and facilitating dialogue, UIA drives meaningful change and advocacy. As a trusted community support resource for the Hispanic community, Unity in Action focuses on local elections, education on voting history and ballot initiatives, citizenship rights, and outreach to develop a continuous culture of active participation and inclusivity.
We will reach a universe of 50,000 left-leaning Latino and other voters with high progressive VAN scores in 15 rural counties in the Mountains/Western Slope of Colorado through doors, phones, ads, and mailers. Reclaiming SD5 would mean securing a supermajority in the Colorado Senate.
Budget Size: Small: Previous year budget $20,000 - $1M
Priority Issues: Top issues that we focus on include immigrant rights, environmental justice, economic justice, racial justice, and reproductive justice.
We will reach at least 40,000 voters through doors, phones, ads, and mailers in 15 rural counties in the Mountains/Western Slope of Colorado. In 2024, we will also run a persuasion campaign to enshrine reproductive justice in the Colorado Constitution. Our GOTV covers these key political districts: CD3, CD2, CD7, SD5, HD57, HD26 and HD13.
Here at Voces Unidas, we envision a mountain region where Latinas and Latinos are thriving, engaged and leading in all of our communities. We do this by creating opportunities where Latinas and Latinos advocate for themselves, actively participate in all civic institutions and take leadership roles in all decision-making tables.
Budget Size: Medium: Previous year budget $1M - $3M
Priority Issues: Top issues that we focus on include immigrant rights, environmental justice, economic justice, racial justice, and reproductive justice.
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.
WMCA empowers Wisconsin’s Muslim communities through nonpartisan voter education, civic engagement, and policy advocacy. Our efforts include voter registration drives, educational workshops, candidate forums, and Get Out the Vote initiatives. We equip community members with resources to make informed electoral decisions while strengthening leadership pathways. Through strategic outreach and coalition-building, WMCA amplifies Muslim voices in the democratic process, ensuring long-term civic participation and representation at local, state, and federal levels.
Registering Muslim voters through relational organizing, holding registration drives at Muslim establishments, collaborating with university groups, micro-targeted ads, postcards, mail and phone and SMS programs.
To empower and amplify the voices of the Wisconsin Muslim community through civic engagement, research, and advocacy, striving to foster a more inclusive and equitable society for all Wisconsinites.
Budget Size: Small: Previous year budget $20,000 - $1M