From Indivisible Team <[email protected]>
Subject 5-year anniversary edition!
Date December 12, 2021 5:00 PM
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Indivisibles,

Five years ago, Leah and I were making final tweaks to the Indivisible
Guide, which I then tweeted out after work a few days later while eating
some memorably delicious tortilla soup at our kitchen table ([ [link removed] ]see our
first-ever news coverage back then for a trip down memory lane). So for
our final newsletter of 2021, I want to reflect on what’s in Indivisible’s
DNA, and what it means for this moment when we’re fighting for immediate
democracy reforms while bracing ourselves against the rising tide of
authoritarianism in America. This is a story about political despair,
hope, and power. I’ll reward you with a couple new pics of our
14-month-old Zeke if you make it to the end!

Indivisible leaders are light in the dark

Let’s start with where Indivisible started at a particularly dark time in
American history. We faced a Trump-led trifecta in D.C. and Republican
gains across the country. Incoming Republican leaders were pointing to the
World War 2 Japanese internment camps as a guide for future policy
([ [link removed] ]“Trump Camp’s Talk of Registry and Japanese Internment Raises Muslims’
Fears”). The incoming Speaker of the House was promising to remake the
country in Trump’s image ([ [link removed] ]“Paul Ryan: Now time to 'go big, go bold'”).
Leaders in the Democratic Party prioritized finding common ground with
this authoritarian movement ([ [link removed] ]Senate Democrats’ Surprising Strategy:
Trying to Align With Trump). We seemed to be living through a real-life
enactment of that poem all high schoolers are forced to read, “[ [link removed] ]The best
lack all conviction, while the worst are full of passionate intensity.”

But as dark as that moment was, we also had us. In blue, purple, and red
districts around the country, we reached out and found each other. And
when we pulled ourselves together, we found that there were more of us
than there were of them -- and through our collective will we could
actually change what was politically possible. In this dark period of our
history, we didn’t have Amanda Gorman’s words yet, but we viscerally felt
what the poet laureate would describe in her 2021 inaugural poem:
“[ [link removed] ][T]here is always light, if only we’re brave enough to see it, if only
we’re brave enough to be it.” 

“Being the light” is a good description of what I’ve seen Indivisible
leaders do all around the country for the last half a decade. We’ve taken
on hard battles that we weren’t guaranteed to win but that we knew were
right and necessary -- defending the Affordable Care Act, building a blue
wave in 2018 to take the House, defeating the incumbent president, and
securing a Democratic trifecta. This young movement has brought quite a
bit of light to our political world these past few years.

The problem with political despair

Just because we’ve notched some big wins doesn’t mean that it’s easy or
automatic for Indivisible leaders or anyone else to keep “being the light”
-- it takes effort, a lot of effort. A couple of weeks ago, the
ever-insightful Michelle Goldberg wrote [ [link removed] ]The Problem of Political
Despair, describing the problem as her sense and fear that many
previously-engaged folks are giving up and tuning out. Trump is out of
office, Congress is in its lethargic slog, and the GOP continues to fall
down that ideological cliff it jumped off years ago. The filibuster.
Manchin and Sinema. The lack of legislative momentum. The voter
suppression. The gerrymandering. The looming threat of a coup in 2024.
It’s so much. It’s too much. Why engage? What does it even matter if we
do?

The problem with political despair is that it’s easy, alluring, and
self-defeating. None of us wants to be a sucker, and nobody wants to waste
their time. Cynicism can feel smart and reasonable, and it absolves us
from responsibility or blame for the fires consuming our society. Not your
problem anymore! You can watch Succession or Ted Lasso and live your own
damn life! But of course, it’s also self-defeating -- the other side, the
anti-democracy authoritarians like McConnell and Trump, triumph when we
give in to despair.

So what are we to do?

The answer to despair isn’t hope; it’s power

In the five years we’ve been organizing for democracy, here’s one of the
biggest lessons I’ve learned: political despair doesn’t come from the
challenges we face -- it comes from feeling powerless to do anything about
the challenges we face. The central task for all of us organizing within
Indivisible is not to convince folks that things are OK; or that winning
is as simple as signing a petition; or even that everyone should feel
hopeful. The central task for a pro-democracy organizer is to identify
what folks can actually do, and then give them a sense of their power to
affect real-world change. 

The title of the Indivisible Guide hit on that -- it was a “practical”
guide. This wasn’t some sort of philosophical essay on democracy -- it was
step-by-step instructions on building and applying national political
power at the local level. The goal of that [ [link removed] ]original Google Doc and the
goal of Indivisible ever since then has been to look squarely at the
problem, critically evaluate what is in our power to do that is worth a
damn, and then translate that into actionable guidance for real people.

Five years ago, I didn’t know for sure that we would succeed in saving the
Affordable Care Act, winning back congress, or defeating the incumbent
president. But I believed that an engaged group of active leaders across
the country could affect the outcome of these fights. And I had an idea of
some specific strategies and tactics that would allow them to do that. The
hope that came from that Guide and the organizing that followed was a
product of newly-minted local leaders accepting, applying, and building
their own personal and collective political power. 

What that means for where we go next

Will we pass the Build Back Better bill before the end of the year? Will
we amend the filibuster and pass the Freedom to Vote Act? Will
pro-democracy forces survive the midterms? Will we avert a coup in 2024?
Will we safeguard our republic thereafter? Will we overcome the challenges
of gerrymandering, voter suppression, election subversion, and political
violence? 

I’m not here to tell you the future, and you shouldn’t trust anybody who
claims to know how this will turn out. 

But five years into this movement for democracy, I know that there are
still more of us than there are of them. I know that we can still be the
light. And I believe that an engaged group of leaders throughout the
country can influence the course of our democracy -- because I’ve seen it
happen these past five years. I’ve seen an entire national political
system bend to the will of an organized and fired-up constituency with a
clear demand -- again and again and again.

Here’s something I can predict with confidence. Our opponents will change,
our challenges will shift, and our strategies and tactics will have to
evolve. This is easy to predict because it’s characterized the Indivisible
movement since our founding.

We started with a simple guide to congressional advocacy. Since then, we
pressured our own elected, we registered voters, we set up community aid
drives, we designed billboards, we held meetings in bars and church
basements, we scheduled guest speakers, we ran and attended trainings on
racial equity and inclusion, we shared recipes, we fundraised for
candidates, we cajoled our friends, we hounded our opponents, we wrote
millions of postcards, we sent millions of texts, we endorsed candidates,
we ran debates, we ran for office, we stepped up, we recruited new
leaders, we stepped back, we lost, we drank, we took a break, we rejoined,
we won, we celebrated, we built communities, we built power. 

This is the creative, persistent, locally-led, and ever-evolving
Indivisible movement that I have been so proud to be a part of this last
half-decade. When we were finishing up the Google Doc back then, I hoped
someone might read it and find it useful. I did not dream that you all
would take 23 pages of poorly copyedited text and turn it into a
nationwide movement that would give me hope for our democracy. But here we
are, still standing Indivisible, still changing the course of history
together, come what may.

In solidarity,

Ezra Levin

Co-Founder, Indivisible

PS: You made it to the end! As promised, here’s Zeke at just about 14
months. He is confidently toddling his way around town now, exploring the
world with an enthusiasm and adventurous spirit that brings Leah and me so
much joy every day.

[9]Leah and Ezra's son Zeke

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