I can’t remember the last time so many people wrote in to let me know how much they appreciated one of my notes.
So I’m passing it along again — copied below — in case you missed it.
I hope you’ll read it, as so many others have.
- Robert
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I know you’ve been getting a lot of emails from Public Citizen lately.
Give me just a minute to explain what’s going on.
If — after reading through this note — you still think it’s too much, at least we’ll both know where things stand.
This is a “peek behind the curtain” that many of the organizations and political candidates who are contributing to your overflowing inbox won’t show you.
Let’s start with some very basic numbers:
- In December of 2016 — just three years ago — Public Citizen received nearly $500,000 in online donations.
- By last year, December revenue had dropped to barely half of what it had been.
- And so far this December, we’re not even up to $200,000, with only hours to go.
What happened?
As you may know, December is the most important month of the year for nonprofit organizations like Public Citizen that depend on individual supporters like you — as opposed to strings-attached subsidies from Big Business and Uncle Sam — to power our work.
But three major developments have formed a “perfect storm” that is making for rather choppy waters of late.
FIRST
Public Citizen was a pioneer in harnessing email as a key tool our supporters could use to learn about, and participate in, our work — by signing petitions, communicating with elected officials and government agencies, and, yes, funding our modest operating expenses.
We never shied away from including donation requests in our email outreach. But we didn’t ask constantly. And when we did ask, we avoided gimmicks like ALL-CAPS subject lines, garish formatting, gratuitous graphics, misleading “membership status” alerts, and more.
Even now, when we do need to push out a series of fundraising emails, we try to keep them simple and include something interesting.
But over the years — unfortunately for the utility of email itself — more and more organizations have taken to emailing every day, multiple times a day, and abusing cheap techniques that used to be confined to spammers.
What this all means is that email doesn’t work quite as well as it once did. It’s still one of the best ways for a budget-conscious nonprofit like Public Citizen to connect with our hundreds of thousands of activists and supporters all across America.
We just have to email a little more often than we used to.
SECOND
Something is happening right now that hasn’t really happened before.
Many, many people are running to be the Democratic nominee for President of the United States AND they are all conducting highly aggressive email campaigns as part of bankrolling their candidacies.
Even as long as Public Citizen has been doing email, we haven’t been forced to fight for inbox space during December — which, again, is the make-or-break month of our entire year for online donations — with SO many politicians SO willing to exploit email to its breaking point.
Until now.
THIRD
We all woke up sickened on November 9, 2016 — hardly able to believe that Donald Trump had been elected president.
We could have mired in despair, but we did not.
Millions of Americans took to the streets, again and again, to protest Trump and his policies.
It made a difference. It stiffened Democrats’ spines. It stopped the repeal of the Affordable Care Act. It prevented all kinds of atrocities the Trump cabal had planned.
Public Citizen and other organizations’ lawsuits blocked countless dangerous policies. Our and others’ ethics challenges forced out numerous cabinet officials (Tom Price, Scott Pruitt, and Ryan Zinke, to name three).
Yet despite all we have done, Trump has done immeasurable harm. He lies relentlessly. And he appears — though he is not — impervious to standard mechanisms of accountability.
As a result, many of us are feeling burnout, fatigue and — worst of all — that fighting doesn’t make a difference.
These feelings are understandable.
Understandable. But feelings we must resist with every ounce of determination and hope we can muster. Because the sentiment that fighting doesn’t make a difference is totally wrong. It’s the ONLY thing that makes a difference.
If we stop fighting, there is, literally, no telling what Trump will do. On the other hand, if we stay in this together, we will defeat Trumpism along with the bigotry, fear, and greed that gave it rise.
That means, among many things, keeping in touch. Even if you wish I wouldn’t send so many emails.
STILL WITH ME?
With everything on the line — ending the Trump regime, winning Medicare for All, overturning Citizens United, confronting climate disaster, and so much more — your support is more critical than ever.
Please donate right now.
ALL CONTRIBUTIONS WILL BE MATCHED TWO-FOR-ONE UP TO $250,000!
Donate $10 and Public Citizen gets an extra $20.
Donate $25 and Public Citizen gets an extra $50.
Donate $100 and Public Citizen gets an extra $200.
Donate $500 and Public Citizen gets an extra $1,000.
Donate ANY amount and it will be matched two-for-one.
Thank you for reading this.
Thank you for anything you can chip in.
And thank you for everything you do as part of this shared project called Public Citizen.
- Robert Weissman, President of Public Citizen
P.S. Become a Monthly Donor today and EVERY ONE of your first 12 monthly installments will earn the two-for-one match!
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