Take Action
Ready to fight for
something real?
A 414,000-word plan means nothing if no one acts on it. Here is how you go from knowing to doing - starting today.
Step One
Register to Vote.
This is not optional. This is the minimum. Takes 2 minutes. Changes everything. And then do it for the people around you.
Voter registration status can expire. Purges happen. Check your status now, even if you've voted before. And register your partner, your friends, your kids when they turn 18.
Every election matters
- Federal elections - President, Senate, House. The big ones everyone knows. Vote in every one, including primaries.
- State elections - Governor, legislature, attorney general. State law governs abortion, labor rights, voting rules, and more.
- Local elections - City council, county commissioners, school board, sheriff. These races often decide everything - and get decided by dozens of votes.
- Judicial elections - State supreme courts, trial judges. Often uncontested. Show up and they become contested.
- Special elections - The ones held off-cycle when nobody's looking. They matter as much as any other.
Step Two
Join the Movement.
Get updates on Project 2029, organizing tools, and community. Be the first to know when local chapters launch. This is how movements are built - one person at a time, until it's a groundswell.
No spam. No selling your data. Just updates when it matters.
Count me in
Step Three
Print & Share.
Digital matters. But a piece of paper in someone's hand reaches people who aren't online. Project 2029 has one-pagers for every issue and every chapter.
Issue One-Pagers
29 one-page explainers covering every major policy reform. Plain language. Key stats. Print-ready.
View on GitHubChapter One-Pagers
31 chapter summaries - one for every federal agency covered in Project 2029. Great for town halls.
View on GitHubStudy Guides
Activist and educator study guides - structured curricula for people who want to go deeper and teach others.
View on GitHubStep Four
Organize Locally.
National change starts with local organizing. These organizations are doing the work. Find your people.
Indivisible
Local chapters across the country focused on holding elected officials accountable and building progressive power.
Visit siteWorking Families Party
Progressive electoral power - running candidates, endorsing champions, and building long-term political power in states.
Visit siteSunrise Movement
Youth-led climate and economic justice organizing. Building the political will for a Green New Deal.
Visit sitePoor People's Campaign
A National Call for Moral Revival - organizing across race, religion, and party to fight poverty, racism, and militarism.
Visit siteOur Revolution
Progressive electoral power. Endorsing, training, and supporting progressive candidates at every level.
Visit siteRun for Something
Recruiting and supporting young, diverse candidates to run for down-ballot offices. Start local. Change everything.
Visit siteStep Five
Call Your Representatives.
Phone calls work. Not emails - calls. A member of Congress's staff counts calls and reports to the member. A high call volume on a specific issue changes behavior.
You need three numbers: your U.S. Senator (you have two), and your U.S. House member. Call them. Be specific. Name the legislation. Ask for a position.
Find Your RepresentativesWhat to say when they answer
That's it. That's the whole script. Takes 60 seconds. Do it for every issue you care about.
Step Six
Run for Something.
Every policy in Project 2029 starts at the local level. The school board member who fights for equitable funding. The city council member who passes tenant protections. The state legislator who expands Medicaid. That could be you.
You don't need to run for Congress. Start local. The pipeline runs from city council to state legislature to Congress - but the most important races are at the bottom of the ticket, where almost nobody runs and almost nobody shows up.
Where to start
- ● School Board: Often decided by 50-100 votes. Sets curriculum, budget, and hiring.
- ● City Council: Controls zoning, police, local budget, and tenant protections.
- ● County Commissioner: Controls property tax, social services, and elections administration.
- ● State Legislature: Sets state law on voting, labor, healthcare, education funding.
- ● District Attorney: The most consequential local office almost nobody thinks about.
Step Seven
Share this. All of it.
Every person who reads this is a potential organizer. Share the site. Share the issues pages. Share specific reforms with people who care about them. Word of mouth is still the most powerful force in politics.