Democratic Donors: Stop Setting Your Money on Fire

“Rage-giving” may feel good, but it won’t change who has power.

Micah Sifry
GEN

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Photo by Jp Valery on Unsplash

One of my young political heroes is Amanda Litman. We’ve never met, but I’ve followed her career since 2015, when she was the email director for Hillary Clinton’s presidential campaign. That’s not why I admire her. It’s what she did next, after Clinton lost, that so impresses me. She, along with Ross Morales Rocketto, a digital campaign manager, started a brand-new organization called Run for Something. It was one of many new groups that burst onto the scene after Donald Trump’s upset victory shocked many incumbent Democratic politicians and liberal advocacy groups. Instead of bemoaning their loss, or, worse, making noises about finding ways to work harmoniously with the incoming Trump cabal, as a number of Democrats initially did, Litman set out to do the hard work of rebuilding the Democratic base, specifically by encouraging progressives under the age of 40 to run for elective office.

In its first year, Run for Something pulled more than 15,000 young people into its pipeline, offering them coaching in all the organizational skills needed to effectively run for office and lowering the hidden barriers that traditionally have kept the candidate pool limited to ambitious young men with law degrees and connections. They endorsed…

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Micah Sifry
GEN

Co-founder Civic Hall. Publisher of The Connector newsletter (theconnector.substack.com)