Rich Democrats consider funding anti-Trump activists
Groups can pitch to contributors at Democracy Alliance
A network of some of the nation’s wealthiest Democratic donors is weighing providing money and support to several activist groups that have cropped up since Election Day to challenge President Trump and his agenda.
Organizers of January’s Women’s March on Washington and leaders of Indivisible will make presentations this week to the Democracy Alliance when the influential donor coalition holds its private spring meeting in Washington, the group’s president, Gara LaMarche, said.
LaMarche said he has sought to connect alliance contributors to Indivisible, one of the groups at the forefront of anti-Trump efforts. Its organizers, led by former Democratic congressional aides, created a how-to manual “for resisting the Trump agenda” that is modeled on conservative Tea Party tactics and has encouraged shows of opposition at congressional town hall meetings.
More than 5,500 groups use the guide to fight administration policies, organizers said.
“Everybody is impressed by what’s come up in a grass-roots sense and doing what we can to support that and connect that up to a larger infrastructure,” LaMarche told USA TODAY.
The alliance, aligned with billionaire financier George Soros, also is weighing building a pool of money that can be deployed for “rapid response” work by other liberal groups on an array of issues, such as challenging the Trump administration on the deportation of undocumented immigrants.
In a recent Fox News interview, White House spokesman Sean Spicer called the liberal activism at sometimes rowdy congressional town halls a “very paid, Astroturf-type movement.” Trump tweeted that many of the “so-called angry crowds” confronting Republicans were “planned out by liberal activists.”
Ezra Levin, a former congressional aide who helped start Indivisible with his wife, Leah Greenberg, and other ex-Capitol Hill staffers, said the group “is very much led on the ground” by activists determined to take action against Trump and is not under the sway of any one donor or group.
Levin said the group has received more than 10,000 donations totaling more than $500,000 since last January through ActBlue, a fundraising engine for liberal candidates and causes. Levin said the group wants to continue to have a broad fundraising base, even as it looks to groups such as the Democracy Alliance for additional help.
“If the Democracy Alliance and other folks in this space ... are in- terested in supporting a broad movement that is fundamentally led at the ground level,” he said, “we think the movement needs their support.”
Levin and Greenberg, both of whom worked on Capitol Hill during the rise of the Tea Party, and a couple of dozen volunteers helped draft their 23-page antiTrump guide, which was posted as a Google document two weeks before Christmas.
It quickly went viral and has become a manual on how to pressure lawmakers that Levin said is used by groups registered in every congressional district. That growth, he said, “mostly speaks to the level of energy out there and the sheer scale of the opposition to this president’s agenda.”
It’s not unusual for established organizations to align with activists. Conservative groups — such as FreedomWorks and Americans for Prosperity, founded by billionaires Charles and David Koch — worked with Tea Party-fueled activists to aggressively oppose President Obama’s agenda, helping fuel a Republican takeover of the U.S. House of Representatives in 2010.
In recent years, the Democracy Alliance has focused on supporting a network of liberal groups working on long-term issues, such as boosting voting rights and increasing the minimum wage. It has made a big investment in building liberal power in the states before the 2020 Census, which will shape the next round of legislative redistricting. The GOP redistricting successes after the last Census in 2010 helped cement Republican power in Congress and the states.