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Indivisible Newsletter – November 27, 2022

Posted on November 27, 2022

Indivisibles,

It’s Thanksgiving newsletter time with your host, Ezra! As always, this newsletter is free, and I won’t be asking you for money here — these newsletters are all about building community, developing a shared understanding of the world, and giving you a picture of our ridiculously adorable 2-year-old (scroll to the bottom for that). And since it’s Thanksgiving, I want to give some thanks while giving a peek behind the curtain on how this year in politics played out for us.

Sidenote: normally I say you can find me on Twitter, which is still true here, but I’m increasingly skeptical of the platform with Elon at the helm. I’m starting to explore other platforms, so you can find me on Mastodon here, and on TikTok here where I’ll record a video version of this newsletter. I like Twitter and hope we can maintain a non-troll community there, but I’m also not putting my full faith in the right-wing, conspiracy-theory-spreading man-child who now calls the shots there.

With that, let’s do some reflecting and thanking together.

How we kicked off the midterms

In January of this year, I was out in Arizona marching with Indivisible members from across the state and with MLK Jr’s family encouraging Kyrsten Sinema to side with us over Mitch McConnell. We were calling on her to reform the filibuster and pass the democracy bill protecting our elections, ending gerrymandering, and getting money out of politics. But Sinema instead gave a defiant speech on the floor of the Senate, killing the democracy bill.

This was a rough period for the pro-democracy movement. Sinema and Manchin killed the democracy bill. Our economic agenda was on life support. President Biden had yet to move forward on any inspiring executive action. Talk of an inevitable red wave in the midterms had started to bubble up. What got me through this period was talking with Indivisible leaders about what we do next — and that talk naturally turned to the midterms.

It was at this point that we rolled out our strategy for the midterms. If I spoke to your Indivisible group virtually or in-person anytime this year, you probably heard one thing from me: Our only chance to win in 2022 was by making this election a referendum on MAGA extremism. The specific issue might depend on the community — book burning, support of seditionists, radical attacks on abortion rights. But the throughline was the same: We needed to make voters choose between us and those power-hungry wackadoodle MAGAs.

Indivisible went all in on this strategy. We joined a national messaging collaborative called Protect Our Freedoms with communications guru Anat Shenker-Osorio and Way to Win, who helped keep us both on offense and on message. We launched pilot programs in Pennsylvania and Arizona to help local Indivisible leaders drive public attention to the other side’s extremism. From bird-dogging anti-abortion zealots to gettting chuckles across the state for donning giant broccoli costumes, Indivisible leaders started getting creative for how to force MAGA extremism on the front pages. 

At our national convention this summer with Senators Raphael Warnock and Elizabeth Warren, Indivisible focused on messaging strategies and tactics to drive public attention to MAGA extremists. Our friend Navin Nayak, who leads Center for American Progress Action, led a training around using the language “MAGA Republicans” to drive our point home. Indivisible released a new guide to getting earned media highlighting MAGA extremism and worked with our organizers across the country to help local groups do this work. 

While political prognosticators were running flawed polls and predicting a red wave, those of us on the ground knew there was political power in this approach. 

Book burning is not popular. 
Violent conspiracies to overturn our elections are not popular.
Banning abortion is not popular. 

We believed we were morally right in loudly opposing this scary MAGA extremism, and we believed there was political potency in this approach too.

How we won the strategy debate

While Indivisible were running with our anti-MAGA strategy by the early spring, this was not the dominant position of Democratic Party leaders — at least not yet. Both publicly and through back channels we encouraged Party leaders to join us in this approach to the midterms, but we met resistance. As recently as July — even after the Supreme Court struck down Roe — I heard from senior Democratic leaders that abortion was a “loser” issue to be avoided on the campaign trail. Seriously — I gasped too at the time.

But we kept pushing — we wanted Dems on our side. And in my August newsletter, I was celebrating a victory. We hadn’t won the elections yet, but the media was reporting a shift: Democratic leaders…to focus on calling out Republicans as “extremists.” This was major progress! The Democratic Party was doing something we’re not that used to: It was unifying around a central campaign message. By the fall, this transformation was complete. President Biden’s final two speeches of the campaign were rallying cries on abortion, democracy, and MAGA extremism. The Party was unified and on message headed into the midterms. 

We were thrilled. We were celebrating. A few days later, my spouse/co-founder Leah wrote “The Case for Hope,” making a straightforward case for hope for the midterms. She pointed to GOP overreach on abortion and the Big Lie, the weakness of MAGA candidates winning primaries, and the Democrats seemingly getting their mojo back. The piece holds up well.

But while we were celebrating, much of the professional political world was condescendingly sure we were wrong. Reviewing one of Biden’s speeches on the threat of MAGA extremism to our democracy, the regularly-wrong CNN commentator Chris Cillizza, called this messaging approach a “strategic blunder.” Professional opinion-havers across the political spectrum shared this assessment. Voters don’t care about abortion or democracy! The Democrats are out of touch! A red tsunami is going to come crashing down on all these woefully misguided Democrats! 

At this point though, we had won the strategic debate and there was nothing to do for us but finish the campaign. We wrote hundreds of letters to the editor. We orchestrated spectacles and public events to shine a light on MAGA extremism. We contacted millions of voters — we postcarded, we phone banked, we textbanked, we canvassed. And then we waited for the election results.

How it went down

If I have one personal anecdote from this election that sums up what we achieved, it comes from canvassing a swing district in Washington state. I was knocking doors with Indivisibles in Washington’s 8th — a must-win district that most thought was a tossup. I came across a middle-aged white guy with a backwards baseball cap who told me his top issues this year were “inflation and the economy.” This was the exact kind of voter the political commentators were saying the Democrats were losing by focusing on sideshows like democracy, abortion rights, and right-wing extremism. I asked him who he was supporting in the congressional election and he told me, “Well not the Republican — he’s crazy!” 

We won that race. And not just that race.

You didn’t have to go too far from Washington’s 8th to find another example. Washington’s 3rd was one of Indivisible’s stretch races. It included large swaths of rural Washington, and the district had voted for Trump twice. But the incumbent — a rare anti-seditionist Republican — had lost her primary to a MAGA wackadoodle. The race was such an interesting case study that Michelle Goldberg wrote up a profile of it in the New York Times. And when I was out in the district this fall, what I heard from Indivisible leaders on the ground was this was winnable. So we saw an opening, even as prominent prognosticators like Nate Silver gave the Democrat a 4% chance of winning, and the national Democratic Party largely declined to invest in the race. 

And we won that one too — by less than 1%, but we won! 

Across the country we won similar races — election night was an almost-unending flow of good news updates, which then continued in the days to come. We won “Republican” districts. We flipped the Pennsylvania Senate seat (welcome Senator Fetterman!) and the state House. We picked up governorships and state legislatures. We won secretary of state and attorneys general races. We defeated election deniers up and down the ballot. 

No, we didn’t win everything — you never do in a national election. Indivisibles in New York mourned the loss of several winnable congressional districts along with those of us in Texas, Florida, and California. Among the most painful losses for me was Mandela Barnes’ less-than-1-percent loss to Ron Johnson — in a race Indivisibles across the country worked so hard to win. And while the Republicans managed to gerrymander their way into a House majority, it is a miniscule, disorganized, and weak majority.

Even accepting the losses, this was an historic midterm, arguably without precedent in modern American history. 1934, 1962, 2002. Those are the three examples of a President performing well in his first midterm in the last century. But there was no Great Depression like in 1934. There was no Cuban Missile Crisis like in 1962. There was no terrorist attack like in 2002. And there was no rally-around-the-flag effect boosting presidential approval ratings like in all three. Instead what we had this midterm was anti-democratic MAGA candidates, and all of us focused on making this election a referendum on that extremism. And it worked. Democracy won.

How we’ll keep winning

I listened to the New York Times Daily podcast after the election, How Democrats Defied the Odds. Their conclusions quickly became conventional wisdom in political circles: It turns out focusing on abortion, democracy, and MAGA extremism was politically potent. Who woulda thought! In the days that followed, this became so accepted that it achieved a status of almost being foreordained. 

This was not foreordained. Just the opposite. The conventional wisdom a month ago was that the red wave was coming, and that the Democrats deserved to lose because of their strategic blunder focusing on abortion, democracy, and MAGA extremism.

We did not get lucky. We fought hard for this outcome. 

And in fighting for this we did not just take a bet on our strategic instincts. We didn’t just win an election. We didn’t just make political history. We proved something important: In this country, there is a political price to pay for anti-democratic extremism. 

We fought hard for the political world to learn this lesson. We should hold onto it, repeat it, and proselytize it as we look forward to the future fights against the miniscule MAGA majority in the House, against Trump, against Desantis, and against the right-wing extremists who seek to take away our freedoms and undermine our democracy.

So on this Thanksgiving, I am thankful to be a small part of this movement that has spent the last six years racking up win after win for our democracy. There are more of us than there are of those MAGA weirdos. We’re better organized. We know how to win. We won. We’re winning. And we will win again.

In solidarity,

Ezra

Ezra Levin

Co-Executive Director

Pronouns: He/him


Indivisible Action is a Hybrid Political Action Committee fueled by the grassroots movement to win elections and build local, independent progressive power nationwide. Read more about the formation of our PAC here.

Grassroots donations, not foundations or large gifts, are our single largest source of funding. That means we’re accountable to, and fueled by, Indivisibles on the ground. Chip in $7 to keep fueling our movement. 

To give by mail, send a check to Indivisible Action, PO Box 43135, Washington, DC 20010.

Contributions to Indivisible Action are not tax-deductible.

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Benton County WA Democrats
Today is the LAST DAY TO VOTE!You have until 8:00pm to drop off your ballot. ---- Ballot Drop Box Locations ----📍Kennewick- Benton County Campus, 7122 W. Okanogan Place (Drive up)- Benton County Elections, 7122 W. Okanogan Place Bldg. F- Finley Middle School, 37208 S. Finley Road- Kennewick City Hall, 524 S. Auburn Street (Drive up)📍Richland- Badger Mountain Community Park, Keene Road (Drive up)- Jefferson Park, Symons Street- WSU Tri-Cities, 2770 Crimson Way (Drive up)📍West Richland- West Richland City Hall, 3100 Belmont Blvd. (Drive up)- West Richland Library, 3803 W. Van Giesen Street (Drive up)📍Benton City- City Hall, 1009 Dale Avenue📍Prosser- Prosser Courthouse, 620 Market Street ... See MoreSee Less

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Benton County WA Democrats

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Benton County WA Democrats
FYI - It’s too late to mail your ballot!You will need to drop it off at an official drop box by November 4th at 8 PM.You can check that your ballot was received, find drop box locations, and get all your last-minute voting info in the Indivisible Tri-Cities WA Voter Toolbox:👉 linktr.ee/IndivisibleTriCitiesVoterTools🗳️ Tri-Cities! It’s too late to mail your ballot.✅ Instead, drop it off at an official drop box by November 4th at 8 PM.You can check that your ballot was received, find drop box locations, and get all your last-minute voting info in our Voter Toolbox:👉 linktr.ee/IndivisibleTriCitiesVoterToolsEvery vote matters. Let’s finish strong! 💪#GetOutTheVote #IndivisibleTriCitiesWA ... See MoreSee Less

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Benton County WA Democrats

2 weeks ago

Benton County WA Democrats
Your voice matters. The decisions shaping our neighborhoods, schools, housing, transit, and quality of life are made right here.VOTE NOW!You have ONE WEEK left to fill out your ballot! Election Day is on November 4th. ... See MoreSee Less

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Benton County WA Democrats

2 weeks ago

Benton County WA Democrats
There has been a lot of conversation and questions regarding the City of Richland Charter Amendment Measure No. 1 (aka Richland Districting). Background:Since Richland was incorporated, 67 years ago, its population has more than doubled (from 24,000 to over 60,000) and its land area has significantly expanded (from 8 square miles to 35 square miles). In a nutshell:The current at-large system, which was adopted in 1958, means that everyone in Richland votes for all 7 City Council positions. Many citizens of Richland have felt under represented and argue that the city has outgrown its current at-large system. ✅ Voting YES on Measure No. 1 supports changing the City Council election structure so that five of the seven council members are elected by geographic district. This is intended to improve accountability and achieve more even representation across the city.❌ Voting No on Measure No. 1 supports keeping the City Council election structure the way that it is.Richland voters, the choice is yours. Do you feel fairly represented by the current system? Or would you rather have council members serve both their district and the city? -------------- Need more details? Here are some common questions:❓ Question: How were the districts created?Answer: The districts were created by following Washington State law using 2020 census population data and GIS precinct data layers. The district boundaries are contiguous, and are equal in population. Council members serve both their district and the city as a whole, preserving teamwork while preventing lockstep conformity. - A Better Richland (ABR) used the state law (RCW 29A.76.010) and guidance from the Municipal Research and Services Center to draw the districts.- The state law requires 1) each district be as close as possible in population, 2) that the districts be composed of whole precincts, and 3) the precincts in a district be contiguous.- Each proposed district has almost exactly 12,000 residents per 2020 census data. The population of each Richland precinct (a geographical area defined by the state for electoral purposes) varies from 361 to 2,219 people. The whole, contiguous precincts for each district are listed in the proposed charter amendment.❓ Question: What is going on with the Proposed District 2?This proposed district takes that particular shape due to the population density in that area and the guidelines listed above (continuous districts with approximately 12,000 residents).❓ Question: Is this politically motivated? Is this gerrymandering?Answer: The proposal is a non-partisan effort supported by Richland voters across the political spectrum. Claims that districts are politically motivated or gerrymandered are completely unfounded. Check out the proposed district boundaries at abetterrichland.com and decide for yourself: experience.arcgis.com/experience/40eb8af4aef640b5a5cba2ef523b1bc2/page/Page?org=s-d-gSources:app.leg.wa.gov/rcw/default.aspx?cite=29A.76.010mrsc.org/explore-topics/elections/basics/district-based-elections?fbclid=IwZXh0bgNhZW0CMTAAYnJpZB...www.abetterrichland.com/charter-amendment-1 www.sos.wa.gov/elections/data-research/reports-data-and-statistics/precinct-shapefiles?fbclid=IwZ... ... See MoreSee Less

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Benton County WA Democrats

3 weeks ago

Benton County WA Democrats
Still not sure who or what to vote for?Here are two great nonpartisan resources:✅ TriCitiesVote.com is a nonpartisan, community-driven website that provides key information—including candidates' views, donors, and endorsements—to help you make informed decisions.✅ Indivisible Tri-Cities Voter Tool (linktr.ee/IndivisibleTriCitiesVoterTools) is a one-stop guide for local voters. From Essential Voting Links to Get To Know Your Candidates, everything you need is in one convenient place!And don’t forget to VOTE! ... See MoreSee Less

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Party Calendar

November 2025

Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat
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  • TCD Democrats Protest Tuesday

    TCD Democrats Protest Tuesday

    November 4, 2025  3:45 PM - 5:45 PM
    John Dam Plaza, 815 George Washington Way, Richland, WA 99352, USA

    "Protest Tuesday" at John Dam Plaza on GWay in Richland from 3:45pm to 5:45PM. Bring your own sign or flag or one will be provided. Join our stalwarts and protest whatever is bothering you most that day.
    https://www.facebook.com/events/999996418325987/999996484992647/

    See more details

  • Richland City Council

    Richland City Council

    November 4, 2025  7:30 PM - 8:30 PM
    Richland City Hall, 505 Swift Blvd, Richland, WA 99352, USA

    See more details

• •
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6
  • Indivisible TC - Founder Hour, Thurs

    Indivisible TC - Founder Hour, Thurs

    November 6, 2025  12:00 PM - 1:00 PM
    The Zoom link can be found in the most recent Indivisible TC Do Something Email Newsletter.

    This is a Zoom meeting. The link to the meeting is provided in the weekly Do-Something email. When you join the organization at this link: https://www.indivisibletricitieswa.org/join-us , you will receive this newsletter.

    Join in and ask questions, get updates or just say hi! These are held every Thursday at 12pm and occasional weekends.

    See more details

•
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  • Benton County Executive Board

    Benton County Executive Board

    November 10, 2025  6:30 PM - 8:30 PM
    Meeting details will be provided over email from the Benton County Democrats Chair.

    See more details

•
11
  • TCD Democrats Protest Tuesday

    TCD Democrats Protest Tuesday

    November 11, 2025  3:45 PM - 5:45 PM
    John Dam Plaza, 815 George Washington Way, Richland, WA 99352, USA

    "Protest Tuesday" at John Dam Plaza on GWay in Richland from 3:45pm to 5:45PM. Bring your own sign or flag or one will be provided. Join our stalwarts and protest whatever is bothering you most that day.
    https://www.facebook.com/events/999996418325987/999996484992647/

    See more details

  • Kennewick City Council Workshop

    Kennewick City Council Workshop

    November 11, 2025  6:30 PM - 8:00 PM

    See more details

• •
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13
  • Indivisible TC - Founder Hour, Thurs

    Indivisible TC - Founder Hour, Thurs

    November 13, 2025  12:00 PM - 1:00 PM
    The Zoom link can be found in the most recent Indivisible TC Do Something Email Newsletter.

    This is a Zoom meeting. The link to the meeting is provided in the weekly Do-Something email. When you join the organization at this link: https://www.indivisibletricitieswa.org/join-us , you will receive this newsletter.

    Join in and ask questions, get updates or just say hi! These are held every Thursday at 12pm and occasional weekends.

    See more details

•
14
  • Tri-City Democrats - Friday, November 14, 6:00 PM

    Tri-City Democrats - Friday, November 14, 6:00 PM

    November 14, 2025  6:00 PM - 8:00 PM
    Round Table Pizza 3201 W Court St, Pasco

    Greetings fellow Democrats!

    It's getting cold out, so we're going to move indoors for our winter gatherings. This month we'll meet at the round Table Pizza on Court Street in Pasco. November 14 at 6pm Pacific. Come gather with like-minded folks and share some fellowship, food and beverages. As is our normal practice, Tri-City Democrats will order several pizzas to share. We'll have the donation box available for those who care to financially support the group. Some of our generous members are likely to purchase pitchers of beer to share. If you want the salad bar or soft drinks, you are on your own for those items.

    At this writing, we do not have a planned program, but we will have 'Hate Has no Home Here' signs available. We are also in the process of proposing some minor alterations to our bylaws, which we may discuss briefly and possibly vote on.

    See more details

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  • Indivisible Tri-Cities: Working Meeting

    Indivisible Tri-Cities: Working Meeting

    November 15, 2025  1:00 PM - 2:30 PM
    Keewaydin Library 405 S Dayton St, Kennewick

    The event will feature a special guest, Malena “Tweeter” Pinkham (they/them), a local civil legal aid attorney who was born and raised in the Tri-Cities.

    Tweeter is an enrolled member of the Confederated Tribes of Grand Ronde and has dedicated their career to advancing equity and justice in Washington. They previously served as in-house counsel for the Confederated Tribes of the Umatilla Indian Reservation for seven years and continue to lead in community advocacy through their work with the Tri-City Intertribal Org, Washington Immigrant Solidarity Network, and as a board member for both Building Changes and the ACLU of Washington. Tweeter earned both their BASW and JD from the University of Washington

    See more details

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  • Save Our Workers, Save Our Healthcare

    Save Our Workers, Save Our Healthcare

    November 18, 2025  3:00 PM - 5:00 PM
    John Dam Plaza 815 George Washington Way, Richland

    We’re having a peaceful local protest on Tuesday, November 18 at John Dam Plaza from 3-5 p.m.

    Our themes are:
    👷 Protect our Workers!
    🩺 Protect our Healthcare!

    We feel:
    🧑‍🤝‍🧑 The people should be at the TOP of the government’s agenda, not toward the bottom.

    What to bring:
    🚦Your signs on how YOU feel about Tri-Cities workers!
    🍴Your signs on how you feel about Healthcare, SNAP, Medicaid, and more!
    🧸 Also please bring a non-perishable food item and/or a gift for a child.

    We’re teaming up with Communities in Schools and local food banks to help Tri-Citians in need!

    See more details

  • TCD Democrats Protest Tuesday

    TCD Democrats Protest Tuesday

    November 18, 2025  3:45 PM - 5:45 PM
    John Dam Plaza, 815 George Washington Way, Richland, WA 99352, USA

    "Protest Tuesday" at John Dam Plaza on GWay in Richland from 3:45pm to 5:45PM. Bring your own sign or flag or one will be provided. Join our stalwarts and protest whatever is bothering you most that day.
    https://www.facebook.com/events/999996418325987/999996484992647/

    See more details

  • Richland City Council

    Richland City Council

    November 18, 2025  7:30 PM - 8:30 PM
    Richland City Hall, 505 Swift Blvd, Richland, WA 99352, USA

    See more details

• • •
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  • NDTC PCO Training - What is a Democratic Precinct Chair?

    NDTC PCO Training - What is a Democratic Precinct Chair?

    November 19, 2025  10:00 AM - 11:00 AM
    Richland Public Library Conference Room B

    It is recognized this time is not convenient for working people. It is likely the National Democratic Training Committee will record this training and make it available at a future date.

    If you are able to attend we look forward to seeing you there.

    Karen and Ken Buxton

    See more details

•
20
  • BADGER FORUM: Transgender Athletes Participation in School Sports

    BADGER FORUM: Transgender Athletes Participation in School Sports

    November 20, 2025  12:00 PM - 1:00 PM
    https://badgers.clubexpress.com/content.aspx?page_id=4091&club_id=392306

    The Columbia Basin Badger Club invites you to join a thoughtful and respectful discussion on transgender athlete participation in school sports. This timely program explores the complex intersection of athletics, identity, fairness, and inclusion.

    As communities and schools navigate evolving policies and perspectives, our goal is to promote understanding through civil discourse and informed dialogue.

    See more details

  • Indivisible TC - Founder Hour, Thurs

    Indivisible TC - Founder Hour, Thurs

    November 20, 2025  12:00 PM - 1:00 PM
    The Zoom link can be found in the most recent Indivisible TC Do Something Email Newsletter.

    This is a Zoom meeting. The link to the meeting is provided in the weekly Do-Something email. When you join the organization at this link: https://www.indivisibletricitieswa.org/join-us , you will receive this newsletter.

    Join in and ask questions, get updates or just say hi! These are held every Thursday at 12pm and occasional weekends.

    See more details

• •
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  • Indivisible Book and Knitting Club

    Indivisible Book and Knitting Club

    November 22, 2025  11:15 AM - 12:15 PM
    Richland Public Library, Conference Rm B

    Book this month:

    Dreaming of Home: How We Turn Fear Into Pride, Power, and Real Change
    By: Christina Jiménez

    See more details

•
23
  • Paint & Sip at Monterrosa's

    Paint & Sip at Monterrosa's

    November 23, 2025  12:00 PM - 3:00 PM
    Monterosso's Italian Restaurant 1026 Lee Blvd, Richland

    The 8th LD is having a fun fund raiser on November 23rd. Come, mingle and create something beautiful with the 8th LD Democrats

    See more details

•
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25
  • TCD Democrats Protest Tuesday

    TCD Democrats Protest Tuesday

    November 25, 2025  3:45 PM - 5:45 PM
    John Dam Plaza, 815 George Washington Way, Richland, WA 99352, USA

    "Protest Tuesday" at John Dam Plaza on GWay in Richland from 3:45pm to 5:45PM. Bring your own sign or flag or one will be provided. Join our stalwarts and protest whatever is bothering you most that day.
    https://www.facebook.com/events/999996418325987/999996484992647/

    See more details

  • Richland City Council Workshop

    Richland City Council Workshop

    November 25, 2025  6:00 PM - 8:00 PM
    Richland City Hall, 505 Swift Blvd, Richland, WA 99352, USA

    See more details

• •
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27
  • Indivisible TC - Founder Hour, Thurs

    Indivisible TC - Founder Hour, Thurs

    November 27, 2025  12:00 PM - 1:00 PM
    The Zoom link can be found in the most recent Indivisible TC Do Something Email Newsletter.

    This is a Zoom meeting. The link to the meeting is provided in the weekly Do-Something email. When you join the organization at this link: https://www.indivisibletricitieswa.org/join-us , you will receive this newsletter.

    Join in and ask questions, get updates or just say hi! These are held every Thursday at 12pm and occasional weekends.

    See more details

  • BCDCC General Public Meeting

    BCDCC General Public Meeting

    November 27, 2025  6:30 PM - 8:30 PM
    Meeting details will be provided over email from the Benton County Democrats Chair.

    See more details

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