Abortion Rights Actions – You Can Make A Difference

Life in a Post-Roe America Toolkit

Compiled and updated by IMC’s Feminist Action Team

We need all hands on deck to protect reproductive rights! This toolkit, which is updated regularly, has links to a wide variety of actions you can take whether you have only a few minutes to spare or more time to spend. Please share!

Since the Dobbs decision overturned Roe v Wade, 41 states have some abortion restrictions and 14 states have a total ban. Massachusetts is now a target of religious extremists who want to turn back the clock on our rights.

Share this toolkit at https://bit.ly//ROEToolkit with your friends. You will find imporant actions such as:

  1. Protecting Reproductive rights in Massachuetts
  2. Working with other Reproductive Rights Activists
  3. How to help someone who needs an abortion
  4. Where to donate money
  5. How to pass Critical Legislation in Congress
  6. How to protect your privacy
  7. How to share information on social media
  8. How to cut ties with Walgreens
  9. How to get more information or keep up with latest news
  10. Encourage training or other options for abortion providers.

For inspiration, please listen to the songs performed at our June 2024 Reproductive Rights Rally and Denali’s heartfelt recounting of her friend’s abortion in 1969.

Words to Win By: Anat Shenker-Osorio & Indivisible

We were so inspired at the IMC Statewide Convening on June 9th by Anat Shenker-Os0rio’s video presentation of Words to Win By. Founder of ASO Communications, and host of Words to Win By podcast, Shenker-Osorio’s work has led to progressive electoral and policy victories around the world. Learn about what she calls the power of “mobi-suasion” which uses the powers of persuasion and mobilization! Follow her on facebook and share her posts to get the word out!

Click on the Image to see her presentation!

Trump’s Radical Platform, Project 2025

Some Frequently Asked Questions

So What is Project 2025 Anyway?

Project 2025 represents a sweeping vision for our nation’s future, encompassing a wide range of policy proposals that reflect regressive and harmful ideologies. It aspires to resurrect and amplify the initiatives championed by the Trump administration, spanning policy areas like census citizenship questions, the promotion of Christian nationalism, climate change denial, economic policies that favor the wealthy, attacks on education and scientific research, the erosion of democratic norms through expanded presidential powers, destructive foreign policies, assaults on press freedom, regressive healthcare reforms, draconian immigration policies, discriminatory practices against marginalized communities, the politicization of law enforcement, reckless approaches to national security, infringements on reproductive rights, and neglect of sustainable transportation solutions.

Who’s Behind this Right Wing Manifesto?

In 2022, Heritage Foundation president Kevin Roberts originated Project 2025 following incidents where civil service workers resisted Trump’s radical policy implementations, such as the Muslim travel ban and his response to the George Floyd protests. The Mandate, published in April 2023, was authored by hundreds of conservatives, including former Trump administration officials. The project is funded by dark money contributions linked to conservative donor Leonard Leo and fossil fuel billionaire Charles Koch. While other Republican primary candidates were briefed on the project, it is primarily a Trump-driven endeavor. Reports surfaced of plans for a potential second Trump presidency, including targeting and jailing critics, led by extremists like Kash Patel, Steve Bannon, and Mike Davis, who openly spoke of a “three-week reign of terror” if Trump names him acting attorney general.

Can You Give Some Policy Specifics?

Census Citizenship Question: The project seeks to revive a controversial effort to include a citizenship question in the U.S. census despite concerns about its potential to discourage participation and inaccurately represent the population.

Christian Nationalism: Project 2025 advocates for integrating Christian nationalist ideology into government and public life, raising concerns about the erosion of the separation between church and state and excluding non-Christian perspectives.

Climate Change Mitigation: The project opposes critical efforts to mitigate climate change, prioritizing the interests of fossil fuel industries over the urgent need to transition to renewable energy sources and reduce greenhouse gas emissions.

Economy: It promotes economic policies that primarily benefit the wealthy and large corporations, advocating for tax cuts and deregulation while neglecting investments in social programs and infrastructure that could help working-class Americans.

Education and Research: Project 2025 proposes drastic cuts to federal education funding and eliminating important programs like free school meals, undermining efforts to ensure equal access to education and support for vulnerable students.

Expansion of Presidential Powers: It seeks to consolidate power in the hands of the president, threatening the independence of federal agencies and undermining democratic checks and balances.

Foreign Affairs: The project promotes an aggressive and isolationist approach to foreign policy, prioritizing military strength over diplomacy and cooperation with international allies.

Journalism: It aims to undermine press freedom by questioning accommodations for journalists and promoting a narrative that aligns with its conservative agenda.

Healthcare: Project 2025 advocates for regressive healthcare policies that restrict access to essential services and discriminate against marginalized communities, including transgender individuals and low-income families.

Immigration Reforms: It promotes harsh immigration policies that prioritize deportation and border security over compassion and human rights, ignoring the contributions of immigrants to society.

Issues of Identity: The project promotes discriminatory policies that marginalize LGBTQ+ individuals and people of color, rejecting efforts to promote diversity and inclusion in society.

Law Enforcement: It seeks to politicize law enforcement agencies and undermine their independence, threatening civil liberties and perpetuating systemic injustice.

National Security: Project 2025 prioritizes military strength over diplomacy and international cooperation, risking conflict and instability on the global stage.

Reproductive Issues: It promotes restrictive policies that infringe upon reproductive rights and deny individuals access to essential healthcare services, including abortion and contraception.

Transportation: The project opposes investments in sustainable transportation infrastructure, prioritizing the interests of polluting industries over public health and environmental conservation.

What Can I Do to Stop Project 2025?

Here’s how you can help (be sure to find action links below.)

  1. Spread the Word with Effective Messaging
  2. Work to Elect Democratic Candidates
  3. Help Democrats Update their Voter Registration
  4. Get Out the Democratic Vote
Can You Recommend Actions to Spread the Word?

Yep! Indivisible Freedom Writers has created a social media toolkit. Choose a pre-made meme and click to share it on your platform of choice.

Do You Have Actions to Elect Dems to the House, Senate & White House?

Glad you asked! That’s what Turn Purple 2 Blue is all about. We have pages for each.

How Can I Help Register Voters and Get Out the Democratic Vote?

We have phonebanks and postcards!

John Oliver has a great presentation on P2025. Known for deep investigative reporting on very dry subjects interspersed with silly humor, he really explains how the attack on the civil service will work. Watch at 12:44 if you want to skip to that.

Read Project 2025 in its entirety.

Holding Nevada is Crucial and Within Our Reach

While recent events in Nevada are troubling, this is no time to freak out. It’s not too late for us to impact the November election. For nearly two decades, Nevada has been a Democratic stronghold, driven by a youthful, diverse population and strong labor unions. However, recent polls show Donald Trump leading President Biden, attributed to voter frustrations over housing costs, inflation, and gas prices. In 2020, Biden narrowly won Nevada by 2.4 points, but now Trump leads among young voters and Hispanic voters. This critical swing state’s slow economic recovery from the pandemic and high living costs are significant factors in Biden’s declining support. Despite Biden’s efforts to address these issues, economic discontent persists. Increasing voter registration and turnout in Nevada is imperative to maintain Democratic control and counter the growing influence of the Republican Party.

The Biden campaign remains hopeful, relying on Nevada’s history of late-breaking Democratic support and a strong ground game led by the influential Culinary Workers Union. They plan to emphasize issues like abortion rights, hoping to mobilize voters with a potential ballot measure to enshrine abortion access in the state constitution. The Biden campaign also highlights job creation and infrastructure projects, aiming to shift voter perception through extensive outreach and increased visits from Biden, Harris, and other surrogates. However, Trump’s relentless presence and the fallacy of his strength on economic issues, coupled with the difficulty of reaching a population with dynamic influx and outflow, pose a significant challenge to Biden’s re-election efforts in Nevada.

“Nothing is likelier to bolster Mr. Biden’s chances than abortion, an issue that has aided Democratic candidates since the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade in 2022, ending a constitutional right to the procedure. Even in conservative states, voters have turned out in droves to back abortion rights. Nevada is likely to have a measure on the November ballot that would enshrine access to abortion until fetal viability, or about 24 weeks, in the state’s Constitution.”

– Kellen Browning and Nicholas Nehamas, New york times

Sam Brown, front-running Republican opponent of incumbent Nevada Senator Jacky Rosen, is flip-flopping his stance on abortion and distancing himself from his previous positions while downplaying his views on the issue. Like other Republicans in the current election cycle, Brown deflects by saying abortion legislation should be determined by states, indicating he wouldn’t support a federal ban due to Nevada’s constitutional protections. However, Rosen’s campaign noted Brown’s past involvement in and support of anti-abortion organizations. It said he “is a direct threat to Nevadans’ reproductive freedom, and he cannot be trusted to protect abortion rights in the Senate.”

The Culinary Union Local 226 and close affiliate Bartenders Union Local 165, significant political players in Nevada, have recently withdrawn their endorsements from 17 incumbent state-level Democratic lawmakers ahead of the primary election. Together, these unions represent 60,000 workers in the gaming, hotel, and food service industries of Las Vegas and Reno. This move follows the lawmakers’ support for Senate Bill 441, which repealed a daily hotel room cleaning mandate from the COVID-19 pandemic. Though these influential unions have withdrawn support, only four affected candidates face opponents in the primary, and the unions have indicated they will reassess endorsements before November.

While we can’t discount the obstacles, we have strong allies in Nevada. In East Las Vegas, where many residents work long hours in hospitality and culinary jobs, political engagement thrives through “The Little Garage,” a community hub initiated in 2016. This garage-turned-outpost hosts political activities, including phone banks, canvassing, and visits from prominent Democrats. Its approach fosters neighborly interactions and encourages meaningful dialogue. The Little Garage and other grassroots groups have been impactful in electoral victories like Catherine Cortez-Masto’s Senate win by less than one percentage point in 2022, and these groups exemplify the power of community engagement in shaping democratic outcomes.

Despite challenges, Biden and Democrats remain determined. They believe in the resilience of Nevada’s electorate and their party’s ability to connect with voters on crucial issues. With a persistent commitment to addressing economic concerns, advocating for workers’ rights, supporting abortion rights, and leveraging grassroots support, the campaigns plan to reverse momentum and secure victory in Nevada on election day. Holding Nevada is crucial and within our reach; here’s how you can help:

This is a Choice that Could Not Be Clearer

Text of Ken Burns 2024 Commencement Address | Brandeis.


Burns said,

[I]f I have learned anything over those years, it’s that there’s only “us.” There is no “them.” And whenever someone suggests to you, whomever it may be in your life that there’s a “them,” run away. “Othering” is the simplistic binary way to make and identify enemies, but it is also the surest way to your own self imprisonment, which brings me to a moment I’ve dreaded [because it] forces me to suspend my longstanding attempt at neutrality.


There is no real choice this November. There is only the perpetuation, however flawed and feeble you might perceive it, of our fragile 249-year-old experiment or the entropy that will engulf and destroy us if we take the other route.


The presumptive Republican nominee is the opioid of all opioids, an easy cure for what some believe is the solution to our myriad pains and problems. When in fact, with him, you end up re-enslaved with an even bigger problem, a worse affliction and addiction, “a bigger delusion” [and] our national suicide as Mr. Lincoln prophesies[d].


Do not be seduced by easy equalization. There is nothing equal about this equation. We are at an existential crossroads in our political and civic lives. This is a choice that could not be clearer.

Heather Cox Richardson “We are in the Middle of a Movement”

Our favorite professor, Heather Cox Richardson, inspired Indivisibles this week during the May Statewide Call. She reminded us that history is filled with ordinary individuals who have made an extraordinary difference just by speaking out to those around them, neighbor-to-neighbor-like! You can watch the IMC Statewide Call with historian Heather Cox Richardson below.

Current Mood: The Margin of Effort

Update: 8/27/24: Current Mood: Hope and Determination! Lately there has been constistant upwards polling trends for Harris/Walz. This encouraging news shows that potential voters are tuning in. Now we need to convert this enthusiam to actual ballots cast. Robert Hubbell (First Edition) says it best:

Despite significant improvement in every swing state, the race remains within the margin of error in reputable polls. If we can continue the progress and momentum through September, we have every reason to believe that Kamala Harris will pull ahead of Trump in swing states by a margin that indicates an incontestable lead.

In other words, we have every reason to be hopeful but no reason to be complacent. We must sustain the intensity of the last month and follow-through on our personal commitments to help Kamala and Tim win!

May 31, 2024 Are you stressing about the latest poll showing alarming support for Trump?   We can’t just say “ignore polls” because we use them as well to show overwhelming support for legal abortion, contraception, IVF and gun safety.  What you need to know is that all polls are not created equally.  Let’s look at some examples of the different ways polls can be manipulated, and how to evaluate them.

Who Created the Poll and Why?

In addition to the obvious right wing “think tanks,” the profit-seeking media also has a different goal than objective truth. Robert Hubbell described it so succinctly in his May 14th newsletter:  

“Polling has become big business for major media outlets. They get to write news stories in which they are star actors. The NY Times produces presidential polls on a monthly basis, guaranteeing exclusive stories in which it designs, conducts, and interprets polls that become front-page news for the Times. Create the news, report on the news you created, and interpret that same news for the public….

The NYTimes polls consistently overweight Trump’s prospects, which the Times dutifully reports, even though most of its findings show an effectively tied race. The Times analysis delves into subgroups with sample sizes so small the error bars render them meaningless.The Times treats its own polls as front-page news, but when polls showing more favorable results for Biden are reported by other outlets in the ensuing weeks, they are ignored by the Times. Because, well, those polls weren’t designed, conducted, and interpreted by the Times…”

Who is the pollster talking to?

In Dan Rather’s newsletter “Steady,” he talks about how many times polls have been poor predictors of actual results.   In 2020, Biden won by a narrower margin than predicted. Rather explains that “It turns out pollsters didn’t factor in enough white, non-college-educated voters, who apparently are less likely to answer pollsters’ questions. They also happen to be Trump’s biggest support base.”

In addition, pollsters still have not adjusted to modern technology, depending on techniques developed well before cell phones existed. “Pollsters are struggling to keep up with changing technology. Not long ago, data was collected by calling voters at home on landlines. Now with the ubiquity of cell phones with caller ID, answer rates for pollsters have been plummeting. Also, some folks, maybe more than we think, just flat-out lie, to mislead the pollsters.”  

What Questions are the Polls Asking?  

The Roper Center, an old and highly respected pollster, has listed 20 questions that journalists should ask before they report a poll and their editor slaps on a highly provocative title to get clicks.  They recommend examining the wording of the questions asked, which can reveal the bias of the group paying for the poll.  But did you know the order of the questions matter too? The answers can be subtly manipulated, intentionally or not.  For example, in economically troubled times, if the interviewer asks about the economy before he asks about the person’s approval of the president, the reported approval will be lower than if the order of questions was reversed.  

How is the data reported? 

Talking Points Memo says that “As we’ve noted a few times, this has become a consistent pattern in this presidential race: Joe Biden does substantially better in likely voter polls. … A Likely Voter screen is the pollster’s attempt to poll the actual voting electorate as opposed to the population of registered voters. So that distinction is very key. And if they diverge you really want to be doing better with Likely Voters, as Biden is.”  Often the media does not distinguish between these two populations in their reporting, especially in the headlines.

What is the margin of error?  

Pew Research has a very detailed description of what the margin of error means.  Whenever you are reading a poll, pay attention to what the pollster describes as the margin of error.  (Notice that this is still calculated by the pollster, who might have an ulterior motive.)  Errors should get larger the smaller the sample size, because extrapolating that to the total population is less accurate.  

Aren’t Poll Aggregators More Accurate?

The poll aggregator 538 (no longer owned by Nate Silver) attempts to take all the different polls and aggregate the results into one overall number.  They have ranked different pollsters by 538’s evaluation of their error, bias and transparency. But basically, they mash all the polls together and report the average.  My opinion?  I don’t care how much you fiddle with weighting these polls, I believe in the truism: Garbage In, Garbage Out.

Can we get anything out of these polls?  

As Rather notes, “Analysts from the polling aggregator FiveThirtyEight explained the 2022 election results this way. “[A poll’s] true utility isn’t in telling us who will win, but rather in roughly how close a race is — and, therefore, how confident we should be in the outcome. Historically, candidates leading polls by at least 20 points have won 99 percent of the time. But candidates leading polls by less than 3 points have won just 55 percent of the time. In other words, races within 3 points in the polls are little better than toss-ups — something we’ve been shouting from the rooftops for years.”

So What Should We Do?

If you want a more nuanced reading of the polls, turn off cable news, and ignore mainstream newspaper’s clickbait headlines.  Instead, check out free newsletters like Robert Hubbell’s First Edition, Simon Rosenberg’s Hopium Chronicles or even Heather Cox Richardson’s Letters From an American to get context.  The polls are a snapshot; and we need to be aware of the pollster’s focus.  We also need to be aware of media bias – clickbait headlines lead to more profit. 

That said, although we shouldn’t panic, we must not be complacent.  When you think about the margin of error, think of yourself as working in the “margin of effort.”  In other words, “Do More, Worry Less” as Rosenberg often says!

Postcards: Script Length Strategies

Who doesn’t enjoy writing postcards with very short scripts? They are fast, fun, and can be done while watching TV. Why aren’t all postcard projects like that? 

One answer is that in an election year, when time is of the essence, not all postcards serve the same purposes.

Early in the election year is the best time to send out voter registration materials. These postcards are typically informational, which may offer QR codes or links to voter registration websites and voting locations. Informational card scripts usually use minimal handwriting, because all the factual details need to be clear as a bell and easily read. These are the cards that end up taped to the refrigerator door until needed.

Later in the election year, we move more toward candidates and issues. These postcards are more relational – they are intended to establish person-to-person interaction. These are the cards that can introduce, persuade or support candidates or ideas. With relational postcard scripts, the goal is to provide a powerful message, which are mostly or fully handwritten to establish that necessary personal contact. 

There are other variations, but these are clear examples. Postcards should be impactful, effective, and timely. And as volunteers in our grassroots army, we write the scripts that best serve the postcard campaign’s purposes.  

Thank you for all you do, and keep up the good work!

Barbara

Arizona’s Fierce Fight for Abortion Rights

The reversal of Roe v. Wade by the US Supreme Court in June 2023 declared open season on women across the country. In AZ, the State Supreme Court responded by restoring an 1864 territorial law banning abortion except to save a mother’s life, with a 2-5 year prison sentence for abortion providers. It did not matter to these Republican-appointed justices that in 1864, AZ was not yet a state, slavery had not been abolished, Abraham Lincoln was president, and women could not vote. 

The AZ House and Senate have since voted to repeal the 1864 law, with a few Republicans joining the Democratic delegation. Democratic Governor Katie Hobbs signed the bill two days later. The bipartisan votes by legislators and support by the governor were very heartening to those hoping to bring abortion rights to AZ. 

Unfortunately, while the repeal is a significant victory, it does not resolve AZ’s abortion issue.  The repeal leaves the 1864 law in place for several more months, although Democratic AZ Attorney General Kristin Mayes has promised not to allow prosecution of anyone violating the abortion ban. But the repealed ban also leaves in place a 15-week ban with no exception for rape or incest. 

Arizonans have pushed back against this game of political football played with women’s lives by creating an initiative, the AZ Abortion Access Act, that will be on the ballot this November. The Act would enshrine abortion access in the AZ constitution, beyond the reach of legislation. 

But the fight is not over even then, as the AZ Republican legislature is putting together for the November ballot an opposing amendment which is aimed at confusing voters. The fight will be heating up this fall, and Turn Purple 2 Blue will be there with actions you can take to help AZ win the abortion battle for good.