Indivisible:: A Practical Guide Resisting The Trump Agenda
Indivisible:: A Practical Guide Resisting The Trump Agenda
INDIVISIBLE:
   A PRACTICAL GUIDE     for
RESISTING THE TRUMP AGENDA
  Every single person who worked on this guide and website is a volunteer. Were doing this in our free
  time without coordination or support from our employers. Our only goal is to help the real leaders
  on the ground who are resisting Trumps agenda on their home turf. We hope you will take this
  document and use it however you see fit.
  We want to hear your stories, questions, comments, edits, etc., so please feel free to ping some of
  us on Twitter: @IndivisibleTeam, @ezralevin, @angelrafpadilla, @texpat, @Leahgreenb. Or email
  IndivisibleAgainstTrump@gmail.com.
And please please please spread the word! Only folks who know this exists will use it.
         The US Constitution ensures equal representation for all individuals living in the United
         States, regardless of income, race, ethnicity, gender, sexual orientation, age, or immigration
         status. Noncitizens, though they may lack the right to vote in federal elections, have the
         right to have their voices heard by their representatives in Congress.
         This guide is intended to serve as a resource to all individuals who would like to more
         effectively participate in the democratic process. While we encourage noncitizens to
         participate to the extent that they are able, individuals should only take actions that they
         are comfortable taking, and they should consider their particular set of circumstances
         before engaging in any of these activities.
         Individuals are under no obligation to provide any personally identifiable information to a
         member of Congress or their staff. Individuals may be asked for their name and zip code,
         but this is only to confirm that the person is a constituent, and providing this information
         is strictly voluntary. NO ONE is required to provide any additional information, such as
         address, social security number, or immigration status.
  Indivisible: A Practical Guide for Resisting the Trump Agenda is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-
  NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License. To view a copy of this license, visit http://creativecommons.
  org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/.
Donald Trump is the biggest popular-vote loser in history to ever call himself President. In
spite of the fact that he has no mandate, he will attempt to use his congressional majority
to reshape America in his own racist, authoritarian, and corrupt image. If progressives
are going to stop this, we must stand indivisibly opposed to Trump and the Members of
Congress (MoCs) who would do his bidding. Together, we have the power to resist  and
we have the power to win.
To this end, the following chapters offer a step-by-step guide for individuals, groups, and
organizations looking to replicate the Tea Partys success in getting Congress to listen to a
small, vocal, dedicated group of constituents. The guide is intended to be equally useful for
stiffening Democratic spines and weakening pro-Trump Republican resolve.
We believe that the next four years depend on Americans across the country standing
indivisible against the Trump agenda. We believe that buying into false promises or
accepting partial concessions will only further empower Trump to victimize us and our
neighbors. We hope that this guide will provide those who share that belief with useful
tools to make Congress listen.
  Heres the quick-and-dirty summary of this document. While this page summarizes top-
  level takeaways, the full document describes how to actually carry out these activities.
  CHAPTER 1
  How grassroots advocacy worked to stop President Obama. We examine lessons from the
  Tea Partys rise and recommend two key strategic components:
  CHAPTER 2
  How your MoC thinks  reelection, reelection, reelection  and how to use that to save
  democracy. MoCs want their constituents to think well of them, and they want good, local
  press. They hate surprises, wasted time, and most of all, bad press that makes them look
  weak, unlikable, and vulnerable. You will use these interests to make them listen and act.
  CHAPTER 3
  Identify or organize your local group. Is there an existing local group or network you can
  join? Or do you need to start your own? We suggest steps to help mobilize your fellow
  constituents locally and start organizing for action.
  CHAPTER 4
  Four local advocacy tactics that actually work. Most of you have three MoCs  two
  Senators and one Representative. Whether you like it or not, they are your voices in
  Washington. Your job is to make sure they are, in fact, speaking for you. Weve identified four
  key opportunity areas that just a handful of local constituents can use to great effect. Always
  record encounters on video, prepare questions ahead of time, coordinate with your group,
  and report back to local media:
      1.	     Town halls. MoCs regularly hold public in-district events to show that they are
              listening to constituents. Make them listen to you, and report out when they dont.
      2.	     Other local public events. MoCs love cutting ribbons and kissing babies
              back home. Dont let them get photo-ops without questions about racism,
              authoritarianism, and corruption.
      3.	     District office visits. Every MoC has one or several district offices.
              Go there. Demand a meeting with the MoC. Report to the world if they refuse
              to listen.
      4.	     Coordinated calls. Calls are a light lift, but can have an impact. Organize your
              local group to barrage your MoCs with calls at an opportune moment about and
              on a specific issue.
Like us, you probably deeply disagree with the principles and positions of the Tea Party. But
we can all learn from their success in influencing the national debate and the behavior of
national policymakers. To their credit, they thought thoroughly about advocacy tactics, as
the leaked Town Hall Action Memo demonstrates.
This chapter draws on both research and our own experiences as former congressional
staffers to illustrate the strengths of the Tea Party movement and to provide lessons to
leverage in the fight against Trumps racism, authoritarianism, and corruption.
1. They were locally focused. The Tea Party started as an organic movement built on small
local groups of dedicated conservatives. Yes, they received some support/coordination
from above, but fundamentally all the hubbub was caused by a relatively small number of
conservatives working together.
        Groups were small, local, and dedicated. Tea Party groups could be fewer than
          10 people, but they were highly localized, and they dedicated significant personal
          time and resources. Members communicated with each other regularly, tracked
          developments in Washington, and coordinated advocacy efforts together.
        Groups were relatively few in number. The Tea Party was not hundreds of
          thousands of people spending every waking hour focused on advocacy. Rather,
          the efforts were somewhat modest. Only 1 in 5 self-identified Tea Partiers
          contributed money or attended events. On any given day in 2009 or 2010, only 20
          local events  meetings, trainings, town halls, etc.  were scheduled nationwide.
          In short, a relatively small number of groups were having a big impact on the
          national debate.
  2. They were almost purely defensive. The Tea Party focused on saying NO to Members of
  Congress (MoCs) on their home turf. While the Tea Party activists were united by a core set
  of shared beliefs, they actively avoided developing their own policy agenda. Instead, they
  had an extraordinary clarity of purpose, united in opposition to President Obama. They
  didnt accept concessions and treated weak Republicans as traitors.
               Groups focused on defense, not policy development. The Tea Party took root
                 in 2009, focused on fighting against every proposal coming out of the new
                 Democratic Administration and Congress. This focus on defense rather than policy
                 development allowed the movement to avoid fracturing. Tea Party members
                 may not have agreed on the policy reforms, but they could agree that Obama,
                 Democrats, and moderate Republicans had to be stopped.
        Stall the Trump agenda by forcing them to redirect energy away from their
          priorities. Congressional offices have limited time and limited people. A day
          that they spend worrying about you is a day that theyre not ending Medicare,
          privatizing public schools, or preparing a Muslim registry.
        Reaffirm the illegitimacy of the Trump agenda. The hard truth is that Trump,
          McConnell, and Ryan will have the votes to cause some damage. But by objecting
          as loudly and powerfully as possible, and by centering the voices of those who are
          most affected by their agenda, you can ensure that people understand exactly
          how bad these laws are from the very start  priming the ground for the 2018
          midterms and their repeal when Democrats retake power.
        A defensive strategy does not mean dropping your own policy priorities or staying silent
        on an alternate vision for our country over the next four years. What it means is that,
        when youre trying to influence your MoC, you will have the most leverage when you are
        focused on the current legislative priority.
        You may not like the idea of being purely defensive; we certainly dont. As progressives,
        our natural inclination is to talk about the things were for  a clean climate, economic
        justice, health care for all, racial equality, gender and sexual equality, and peace and
        human rights. These are the things that move us. But the hard truth of the next four
        years is that were not going to set the agenda; Trump and congressional Republicans
        will, and well have to respond. The best way to stand up for the progressive values and
        policies we cherish is to stand together, indivisible  to treat an attack on one as an
        attack on all.
  This chapter explains how congressional offices and the people within them work, and what
  that means for your advocacy strategy.
  To be clear, this does not mean that your MoC is cynical and unprincipled. The vast majority
  of people in Congress believe in their ideals and care deeply about representing their
  constituents and having a positive impact. But they also know that if they want to make
  change, they need to stay in office.
  This constant reelection pressure means that MoCs are enormously sensitive to their image
  in the district or state, and they will work very hard to avoid signs of public dissent or
  disapproval. What every MoC wants  regardless of party  is for his or her constituents to
  agree with the following narrative:
              My MoC cares about me, shares my values, and is working hard for me.
                            What every MoC wants their constituents to think
  If your actions threaten this narrative, then you will unnerve your MoC and change their
  decision-making process.
            If your MoC is in a heavily Democratic or Republican district, you may assume that they
            have a safe seat and theres nothing you can do to influence them. This is not true! The
            reality is that no MoC ever considers themselves to be safe from all threats. MoCs who
            have nothing to fear from a general election still worry about primary challenges.
            More broadly, no one stays a MoC without being borderline compulsive about
            protecting their image. Even the safest MoC will be deeply alarmed by signs of
            organized opposition, because these actions create the impression that theyre not
            connected to their district and not listening to their constituents.
        Congratulations! Your Senators and Representative are doing what they should to fight
        racism, authoritarianism, and corruption. Theyre making the right public statements,
        co-sponsoring the right bills, and voting the right way. So how does this change your
        strategy? Two key things to keep in mind:
        1.	 Do NOT switch to targeting other MoCs who dont represent you. They dont
            represent you, and they dont care what you have to say. Stick with your own local
            MoCs.
        2.	 DO use this guide to engage with your MoCs locally. Instead of pressuring them to
            do the right thing, praise them for doing the right thing. This is important because
            it will help ensure that they continue to do the right thing. Congressional staff are
            rarely contacted when the MoC does something good  your efforts locally will
            provide highly valuable positive reinforcement.
        Meet with constituents. MoCs and staff meet with constituents to learn about
          local priorities and build connections.
        Seek and create positive press. Staff try to shape press coverage and public
          information to create a favorable image for the MoC.
        Host and attend events in district. Representatives host and attend events in the
          district to connect with constituents, understand their priorities, and get good
          local press.
        Actual legislating. MoCs and staff decide their policy positions, develop and
          sponsor bills, and take votes based on a combination of their own beliefs, pressure
          from leadership/lobbyists, and pressure from their constituents.
  If youre reading this, youre probably already part of a local network of people who want to
  stop the Trump agenda  even if its just your friends or a group on Facebook. This chapter is
  about how to take that energy to the next level and start fighting locally to take the country
  back.
  If you look around and cant find a group working specifically on local action focused on
  your Members of Congress (MoCs) in your area, just start doing it! Its not rocket science. You
  really just need two things:
            Ten or so people (but even fewer is a fine start!) who are geographically nearby 
              ideally in the same congressional district
            Trumps agenda explicitly targets immigrants, Muslims, people of color, LGBTQ people,
            the poor and working class, and women. It is critical that our resistance reflect and
            center the voices of those who are most directly threatened by the Trump agenda. If
            you are forming a group, we urge you to make a conscious effort to pursue diversity
            and solidarity at every stage in the process. Being inclusive and diverse might include
            recruiting members who can bridge language gaps, and finding ways to accommodate
            participation when people cant attend due to work schedules, health issues, or
            childcare needs.
            In addition, where there are local groups already organizing around the rights of those
            most threatened by the Trump agenda, we urge you to reach out to partner with them,
            amplify their voices, and defer to their leadership.
  1.	     Decide youre going to start a local group dedicated to making your MoCs aware
          of their constituents opposition to the Trump agenda. This might be a subgroup
          of an existing activist group or it might be a new effort  it really depends on your
          circumstances. Start where people are: if youre in a group with a lot of people
          who want to do this kind of thing, then start there; if youre not, youll need to find
          them somewhere else. The most important thing is that this is a LOCAL group.
          Your band of heroes is focused on applying local pressure, which means you all
          need to be local.
  3.	     Email your contacts and post a message on your Facebook page, on any
          local Facebook groups that youre a member of, and/or other social media
          channels you use regularly. Say that youre starting a group for constituents of
          Congresswoman Sara, dedicated to stopping the Trump agenda, and ask people
          to email you to sign up.
        Most people are moved to take action through individual conversations. Here are some
        tips for having successful conversations to inspire people to take action with your group.
        1.	 Get the story. What issues does the other person care about? How would the
            reactionary Republican agenda affect them, their communities, and their values?
        2.	 Imagine whats possible. How can your group change your communitys
            relationship with your MoC? How could your group, and others like it, protect our
            values?
        3.	 Commitment and ownership. Ask a clear yes or no question: will you work with me
            to hold our representatives accountable? Then, get to specifics. Who else can they
            talk to about joining the group? What work needs to be done  planning a meeting,
            researching a MoC  that they can take on? When will you follow up?
        Ask open-ended questions! People are more likely to take action when they articulate
        what they care about and can connect it to the action they are going to take. A good
        rule of thumb is to talk 30% of the time or less and listen at least 70% of the time.
                      Manage the meeting: Keep people focused on the ultimate core strategy:
                        applying pressure to your MoC to stop Trump. Other attendees may have
                        other ideas  or may be coming to share their concerns about Trump
                         and its important to affirm their concerns and feelings. But its also
                        important to redirect that energy and make sure that the conversation
                        stays focused on developing a group and a plan of action dedicated to
                        this strategy.
                      Agree on principles: This is your chance to say what your group stands for.
                        We recommend two guiding principles:
                      Volunteer for roles: Figure out how to divide roles and responsibilities
                        among your group. This can look very different depending on whos in
                        the room, but at a minimum, you probably want 1-2 people in charge of
                        overall group coordination, a designated media/social media contact, and
                        1-2 people in charge of tracking the congressional offices schedule and
5.	     Expand! Enlist your members to recruit across their networks. Ask every member
        to send out the same outreach emails/posts that you did.
Recruit people for your email list 100 or 200 isnt unreasonable.
  This chapter describes the nuts and bolts of implementing four advocacy tactics to put
  pressure on your three Members of Congress (MoCs)  your Representative and two
  Senators. Before we get there though, there are a few things all local groups should do:
  Begin with these five steps to gather intel. Before anything else, take the following five
  steps to arm yourself with information necessary for all future advocacy activities.
      1.	     Find your three MoCs, their official websites, and their office contact info at
              www.callmycongress.com.
      2.	     Sign up on your MoCs websites to receive regular email updates, invites to local
              events, and propaganda to understand what theyre saying. Every MoC has an
              e-newsletter.
      3.	     Find out where your MoCs stand on the issues of the day  appointment of white
              supremacists, tax cuts for the rich, etc. Review their voting history at VoteSmart.
              org. Research their biggest campaign contributors at OpenSecrets.org.
            We do not yet know how Trump supporters will respond to organized shows of opposition,
            but we have seen enough to be very concerned that minorities will be targeted or singled
            out. Plan your actions to ensure that no one is asked to take on a role that they are not
            comfortable with  especially those roles that call for semi-confrontational behavior  and
            be mindful of the fact that not everyone is facing an equal level of threat. Members of your
            group who enjoy more privilege should think carefully about how they can ensure that they
            are using their privilege to support other members of the group. If you are concerned about
            potential law enforcement intimidation, consider downloading your states version of the
            ACLU Mobile Justice app to ensure that any intimidating behavior is captured on film. Please
            familiarize yourself with your state and local laws that govern recording, along with any
            applicable Senate or House rules, prior to recording. These laws and rules vary substantially
            from jurisdiction to jurisdiction.
PREPARATION
  1.	  Find out when your MoCs next public town hall event is. Sometimes these
       are announced well in advance, and sometimes, although they are technically
       public, only select constituents are notified about them shortly before the event.
       If you cant find announcements online, call your MoC directly to find out. When
       you call, be friendly and say to the staffer, Hi, Im a constituent, and Id like to
       know when his/her next town hall forum will be. If they dont know, ask to be
       added to the email list so that you get notified when they do.
   2.	     Send out a notice of the town hall to your group, and get commitments from
           members to attend. Distribute to all of them whatever information you have on
           your MoCs voting record, as well as the prepared questions.
   3.	     Prepare several questions ahead of time for your group to ask. Your questions
           should be sharp and fact-based, ideally including information on the MoCs
           record, votes theyve taken, or statements theyve made. Thematically, questions
           should focus on a limited number of issues to maximize impact. Prepare 5-10
           of these questions and hand them out to your group ahead of the meeting.
           Example question:
         Signs can be useful for reinforcing the sense of broad agreement with your message.
         However, if youre holding an oppositional sign, staffers will almost certainly not give you
         or the people with you the chance to get the mic or ask a question. If you have enough
         people to both ask questions and hold signs, though, then go for it!
      2.	     Get seated and spread out. Head into the venue a bit early to grab seats at the
              front half of the room, but do not all sit together. Sit by yourself or in groups of
              two, and spread out throughout the room. This will help reinforce the impression
              of broad consensus.
      3.	     Make your voices heard by asking good questions. When the MoC opens the
              floor for questions, everyone in the group should put their hands up and keep
              them there. Look friendly or neutral so that staffers will call on you. When youre
              asking a question, remember the following guidelines:
                      Be polite but persistent, and demand real answers. MoCs are very good
                        at deflecting or dodging questions they dont want to answer. If the MoC
                        dodges, ask a follow-up question. If they arent giving you real answers,
                        then call them out for it. Other group members around the room should
                        amplify by either booing the MoC or applauding you.
                      Dont give up the mic until youre satisfied with the answer. If youve
                        asked a hostile question, a staffer will often try to limit your ability to
                        follow up by taking the microphone back immediately after you finish
                        speaking. They cant do that if you keep a firm hold on the mic. No staffer
                        in their right mind wants to look like theyre physically intimidating a
                        constituent, so they will back off. If they object, then say politely but
                        loudly: Im not finished. The MoC is dodging my question. Why are you
                        trying to stop me from following up?
                      Keep the pressure on. After one member of the group finishes, everyone
                        should raise their hands again. The next member of the group to be called
                        on should move down the list of questions and ask the next one.
      4.	     Support the group and reinforce the message. After one member of your group
              asks a question, everyone should applaud to show that the feeling is shared
              throughout the audience. Whenever someone from your group gets the mic, they
              should note that theyre building on the previous questions  amplifying the fact
              that youre part of a broad group.
         .@reporter I was at Rep. Smiths town hall in Springfield today. Large group
         asked about Medicare privatization. I have video & happy to chat.
         Note: Its important to make this a public tweet by including the period before
         the journalists Twitter handle. Making this public will make the journalist more
         likely to respond to ensure they get the intel first.
         Ensure that the members of your group who are directly affected by specific
         threats are the ones whose voices are elevated when you reach out to media.
   2.	   Share everything. Post pictures, video, your own thoughts about the event, etc.,
         to social media afterward. Tag the MoCs office and encourage others to share
         widely.
  Similar to town halls, but with some tweaks. To take advantage of this opportunity, you
  can follow most of the guidelines above for town halls (filming, etc.). However, because
  these events are not designed for constituent input, you will need to think creatively about
  how to make sure your presence and message come through loud and clear.
  Tactics for these events may be similar to more traditional protests, where youre trying to
  shift attention from the scheduled event to your own message.
      1.	     Optimize visibility. Unlike in town halls, you want your presence as a group to
              be recognizable and attention-getting at this event. It may make sense to stick
              together as a group, wear relatively similar clothing / message shirts, and carry
              signs in order to be sure that your presence is noticeable.
      2.	     Be prepared to interrupt and insist on your right to be heard. Since you wont
              get the mic at an event like this, you have to attract attention to yourself and your
              message. Agree beforehand with your group on a simple message focused on
              a current or upcoming issue. Coordinate with each other to chant this message
              during any public remarks that your MoC makes. This can be difficult and a bit
              uncomfortable. But it sends a powerful message to your MoC that they wont be
              able to get press for other events until they address your concerns.
      3.	     Identify, and try to speak with, reporters on the scene. Be polite and friendly,
              and stick to your message. For example, Were here to remind Congresswoman
              Sara that her constituents are opposed to Medicare cuts. You may want to
              research in advance which local reporters cover MoCs or relevant beats, so that
              you know who to look for.
  1.	    Find out where your MoCs local offices are. The official webpage for your MoC
         will list the address of every local office. You can find those webpages easily
         through a simple Google search. In most cases, the URL for a House member will
         be www.[lastname].house.gov, and the URL for Senate offices is www.[lastname].
         senate.gov.
  2.	    Plan a trip when the MoC is there. Most MoC district offices are open only during
         regular business hours, 9am-5pm. While MoCs spend a fair amount of time in
         Washington, they are often in district on Mondays and Fridays, and there are
         weeks designated for MoCs to work in district. The MoC is most likely to be at the
         main office  the office in the largest city in the district, and where the MoCs
         district director works. Ideally, plan a time when you and several other people can
         show up together.
  3.	    Prepare several questions ahead of time. As with the town halls, you should
         prepare a list of questions ahead of time.
  4.	    Politely, but firmly, ask to meet with the MoC directly. Staff will ask you to leave
         or at best offer to take down your concerns. Dont settle for that. You want to
         speak with the MoC directly. If they are not in, ask when they will next be in. If the
         staffer doesnt know, tell them you will wait until they find out. Sit politely in the
         lobby. Note, on any given weekend, the MoC may or may not actually come to
         that district office.
         Note that office sit-ins can backfire, so be very thoughtful about the optics of
         your visit. This tactic works best when you are protesting an issue that directly
         affects you and/or members of your group (e.g., seniors and caregivers on
         Medicare cuts, or Muslims and allies protesting a Muslim registry). Being polite
         and respectful throughout is critical.
Leave staff with a brief write-up of your issue, with your ask clearly stated.
                      Be persistent  get their business card and call/email them regularly; ask
                        if the MoC has taken action on the issue.
      6.	     Advertise what youre doing. Communicate on social media, and tell the local
              reporters you follow what is happening. Take and send pictures and videos with
              your group: At Congresswoman Saras office with 10 other constituents to talk to
              her about privatizing Medicare. She refuses to meet with us and staff wont tell us
              when she will come out. Were waiting.
   1.	    Find the phone numbers for your MoCs. You can find your local MoCs and their
          office phone numbers at www.callmycongress.com.
   2.	    Prepare a single question per call. For in-person events, you want to prepare a
          host of questions, but for calls, keep it simple. You and your group should all agree
          to call in on one specific issue that day. The question should be about a live issue
           e.g., a vote that is coming up, a chance to take a stand, or some other time-
          sensitive opportunity. The next day or week, pick another issue, and call again on
          that.
   3.	    Find out who youre talking to. In general, the staffer who answers the phone will
          be an intern, a staff assistant, or some other very junior staffer in the MoCs office.
          But you want to talk to the legislative staffer who covers the issue youre calling
          about. There are two ways to do this:
                Ask to speak to the staffer who handles the issue (immigration, health
                  care, etc.). Junior staff are usually directed to not tell you who this is, and
                  just take down your comment instead.
                On a different day, call and ask whoever answers the phone, Hi, can you
                  confirm the name of the staffer who covers [immigration/health care/
                  etc.]? Staff will generally tell you the name. Say Thanks! and hang up.
                  Ask for the staffer by name when you call back next time.
          Congressional email addresses are standardized, so even if the MoCs office wont
          give you an email address, you can probably guess it if you have the staffers first
          and last name.
      5.	     Keep a record of the conversation. Take detailed notes on everything the staffer
              tells you. Direct quotes are great, and anything they tell you is public information
              that can be shared widely. Compare notes with the rest of your group, and
              identify any conflicts in what theyre telling constituents.
      6.	     Report back to media and your group. Report back to both your media contacts
              and your group what the staffer said when you called.
       Change will not come if we wait for some other person or some
        other time. We are the ones weve been waiting for. We are the
                            change that we seek.
                                                President Barack Obama
  We wrote this guide because we believe that the coming years will see an unprecedented
  movement of Americans rising up across the country to protect our values, our neighbors,
  and ourselves. Our goal is to provide practical understanding of how your Members of
  Congress (MoCs) think, and how you can demonstrate to them the depth and power of
  the opposition to Donald Trump and to Republican congressional overreach. This is not a
  panacea, and it is not intended to stand alone. We strongly urge you to marry the strategy in
  this guide with a broader commitment to creating a more just society, building local power,
  and addressing systemic injustice and racism.
  Finally, this guide is intended as a work in progress, one that we hope to continue updating
  as the resistance to the Trump agenda takes shape. We are happy to offer support to
  anybody interested in building upon the tactics outlined in this guide, and we hope that if
  you find it useful or put any of the tactics described above into action, you will let us know
  how it goes. Feel free to ping some of us on Twitter with questions, edits, recommendations,
  feedback/stories about what is helpful here, etc.: @IndivisibleTeam, @ezralevin,
  @angelrafpadilla, @texpat, @Leahgreenb. Or email IndivisibleAgainstTrump@gmail.com.