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Learn practical steps and key concepts for organizing a constitutionalist movement, understanding core group formation, goal setting, and strategy development. Discover valuable resources and stages for successful implementation with evaluation techniques. Gain insights from historical movements and practical advice on preparing yourself for effective organization. Explore diverse organizational models, tools, and recent events impacting constitutional activism.
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Austin Constitution Meetup April 16, 2009 Presented by Jon Roland Organizing for Constitutional Compliance
Stages • Form core group. • Research the problem. • Select a goal. • Develop a strategy. • Assess and gather resources. • Communicate with targets. • Implement activities. • Evaluate your efforts.
Form core group • Recruit those needed for success • Decide who should not be included • Select leaders • Select regular meeting times and places • Inventory assets • Acquire more assets • Develop skills
Develop skills • Public speaking • Rules of parliamentary procedure • Management • Bookkeeping • Research • Writing • Motivating
Research the problem • Organize the subject. • Answer who, what, how, when, where, why, and whither. • Model the system. • Find the points of maximum leverage. • Prioritize the interventions. • Assess what the interventions will require. • Determine what tasks are to be done.
Select a goal • Define an general goal, put it in writing. • Break out into subgoals, down to daily ones for each. • Select milestones and a timetable. • Don't overreach. • Don't become discouraged if subgoals not met on time. • Keep moving forward.
Constitutionalist Goals • Level: Federal, State, Local • Branch: Legislative, Executive, Judicial • Civic culture • Legal profession • Academia • Media • Civic organizations
Constitutionalist Goals • Good place to start is constitution.org page on Political Reform: • Statement of Grievances and Demands for Redress • Constitutionalist Platform • Pick a goal on which your group will focus. • Pick most important one that is most neglected. • Encourage other groups to pick others and support one another. • Coordinate on a few shared goals for many groups.
Cons Doesn't help with things that don't make it to a jury. Not as attractive to people who want total remedies. Requires more education of those persuaded. Example: Trial Jury Reform • Pros • Only have to persuade about 6% of people. • Those can be secondary adopters for further reforms • Not too difficult to explain basics to newbies.
Develop a Strategy • Identify which decisionmakers can be persuaded and how far, and which must be replaced. • Prepare replacements. • Get replacements into key positions. • Draft legislation (don't leave drafting to others). • Select winnable cases that can establish precedents. • Spread the word on outrages.
Assess & Gather Resources • Leaders • Workers • Donors • Supplies, capital • Allied groups • Opportunities • Threats
Communicate with Targets • Replacements for core group • Next level of adopters • Intermediate decisionmakers • Staffers • Media • Constituent groups, sponsors • Ultimate decisionmakers • Potential successors to decisionmakers • Find, give them what they want to get what you want
Implement Activities • Keep it professional • Pace yourselves • Make it fun • Economize • Focus on what works • Keep everyone busy • Praise small victories • Remember they are volunteers
Evaluate your efforts • Try to measure your efforts and the results. • But not everything important is measurable. • Figure out what went right, what went wrong, and why. • Learn from the examples of others as well as your own. • Commemorate the victories. • Document for later reconsideration.
Constitutionalist Movement History • Roots in antiquity • The frontier experience • Ratifying state constitutions • Ratifying U.S. Constitution • Election of 1800 • Secession war • Reactions to usurpations, especially since 1886 • Post-cold-war revival
Lessons of other movements • Legal codification • Union • Women's suffrage • Temperance • Civil rights • Anti-war • Environmental • Consumer protection • Campaign finance reform
Prepare Yourself • Join existing successful organizations to learn how to make them work. • Try to also pick organizations where there are a lot of recruitment prospects. • Develop support networks for adversity. • Get your family on board. • Know everything, believe nothing, and be prepared for anything.
Organization Models • Centralized, top-down • Charismatic leader • Scripture • Decentralized, bottom-up • Public, open • Clandestine • Leaderless resistance cells
Organization Types • Public education • Litigation • Lobbying • Electoral • Professional • Academic • Religious • Infiltrative • Millenial
Organizing Tools • meetup.com • ning.com • facebook.com • Listserv • Websites, blogs • Email, mail, newsletters • Books, campaign handbooks • Robert's Rules of Order, Revised
Recent events: Tea Party • Grass roots, spontaneous • Grew quickly to enough people to be news • Instigated by meltdown, government bailouts • Politicians, media got on board • No real charismatic leader involved • Better than a march on Washington • But most participants not educated on legal issues
Beware Pirates! • Opportunists like to hijack new movements. • Most participants don't recognize the pirates until it is too late. • Asking politicians to “do something” without being specific is asking them to do something to you, not for you. • Simple, obvious solutions aren't. • There are very few constitutionalist lawyers. • Large donations can do more harm than good.