Advocacy to Newly Elected Officials

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On this episode of Rules of the Game, we’ll take a look at the ways nonprofits can work with newly elected officials to advance missions and policy agendas. Now that all votes have been cast, we have to begin looking forward to what’s ahead and what we want our local, state, and federal policymakers to consider over the comings months and years. Direct download: https://traffic.libsyn.com/secure/rulesofthegame/ROTG-newly-elected-officials.mp3 Our attorneys for this episode Leslie Barnes Natalie Ossenfort Shyaam Subramanian       Shownotes How 501(c)(3) public charities can build relationships with newly elected officials and their staff to amplify the organization’s mission and advance community’s policy priorities Congratulate or acknowledge those who won their elections Take care not to take credit for victory or “flipping the state” Can discuss how c3 registered “x” number of voters Can discuss how c3 increased voter turnout Can share why it’s good/bad X was elected Can share issues your organization hopes to work on with new official Remind officials what they promised during campaign Identify likely allies   During a site visit or meet-n-greet with new official a 501(c)(3) public charity may do the following: Inform official of organization’s mission Inform official of community’s policy priorities Share statistics on number of community served by organization Shine light on issues of importance Make budgetary asks or legislative requests (lobbying-IRS purposes)   501(c)(3) public charities can lobby a limited amount.   Lobbying is defined as activities designed to influence legislation, for IRS purposes.   501(c)(4) social welfare groups can lobby an unlimited amount.   Private foundations cannot lobby without incurring a steep excise tax, but they can engage in the following non-lobbying activities: Congratulate newly elected officials Hold elected officials accountable Schedule meet-n-greets Share funding interest Share foundation’s mission Build relationships Influence executive orders, rules, regulations (not IRS lobbying) Join us for future episodes of funding advocacy AND direct advocacy   Advocating on Executive Orders Don’t involve legislative action, therefore NOT IRS lobbying Safe for 501(c)(3) public charities and private foundation alike Gov. Newsom’s moratorium on death penalty Pres. Trump’s ban on gender & racial diversity training that conflicts with administration’s view of country’s founding Resources Can We Really Say That: Post Election Advocacy for 501(c)(3) Organizations. Transition Team Advocacy Private Foundations May Lobby Bolder Advocacy’s TA hotline: 866-NP-LOBBY Email us at advocacy@afj.org Our website is org

Advocacy to Newly Elected Officials

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Advocacy to Newly Elected Officials
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