Excerpt: The claim that bottom-up civic organizing produces structural policy change is often stated as though it were self-evident. It is not. This article builds the causal argument, documents three historical cases in depth, is honest about when the approach fails, and says plainly what a platform like this one can and cannot do.
The question that needs an actual answer
People across the political spectrum repeat some version of the same claim: that ordinary people, organized and persistent, can change how institutions work. The claim is offered as inspiration, as strategy, sometimes as consolation. It is rarely explained as a mechanism.
The mechanism matters. “People organized and eventually won” is a description of an outcome, not an argument about causation. It leaves open every important question: What did the organizing actually do to the structure of power? What was the specific sequence of moves that converted public sentiment into enforceable policy? What conditions had to be in place before mass participation could produce legislative results?
America’s Plan is built on the premise that affected-party-led civic work is the right foundation for durable policy change. That premise deserves a real argument, not a slogan. This piece tries to make that argument, using three documented historical cases, and then tries to be honest about where the argument runs out.
The short version of the mechanism is this: bottom-up civic organizing produces structural change when it accomplishes four things in combination — it builds an institutional infrastructure that can persist across years, it generates documented evidence that meets the evidentiary standards of the institutions being targeted, it places affected people in the room when policy is actually written, and it creates sustained public accountability that makes ignoring the demand politically costly. Any one of these elements alone is usually insufficient. Together, they have repeatedly proved sufficient.
Case one: The civil rights movement and the discipline of documented evidence
Most accounts of the civil rights movement begin in the 1950s. The actual groundwork started in the 1930s, and understanding that timeline is essential to understanding how the movement worked.
In 1930, the NAACP commissioned attorney Nathan Margold to produce what became known as the Margold Report — a legal strategy memo identifying the most effective path toward dismantling legal segregation. Margold’s analysis was precise: rather than attacking segregation head-on in ways that would likely fail given existing precedent, the strategy should demonstrate that states were systematically failing to make “separate” facilities genuinely equal, and use that failure to build toward a direct challenge to the Plessy v. Ferguson doctrine itself. This was not a rallying cry. It was a litigation architecture.
Charles Houston, then dean of Howard University Law School, took that architecture and operationalized it. Houston spent years training Black attorneys — including Thurgood Marshall — and building the organizational capacity to execute a coordinated, multi-case legal campaign. He understood something that purely political movements often miss: to change law, you have to build the evidentiary and legal record that makes change possible. You have to argue in the language the court will accept.
Marshall took over as NAACP Legal Defense Fund director in 1940 and pursued the strategy case by case. Missouri ex rel. Gaines v. Canada (1938), Sweatt v. Painter (1950), McLaurin v. Oklahoma State Regents (1950) — each case pushed the “equal” standard further, forced states to reveal that genuine equality under segregation was a fiction, and built a record that pointed toward a single unavoidable conclusion. When Brown v. Board of Education was argued in 1954, the Court was not being asked to make a leap of faith. It was being asked to follow a twenty-year chain of documented, litigated evidence to its logical end.
Simultaneously, the NAACP was doing something less celebrated but equally important: it was counting lynchings. For decades, the organization collected, verified, and published lynching statistics — turning what institutions preferred to treat as isolated incidents into an undeniable documented pattern. That data was legislative-quality evidence: specific enough to counter denial, cumulative enough to establish systemic failure, and attributed in ways that put responsibility on state governments.
When Rosa Parks refused to give up her seat on a Montgomery bus in December 1955, she was not a random passenger who had simply had enough. She was the secretary of the Montgomery NAACP chapter, trained in organizing, connected to the legal infrastructure already in place. The Montgomery Bus Boycott that followed was a mass movement event, but it was detonated in a landscape that had been prepared for twenty-five years. Mass participation amplified a structure; it did not create one from nothing.
The mechanism visible here: long-term institutional investment in documentation and legal infrastructure preceded mass mobilization and made that mobilization structurally effective rather than just emotionally powerful.
Case two: The disability rights movement and the principle of affected-party expertise
“Nothing About Us Without Us” describes something more than a value. It describes a theory of what goes wrong when policy is written without the people who live with its consequences.
Ed Roberts arrived at UC Berkeley in 1962 as its first student using a wheelchair. After fighting to have his initial rejection overturned, he organized other students with disabilities into what became known as the Rolling Quads, and in 1972 helped establish the first Center for Independent Living in Berkeley — a model built on the premise that people with disabilities should control the services they use, rather than having services controlled by non-disabled professionals who defined what “help” looked like.
Judy Heumann was refused a teaching license by New York City in 1970 on the grounds that she was a wheelchair user. She sued, won, became a teacher, and spent the following decades in disability rights organizing. Her career traced the arc from individual lawsuit to national policy: the same person who litigated her own case in 1970 was in the room when the Americans with Disabilities Act was drafted in 1990.
That kind of continuity — affected people staying in the fight across decades — is what produced the legislative infrastructure the movement used. Congress passed more than fifty pieces of disability-related legislation between the 1960s and 1990. Each law created new rights, new legal hooks, new administrative frameworks. Each also created new grievances when implementation fell short, which sustained organizing energy and created new targets for pressure.
Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act (1973) prohibited discrimination against people with disabilities by federally funded programs, but it sat unimplemented for four years. In April 1977, disability rights activists occupied the San Francisco federal building for twenty-eight days to demand the regulations be signed. The organizing infrastructure was there — the networks, the trained leadership, the legal analysis of what regulations were required — which is why twenty-eight days of occupation could produce a specific, enforceable result rather than just a public demonstration.
ADAPT began blocking inaccessible Denver city buses in 1978, demanding that public transit funded with public money be made accessible. The documentation accumulated: which transit systems were inaccessible, what the costs of accessibility actually were versus what transit authorities claimed, how many people were affected and in what ways. This is affected-party knowledge that no external expert could have generated, because external experts do not navigate those buses every day.
On March 12, 1990, disability rights activists left their wheelchairs at the base of the U.S. Capitol steps and crawled up sixty steps to the entrance. Four months later, on July 26, 1990, the Americans with Disabilities Act was signed into law. The Capitol Crawl was not the cause of the ADA. It was the culminating public moment of a forty-year process in which affected people had documented barriers, built legal infrastructure, established organizational capacity, and made themselves impossible to exclude from the policy conversation.
The mechanism visible here: sustained long-term organizing by affected parties generates both the institutional infrastructure and the body of documented evidence that makes comprehensive legislation possible. The people who live with the problem are the ones with the knowledge the legislation needs to be workable.
Case three: The labor movement and the irreplaceability of worker knowledge
Workers knew the factory floor. They knew which processes were dangerous and which were not, which supervisors falsified output numbers, what the actual pace of production was versus what management claimed, where the informal networks of cooperation ran. This knowledge had direct economic value — it lived in the experience of the workers themselves. Organized through union structures, that knowledge became bargaining power.
The National Industrial Recovery Act of 1933, which for the first time affirmed workers’ right to organize and bargain collectively, was not won by persuasion alone. It was won because the organizing infrastructure already being built — in steel, in coal, in the emerging industrial unions — demonstrated that workers could make production ungovernable if their claims were ignored. The Wagner Act (1935) followed because labor had built the organizational infrastructure to sustain pressure and demonstrate, industry by industry, what collective organization looked like.
The CIO’s industrial organizing campaigns succeeded in part because they gathered and articulated worker grievances in specific, documented forms. The sit-down strike at General Motors’ Flint plant in 1936–37 was not just a work stoppage. It was a demonstration that workers understood the production system well enough to control it. That knowledge, organized and expressed, changed the power calculation for legislators trying to decide whether labor legislation was politically tenable.
The mechanism visible here: affected parties hold knowledge that cannot be replicated by outsiders. Organizing that channels that knowledge into documented, specific, actionable form gives civic pressure a quality that generalized public sentiment cannot match.
When bottom-up organizing fails
The historical cases above were chosen partly because they worked. A serious account of the theory of change has to include the ways the approach fails.
The most common failure mode is the movement that achieves mass visibility without developing a specific institutional ask. Occupy Wall Street in 2011 generated genuine and broad public sympathy. But the deliberate choice to avoid specific demands and formal leadership structures meant there was no target at which that sympathy could be directed. When the Zuccotti Park encampment was cleared in November 2011, the movement had no institutional infrastructure, no policy vehicle, and no organized capacity for sustained follow-through. The sentiment was real; the mechanism for converting sentiment to policy was absent.
Slacktivism is a related failure: social media energy that produces shares and signatures but does not convert to sustained participation. The engagement feels collective but imposes almost no cost on participants, which means it imposes almost no sustained pressure on institutions. Institutions can wait out a petition cycle. They are less able to wait out twenty-eight days of building occupation or a decade of coordinated litigation.
A subtler failure mode is professionalization. As movements mature, the organizations that grow from them often shift toward Washington-based professional advocacy. This shift can produce useful lobbying capacity, but it often comes at the cost of the grassroots infrastructure it replaced. Professional advocates can be managed in ways that organized communities cannot.
The Waxman-Markey climate bill in 2009 illustrates the conditions problem. The bill passed the House but died in the Senate not primarily because the policy was wrong, but because there was insufficient sustained grassroots mobilization holding individual senators accountable for their votes. Compare this to the multiple failed attempts to repeal the Affordable Care Act in 2017, where sustained town-hall pressure and visible constituent presence created a different political calculation for senators in competitive states. The difference was not the quality of the policy argument. It was the quality of the organized pressure.
Finally, organizing cannot manufacture political will or structural readiness. Bottom-up pressure can build incentive. It cannot always create the legislative coalitions, the procedural windows, or the absence of blocking majorities that make action possible. Organizing that does not account for that honestly tends to exhaust itself in campaigns that have no realistic path to the target.
What this platform can and cannot do
What this platform can do: it can create a documented record. The Commons is meant to serve that function — a persistent, reusable layer of civic knowledge that does not disappear when attention moves. The platform can surface affected-party voices at scale and build an analysis layer that gives those voices more structural weight than isolated testimony. It can produce plans with enough specificity that officials can be asked concrete questions about them.
What it cannot do alone: it cannot mobilize people offline. The historical cases above all required physical presence, sustained personal commitment, and organizational structures that imposed real costs on participants and real pressure on targets. This platform is also not a legal infrastructure, not an electoral organizing operation, and not a substitute for the professional advocacy capacity that, despite its limits, does play a role in moving legislation.
The platform is also unlikely to produce change on a short timeline. The NAACP’s legal campaign took twenty-four years from the Margold Report to Brown. The disability rights movement took forty years from Ed Roberts at Berkeley to the ADA. A realistic theory of change for bottom-up civic work is measured in years and decades, not news cycles.
What this platform is building toward
Our Strategy describes the pipeline but does not fully argue for it. The core of the argument is this: bottom-up civic work produces structural policy change when it builds durable institutional infrastructure, generates documented evidence in forms the target institutions can be held to, places affected people in positions of direct input on policy, and creates sustained accountability that survives the fading of any single moment of public attention.
This platform is trying to build the documented record and the analysis layer. That is a real and meaningful piece of the larger mechanism — but it is one piece. The historical cases suggest that this kind of infrastructure work, done seriously and sustained over time, has repeatedly proved to be what made the difference when conditions aligned. It also suggests that doing this work without the other pieces — offline organizing, legal infrastructure, electoral accountability — is insufficient.
That is a realistic account of what this project is. The goal is not to overstate what a platform can accomplish, or to undersell the value of building a civic record that is more durable than the next news cycle. Both mistakes have been made before.
This article was researched and drafted with AI assistance under human review. See our full AI and editorial practices.