ABOUT COMMON POWER

Root Action in Education

Building Lasting Community

Promote New Leadership

Root Action in Education • Building Lasting Community • Promote New Leadership •

Common Power (CoPo) works to foster, support, and amplify a democracy that is just and inclusive. We provide creative on-ramps to civic fieldwork, expand the people engaging in and benefiting from it, and sustain this effort by investing in the next generation of leaders.

We catalyze our work through education and bolster a public that takes action in support of a just and inclusive democracy. By fostering a community in which people learn from, support, and grow with one another; we identify and invest in young, diverse leaders and promote them into leadership positions within CoPo and beyond.

Young and diverse on purpose, our staff reflects actual, tangible investment in the next generation of civic leaders.

This is the America we hope to help build.

MEET OUR TEAM

Charles

Larcy

Executive Director of Common Power

Director, CP Future and Operations

Terry

David

Director, The Institute for Common Power

Assoc. Director, Development and Education

Binh

Sr. Operations and Finance Program Manager

General Manager, Marketing and Communications

Maria

General Manager, Fieldwork and Community

Sr. Fieldwork Program Manager

Sr. Institute Program Manager

Education & Legacy Building Program Specialist

Blossom

Community Associate

Sr. Marketing Associate

Sr. Institute Associate

Jessica

Leslie

Sr. Action Academy Associate

Eryka

Sr. Operations and Finance Associate

Wole

Vanna

Devon

Celestria

Asha

Victoria

Sr. Institute Associate

Sr. Operations and Finance Associate

Willow

Jordyn

Fieldwork Associate

Matthew

Jenni

Fieldwork Associate

Community Coordinator

Abby

Development Associate

OUR CHAMPIONS

Our Common Power “Champions” bring a lifetime of experience as civil rights leaders and footsoldiers, and believe that Common Power is a key part of the continuation of their work in the movement for voting rights. They frequent our learning tours to the south, and participate in our virtual events from time to time. We consider them valued elders who inspire our community, and we love and support them however we can.

JoAnne Bland

“During my lifetime, I have been both a witness and a participant in some of our nation's most consequential civil rights battles. In the early 60's, I began my activism, with the SNCC (The Student Non-Violent Coordinating Committee) organized for myself along with other children and teens in my neighborhood and area to participate in the Civil Rights Movement."

Born and raised in Selma, Alabama, I have seen first hand how racism and segregation created a deadly divide between two races and decided that it was my duty to ensure that my voice was one of the many that was heard to create equality and voting rights for African Americans.

Currently, I am the owner and operator of Journeys for the Soul, a touring agency that specializes in Civil Rights tours with a major focus on Selma, Alabama.”

Ms. JoAnne is also a key stakeholder and board member of Foot Soldiers Park in Selma.

Learn more about Foot Soldiers Park

Charles Mauldin

Charles Mauldin was 17 years old and a student leader in Selma AL during the voting rights campaign of the 1960s. He learned from Dr. Bernard Lafayette and other civil rights movement leaders. He was inspired by the Teachers March on January 22, 1965, which is a moment in which educators took action for voting rights. 

On Bloody Sunday on March 7, 1965, Mr. Mauldin was in the third row of American heroes who marched from AME Brown Chapel toward Montgomery. On the far side of the Edmund Pettus Bridge, the marchers were beaten by Alabama police and sheriffs, and forced back to Selma. But Mr. Mauldin and the others returned two days later, and then on March 21-25 he was one of a little more than 300 marchers who walked the full 54 miles to Montgomery. A New Yorker article about the march includes insights and experiences of Mr. Mauldin.

Read The New Yorker Article

THE DETAILS

Common Power is a family of organizations: a Political Action Committee (Common Power PAC), a 501c3 (Common Power Future), and a 501c4 (Common Power). Financial integrity and transparency are core values for us. We file public monthly FEC reports for every dollar raised and spent in our PAC and SPAC, and every report since we began in July 2018 can be found here! Our 501c3's annual 990 reports can be found here for 2021 fiscal year and here for 2022 fiscal year. We created a 501c4 in 2023, and our first 990 form was filed with the IRS in May 2024.


Here is our 2023 annual report for the full family of Common Power organizations. In creating these aligned yet distinct organizations, we are able to be strategically flexible and maximize the impact with the financial support we receive. It also makes it easy for supporters to direct funds to specific initiatives within CoPo. Donation details using either option are outlined on our donation page.

Common Power partners with trusted legal, regulatory, and HR services that provide a foundation of support as we innovate in education, political, and leadership development spaces. Elias Law Group provides legal counsel on regulatory, employment, and campaign/political finance, Premier Political Compliance guides us through our FEC filing and general state and federal political compliance, and Reverb advises internal staff HR needs.

Donate Today!

CoPo COMMUNITIES

At Common Power our commitment to building a lasting effort to strengthen our democracy is manifested in community. These Communities create unique spaces for people at different life stages to on-ramp them into civic action through community, education, and investment in next-generation leadership. All of these elements in concert allow us to sustain and grow this effort for political engagement every year, at home, and around the country.

Purpose: The community that started it all in 2018, the core Common Power group was formed by volunteers of retirement life-stage who bring decades of experience, often with leadership backgrounds, to their work with CP. Today, this community has become a multigenerational and diverse group that aims to work across differences to be an effective volunteer base for CoPo’s Fieldwork program.

Programs: Fieldwork, Volunteer Training, and Voter Registration.

Purpose: The broad education community at Common Power has launched on its own as The Institute for Common Power, a place for transformational and experiential learning. The educational offerings are mostly virtual and year-round with an international audience. The Institute also has specific programming for educators to learn the objective truths of US history and Voting rights in the US.

Through its extensive year-round programming, The Institute is the primary catalyst for activating and re-engaging our volunteers across Common Power.

Programs: Educator Learning Tours, Virtual Courses, Lectures, etc.

Learn More

Purpose: In the summer of 2020 we launched Action Academy: a 10-week program that teaches civic engagement. Hundreds of college-age students each year have participated in this program. Through their friend groups, they’ve grown the overall Common Power Future Community to encompass volunteer Action Days, community-building social events, and the creation of CoPo Squads that support national CoPo Team efforts. CoPo Future folx seed the future of fieldwork and leadership positions within Common Power.

Programs: Action Academy, Crew Leads, Campus Leads

Learn More

Volunteer Development System

WE’RE FIELD MULTIPLIERS.

When we hit the ground, we're knocking on doors where we can make the most impact. We always work through local organizations, campaigns, and state parties to make sure we show up where they need capacity the most. Sometimes this is in high-density apartments to track down young voters, or in a booming suburb with recent move-ins, in a non-English speaking immigrant neighborhood, a working class neighborhood with some rough edges and lots of support, or in the foothills where you have to drive between each house.

By plugging into current efforts, we are not re-inventing the wheel or duplicating hard work. We plug holes, raise morale, and help our partners meet their goals faster and more effectively. We leave our assumptions and expectations at home because we know that the most lasting change is one driven by folks who are living and working in these communities

Read through our 2025 Impact Report and click the button below to learn more about how we win elections!

How We Fieldwork