Becky Bond served as a senior advisor on the Bernie Sanders
presidential campaign and was an architect of the campaign’s
national, volunteer-driven grassroots campaign. Prior to joining
the Bernie Sanders campaign, Becky served as political director at
CREDO where she was an innovator working at the intersection of
organizing, politics, and technology for over a decade. Becky is a
cofounder of CREDO SuperPAC, which was named by Mother Jones as one
“2012’s Least Horrible Super-PACs” for helping to defeat five
sitting Tea Party Republican Congressmen. She lives in San
Francisco, California, with the writer, designer, and book artist
Emily McVarish. For more information about Becky, Rules for
Revolutionaries, and a downloadable, open-source teaching tool to
help you implement change in your community, visit
www.bigorganizing.com.
Zack Exley served as a senior advisor on the Bernie Sanders
presidential campaign and was an architect of the campaign’s
national, volunteer-driven grassroots campaign. Zack was a union
organizer before becoming MoveOn.org’s first organizing director in
its campaign to prevent the war in Iraq in 2003. As an early
advisor to the Howard Dean campaign, he helped transfer
MoveOn.org’s early fundraising and organizing discoveries into
presidential politics, and he then served as John Kerry’s director
of online fundraising and communications in the general election
where his team raised more than $100 million online for the
nominee. Subsequently, Zack worked as a consultant to global NGOs,
campaigns, and companies, and served as Wikipedia’s chief community
officer and chief revenue officer. For more information about
Zack, Rules for Revolutionaries, and a downloadable,
open-source teaching tool to help you implement change in your
community, visit www.bigorganizing.com.
Publishers Weekly- "Bond and Exley, senior advisors on the Sanders
presidential campaign and the primary architects of the campaign’s
national grassroots efforts, distill the organizing techniques they
employed during the hard-fought Sanders-Clinton Democratic
presidential primary. Bond and Exley argue convincingly that the
old-school organizing techniques embodied in Saul Alinsky’s classic
Rules for Radicals fall short in the 21st-century age of social
media. They divide their commentary into 22 rules, illustrated by
examples from the campaign. They cover basics like fund-raising,
phone banking, and intraorganization communication, but the heart
of their theory is 'big organizing.' The idea is that people will
organize around issues that are fundamental and speak to “big
target universes,” such as making public college free, or providing
universal health care. Along with identifying issues that matter to
lots of people, the new rules embrace a structure that gives power
to volunteers. Bond and Exley also argue that good management is
not counter-revolutionary and note the dangers of management by
consensus. The successes of the Sanders campaign gives credibility
to this new organizing paradigm, and Bond and Exley’s valuable and
pragmatic road map will appeal to those interested in social
change, whether they’re organizing presidential campaigns or
neighborhood efforts.”
“Bernie Sanders’s presidential run was a spectacular wake-up
call, revealing the huge number of Americans willing to fight for
radical change. That includes a great many who didn’t sign up for
the political revolution this time around, which is good
news: Our movements can learn how to go even bigger and
broader. We can win—but only if we continue to develop the kinds of
tactics, tools, and vision laid out in this vitally important book,
perhaps the first to explore how to organize at the true scale of
the crises we face.”--Naomi Klein, author of This Changes
Everything and The Shock Doctrine
“Rules for Revolutionaries is a lamppost for those who are
committed to causes of community uplift, grassroots empowerment,
and organizing for good. Insurgents get ready, this is the book for
you.”--Nina Turner, assistant professor of African American
history, Cuyahoga Community College; national surrogate, Bernie
Sanders campaign; former Ohio state senator
“Here’s a guide from the heart of Bernie’s grassroots movement that
mobilized hundreds of thousands of volunteers. Rules for
Revolutionaries is a playbook for ‘big organizing’—a melding of
grassroots movement tactics with new technology. It’s a must-read
for anyone who wants to take back our economy from the moneyed
interests.”--Robert B. Reich, author of Saving Capitalism
“If you want to change the world and the status quo, read this
book. An alternate title would appropriately be: How to Make
the Impossible, Possible. Prepare to be inspired.”--Assemblywoman
Lucy Flores
“Climate activists around the world watched Bernie’s vibrant
volunteer network with envy and wondered whether we, too, could
build that level of engagement absent a candidate and national
election. Bond and Exley answer that question: Yes, we can!
Everyone who wants to solve climate change—or any other big
issue—should read this book and get started.”--Annie Leonard,
Greenpeace USA
“This must-read book lays down 22 ‘rules’ designed to put
power in the hands of people who want to make radical social
change. Becky Bond and Zack Exley have walked the walk—and they
know what organizing looks like when you begin with a big,
transformative demand and challenge the establishment. You win big
when you ask big—and whoever wins in November, we’ll need to push
for revolutionary change from Day One. Becky and Zack’s book
is a vital contribution to that project!”--Katrina vanden
Heuvel, editor and publisher, The
Nation
“If you want to understand Bernie's remarkable campaign—and more
importantly, if you want to understand how to organize big,
world-shaking campaigns of all kinds in the future—this is the book
for you. The authors bring enormous credibility and enormous
insight to a crucial task; what they describe in electoral politics
goes just as much for battles like the one around the Keystone
pipeline.”--Bill McKibben, New York Times bestselling author;
cofounder, 350.org
“Two of our generation’s most accomplished organizers share the
creative tactics and technology they used to lead hundreds of
thousands of people to volunteer their time to change the course of
history—and how you can, too. This page-turner belongs in the hands
of new and veteran organizers alike and will set the standard for
how to make change in the twenty-first century.”--David
Broockman, assistant professor of political economy, Stanford
University
“For populists who want to continue Bernie Sanders’s political
revolution and win radical change, this is a book for you. In
their Rules for Revolutionaries, Becky Bond and Zack Exley lay
down a new marker for what mass volunteer organizing makes possible
by combining emerging consumer technology and radical trust with
some tried and true ‘old organizing’ tactics.”--Jim
Hightower, author of Swim Against the Current
“Crucial, important, strategic, urgent.”--Naomi Wolf, New York
Times bestselling author of The End of America
“Becky and Zack’s rules are as refreshing as Bernie’s candidacy
itself. Their rules are specific enough to get started right now
and flexible enough to last for the long haul of the revolution we
so desperately need."--Tim DeChristopher, Bidder 70; cofounder,
Climate Disobedience Center
Kirkus Reviews- "Senior advisers to the Bernie Sanders presidential
campaign leadership offer pointers on how to start the next
movement—or perhaps continue the one they started. By some lights,
Sanders should have won the Democratic Party nomination in 2016. By
any measure, his ‘revolution' was an extraordinary success, taking
a little-known, admitted socialist from a small New England state
and propelling him to the national spotlight—and, though a
half-century's age difference prevailed, capturing the hearts of
countless millennials. Bond and Exley, members of a team of
'go-for-broke irregulars,' did much to propel the Sanders movement
in their daily work, much of which hinged on old-fashioned
principles of campaigning. As they note, 'when you look at the
actual campaign results, the gold standard for moving voters in
elections is a volunteer having a conversation with a voter on the
doorstep or on the telephone.' How do you get volunteers inspired?
How do you organize them, especially when they're working for an
out-of-the-mainstream candidate and may incline to the anarchic?
How do you keep the bossy ones from cowing the more sheepish among
the crew? Bond and Exley, alternating chapters and anecdotes, have
plenty of answers: don't ask who wants to be the leader but instead
ask 'who wants to get to work.' Make everyone feel welcome. Above
all, make everyone feel as if they're taking part in a historic
moment, in something big. That said, the authors note, there are
some necessary evils, including hiring professionals once an
electoral movement gets to a cer tain momentum and courting wealthy
donors. Again, they have answers: 'Puritanism is a bad thing!' they
admonish, meaning there's not much room in practical politics for
purity of procedure—to which they add, helpfully, that the path to
change means being 'willing to throw out old practices.' A
lively update of and rejoinder to Saul Alinsky's Rules for
Radicals, which, as this book very well may do, has long offered
guidance to the right as well as the left."
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