No Talk Without Action
No Talk Without Action

No Talk Without Action
Winning elections isn’t just about turning out voters—it’s about building real connections and earning trust in communities that feel left behind. The NTWA Plan focuses on three key teams to make that happen:
✅ NTWA Newly Registered Voter Outreach – Voters reach newly registered voters to ensure that voters automatically enrolled have affinity for the Democratic Party and turn out to vote
✅ NTWA Voter Outreach Teams – Volunteers build ongoing relationships with assigned voters, ensuring consistent engagement throughout the election cycle.
✅ NTWA Community Mobilizers are the frontline mobilizers in our No Talk Without Action movement. Their mission is to engage directly with party supporters/voters identified through outreach and get them more involved in our caucuses and county parties!
✅ NTWA Grassroots Communication Teams – Volunteers find and amplify real stories from voters, ensuring our messaging is clear, personal, and impactful—not just statistics.
By staying engaged before, during, and after Election Day, NTWA isn’t just about winning votes—it’s about rebuilding trust and delivering real change.
Join us and be part of the movement.
Studies consistently show that protests alone rarely lead to lasting political change unless they are coupled with sustained organizing efforts. Research by political scientist Erica Chenoweth suggests that nonviolent movements require active participation from at least 3.5% of the population to have a significant impact—an extremely high bar that few movements reach. Furthermore, while protests can raise awareness, they often fail to translate into concrete policy changes unless they are followed up with direct voter engagement, relational organizing, and sustained political action.
By contrast, relational organizing and direct voter contact have proven to be among the most effective tools for driving real political change. Studies from organizations like the Analyst Institute show that face-to-face conversations increase voter turnout by 7-9%, while relational organizing—where people engage their personal networks—can be 2.5 times more effective than traditional canvassing (brookings.edu).
History shows that real power comes not from momentary demonstrations but from long-term voter engagement, coalition-building, and legislative advocacy. To create real change, we must channel energy from protests into sustained action that wins elections and influences policy.