We envision a thriving democracy where all voices are respected, human rights are protected, and communities are resilient, sustainable, and rooted in justice, kindness, and accountability.

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Our Mission

We are a grassroots movement working together to strengthen democracy, accountability, justice and equity, while building a more caring community through informed, committed action for today and tomorrow.

© 2025 Indivisible Project. Indivisible.org is a joint website of Indivisible Project and Indivisible Action. Indivisible Project is a registered 501(c)(4). Indivisible Action is a Hybrid Political Action Committee. They are separate organizations.

Local groups build and wield power in ways that individuals can’t.
To create change, you need the power that comes with working together. We make calls. We attend meetings. We write letters. We show up. We organize. And through that work, we’ve built many mini-movements in support of our local values.

Ways we take action in Leelanau County, and in partnership with Traverse Indivisibles in Northern Michigan:

  • Attend local government meetings regularly

  • Organize town halls

  • Plan and support community gatherings, rallies and marches

  • Sponsor National Writers Series events

  • Bring in local and nationally-known expert speakers to share on pressing issues like immigration, climate change and health care

  • Partner with area non-profits to support their mission and work

  • Host campaign sign pop-up events during election season

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Local Government Impacts Us Most

Your voice is needed. Attend a local township and county meeting, reach out to our elected officials with your opinion and consider applying to join a committee or running for office!

Learn how to get involved

Leelanau Indivisible & Act Blue

A small donation goes a long way to support Leelanau Indivisible and the level of action we are able to take.

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Land Acknowledgement

We acknowledge that the land of Leelanau County is land ceded in the treaty of 1855, whose ancestral land of the Anishinabek, known as the three fires confederacy of the Ojibwe, Odawa and Potawatomi, and recognized by the colonial government as the Grand Traverse Band of Ottawa and Chippewa Indians. We give thanks to the Anishinabeg as the caretakers of mother earth and their relationship to the land; we acknowledge we are nothing without aki (mother-earth), newsin (air), nibi (water), gitigaadan (plants) and wesiinyag (animals).