David Shorr is host of The Battles We Pick podcast and a longtime advocacy strategist. He has helped shape policy debates and decisionmaking for organizations including the William & Flora Hewlett Foundation, Ford Foundation, Democracy Fund, Aspen Institute, Andrew Goodman Foundation, and TechCongress.
Many thanks to David for inviting me as a guest on his most recent podcast. We engaged on a wide range of subjects, as described at the podcast link and below.
I hope you enjoy listening as much as I enjoyed exploring it all...
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"One interesting angle on advocacy are the effort some people devote to prodding certain key players to get more involved. In sectors like philanthropy, there can be a reluctance because it seems too political. As founder of the Center for Community Foundation Policy Leadership, longtime criminal justice reform advocate Stephen Saloom has been focused on encouraging and supporting community foundations to advocate on their issues.
"As Stephen shared on the podcast, the strongest case for doing so traces back to these organizations' stated missions. Community foundations' missions typically commit them to the well-being of the local populace in the broadest terms—as broadly as any governmental body or public official. So it's only logical, Stephen argues, that community foundations should get engaged in questions of policy that affect the local community.
"We talked about one of the deterrents that make organizations hesitant about taking up advocacy: tax laws prohibiting lobbying. But we also gave an immediate disclaimer that we are not tax lawyers offering counsel. For excellent info on such questions, we both recommend the Alliance For Justice's Bolder Advocacy program. Next was a really interesting conversation about what constitutes politics in a democracy (something more basic than just partisan competition)..."
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