When the Federal Government Fails, Local Organizers Step In—With Laws, Not Just Protests

At a time of federal democracy backsliding, grassroots leaders are transforming personal struggle into community-driven policy solutions.

This essay is part of an ongoing Gender & Democracy series, presented in partnership with Groundswell Fund and Groundswell Action Fund, highlighting the work of Groundswell partners advancing inclusive democracy. You’ll find stories, reflections and accomplishments—told in their own words—by grassroots leaders, women of color, Indigenous women, and trans and gender-expansive people supported by Groundswell. By amplifying these voices—their solutions, communities, challenges and victories—our shared goal is to show how intersectional organizing strengthens democracy.


Fellows in the Solís Policy Institute (SPI), a project of Women’s Foundation California that trains local activists on policymaking. (Facebook)

We are living through the hollowing out of federal protection. In real time, the rights to bodily autonomy, to asylum, to be transgender, visible and safe in this country are dissolving, state by state, ruling by ruling. And while the usual narrative goes something like, “Vote, wait, trust the system,” in many places, the people closest to the chaos have stepped up to envision and advance new laws.

In California this year, four bills moving through the legislature were not the result of think tank white papers or party strategists. They came from organizers: queer folks, women of color, survivors … people who have lived the very broken systems they are now trying to change.

A process that centers lived experience as a form of policy expertise is a cutting-edge theory of governance. One that says communities should not have to beg for inclusion in policymaking—they should be building the policy themselves.

Let’s look at what that actually produces.

AB 969: Safety or Economic Stability

In a year when domestic violence shelters are facing budget cuts across the country and Roe v. Wade’s reversal continues to destabilize reproductive safety nets, California is offering a different approach.

AB 969, introduced by Assemblymember Celeste Rodriguez, helps survivors access CalWORKs—California’s main welfare program—by expanding the Family Violence Option and making it easier to navigate the system.

It is a reminder that gender-based violence doesn’t end when someone walks out the door. Without financial independence, safety can remain out of reach. This bill closes the gap between escaping harm and rebuilding life.