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Grassroots
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- For other meanings, see Grass roots (disambiguation).
A grassroots political movement is one driven by the constituents of a community. The term implies that the genesis of the described political movement is natural yet spontaneous and imposes a dichotomy between this and a movement that is orchestrated by traditional power structures.
Contents
- 1 Technique
- 2 Origins
- 3 References
- 4 See also
- 5 External link
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Technique
Grassroots organize and lobby through procedures including:
- house meetings/parties
- larger meetings - AGM's
- putting up posters
- talking with pedestrians on the street (often involving informational clipboards)
- gathering signatures for petitions
- setting up information tables
- raising money from many small donors for political advertising or campaigns
- organizing large demonstrations
- asking individuals to submit opinions to media outlets and government officials
- get out the vote activities which includes the practices of reminding people to vote and/or transporting them to polling places.
Origins
In the
United States, the first use of the word "grassroots and boots" is thought to have been coined by
Senator Albert Jeremiah Beveridge of
Indiana, who declared of the
Progressives Party in 1912 that: "This party [the Progressive Party] has come from the grass roots. It has grown from the soil of people's hard necessities."
[1]
Faking a grassroots movement is known as astroturfing. Astroturfing - as the name suggests - is named after a popular artificial lawn, astroturf. Astroturfing is similar in practice of the grassroots movement, except that those behind it, the lobbyists, hide their agenda by appearing as specific individuals voicing their opinions. The term has incorporated itself into common speech. [2]
References
- ^ Courtesy: Eigen's Political & Historical Quotations Beveridge, Albert J. (05-20-06).
- ^ Walter Truett Anderson. "Astroturf -- The Big Business of Fake Grassroots Politics", 01-05-96.
See also
External link
he:תנועה שורשית
nn:Grasrotrørsle
zh:草根