At the LCDP Leadership Team Meeting, by Zoom, August 1
If you received your Absentee Ballot and did not return it and would like to vote in person on Election Day, it is recommended that you bring your absentee ballot
Hello Indivisibles!It’s 99 days to the election! We are on the home stretch.Here’s what is going on now: Tuesday, July 28, 9 a.m. Coffee and Conversation. Leelanau Indivisible Steering Committee members
Here’s a challenge for YOU- the Volunteer from Leelanau County that makes the most phone calls during the ONE Campaign’s Upcoming “Weekend of Action” – July 25-26, discussed below, wins this 3×5 Biden porch flag.
Absentee Primary Ballots are being mailed now & you might have already received yours! We have had many people contact us to ask who the Leelanau County Democrats have endorsed.
Subject: Leelanau Indivisible Election Countdown Activist Actions Week of July 13, 2020 Leelanau Indivisibles,It’s only 112 days until the Presidential Election so we are entering a particularly critical time period.
This weekend is the Michigan Democratic Party’s ONE Campaign’s second Weekend of Action, when hundreds of volunteers from across the state of Michigan will be reaching out to their friends and
ATTENTION RESIDENTS OF LEELANAU TOWNSHIP: IMPORTANT INFORMATION BEFORE YOU VOTE John Sanders is running for Leelanau Township Supervisor on the Democratic ballot as a write in candidate. He will need
We are excited to announce that John Sanders is running as a Democratic “Write In” candidate for Leelanau Township Supervisor! So we need YOUR HELP to spread the word to anyone you know who lives in Leelanau Township that
Leelanau County Democratic Party
P. O. Box 215
Empire, MI 49630
(231) 903-0001
[email protected]
Leelanau County occupies the ancestral, traditional and contemporary lands of Anishinaabek people. The Leelanau County Democratic Party recognizes The Anishinaabek of the Three Fires Confederacy, the Odawa (Ottawa), Ojibwe (Chippewa), and Bode’wadmi (Potawatomi); historic Indigenous communities in Michigan; and those who were forcibly removed from their homelands. Leelanau County occupies land ceded in the treaty of 1855. We give thanks to the Anishinaabek as the caretakers of Mother Earth and for their relationship to the land; We further recognize the ongoing relationship of dependence upon, and respect for, all living beings of earth, sky, and water. In offering this land acknowledgement, we affirm Indigenous sovereignty, history, and experiences.