Resistance Survival Guide #247
Skill Level: Intermediate
Understanding who actually holds power in your community is one of the most important skills you can build right now. Power does not only sit in elected offices. It lives in donor networks, zoning boards, police leadership, real estate developers, media ownership, and the quiet relationships between them. When you map power early, you stop reacting to decisions after they happen and start seeing them coming. This guide walks you through how to identify, track, and understand local power structures using verifiable public information and independent tools.
Why This Matters
Most people only notice power when it shows up as a crisis. A sudden policy change. A controversial development project. A coordinated crackdown. By then, the decisions are already in motion. Mapping power ahead of time lets you see patterns, alliances, and pressure points before they impact your community. It also helps you identify who influences outcomes behind the scenes, which is often more important than who holds a title.
When you understand how power flows locally, you can make smarter decisions about where to focus your energy, who to watch, and how to respond effectively. This is not about paranoia. It is about awareness and preparation.
What This Is
Power mapping is the process of identifying key individuals, organizations, and relationships that influence decisions in your area. It combines public records research, network analysis, and observation of behavior over time.
You are not guessing. You are using documented information from sources like OpenSecrets, FollowTheMoney, Ballotpedia, ProPublica, and local government databases to build a clear picture of who is connected to whom and how influence operates.
Step by Step Instructions
Step 1: Identify the Visible Power Structure
Start by listing the obvious decision makers in your community. This includes city council members, county commissioners, school board officials, and law enforcement leadership. Use tools like Ballotpedia and your local government website to gather names, roles, and stated priorities. Write everything into a single working document. Keep it simple at first. You are building a foundation, not trying to map everything at once.
Step 2: Follow the Money Behind the Names
Once you have your list, shift your focus to financial influence. Look up campaign donations and funding sources using FollowTheMoney and OpenSecrets. Pay attention to patterns. Notice which donors appear repeatedly and which industries are heavily represented. Add these donors, companies, and organizations to your document. This step reveals who is backing decisions before they become public policy.
Step 3: Identify Unelected Power Players
Power often hides outside elected office. Search for major developers, lobbying groups, law firms, and nonprofit organizations operating in your area. Use investigative reporting from outlets like ProPublica and independent legal tracking from Democracy Docket. Look for overlap between these groups and your elected officials. Shared boards, partnerships, or repeated collaboration are strong indicators of influence.
Step 4: Map Media and Narrative Control
Now examine who shapes the story in your community. Identify local news outlets, independent blogs, and influential community pages. Look at who gets quoted often and whose perspectives dominate coverage. Understanding narrative control helps you see how public opinion is being guided before decisions are made.
Step 5: Build a Visual Power Map
Take your collected information and begin connecting it visually. Use a notebook, spreadsheet, or tools like Kumu or Gephi. Draw connections based only on verified relationships such as donations, partnerships, or shared affiliations. This is where scattered information becomes a clear network. Keep it clean and evidence based.
Step 6: Track Patterns Over Time
Your map becomes powerful when you update it regularly. Watch for repeated names, recurring partnerships, and consistent beneficiaries of decisions. Pay attention to timing. Who shows up before major votes or announcements. Who gains access repeatedly. This step turns your map from a snapshot into a working intelligence tool.
Step 7: Secure and Maintain Your Work
Store your map in a secure and reliable location. Use private documents, encrypted storage, or offline backups. Treat this as important work. Update it as new information appears and keep your sources documented. A well maintained map becomes more valuable over time.
Example
Imagine a small city where a new development project suddenly appears on the agenda. At first glance, it looks like a routine zoning change. But your power map shows that the developer has donated repeatedly to multiple council members. The law firm representing the project shares board connections with a local economic development nonprofit. The same nonprofit has been quoted in local media supporting the project.
Instead of being surprised, you already understand the network behind the decision. That changes how you respond. You know where influence is coming from and how it is being framed publicly.
Required Reading
- Ballotpedia for tracking local officials and election context
- OpenSecrets for federal level financial influence tracking
- FollowTheMoney for state and local campaign finance data
- ProPublica for investigative reporting and databases
- Democracy Docket for legal and election related developments
Conclusion
Power does not operate in isolation. It moves through networks, relationships, and repeated patterns that are visible if you know where to look. By mapping power in your community before it becomes a problem, you shift from reacting to anticipating. You gain clarity, reduce confusion, and make more strategic choices about how to engage.
This is how you stop feeling blindsided. This is how you stay one step ahead.
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