That Greenwich "nonpartisan" group "Invisible Ladies?" Their parent organization isn't ashamed of admitting who they are: a far-left branch of the Democrat Party.
/Obviously, a group formed after Trump’s first coronation specifically to fight and stop him never intended to be anything but Democrat partisans, but i was offended, and continue to at least be annoyed, when a band of bored women organized a Greenwich chapter of “Indivisible” and ran 100 candidates for the traditionally nonpartisan RTM in 2018 while hiding their party affiliations and claiming to be entirely nonpartisan themselves. Uh huh.
In any event, the Indivisible mothership never bothered to hide its political affiliation: Democrat, and these past few days have seen it taking the lead in their party’s governance:
Soros-Backed Leftist Group Calls on Senator Schumer to Step Down as Minority Leader
Politico, which surely knows its own, describes them thus:
The statement from Indivisible, which launched during Trump’s first administration, is a sign that the anger among Democrats extends beyond the halls of Congress. In a Saturday release, Indivisible said 82 percent of its leaders in New York and 91 percent nationwide had voted to call for Schumer to step aside.
“After weeks of constituents demanding that Democrats use this rare, precious point of leverage on the government funding bill, Schumer did the opposite,” the group’s co-executive director Ezra Levin said in the release. “He led the charge to wave the white flag of surrender. But Indivisible has no intention of surrendering to Trump, Musk, and congressional Republicans.”
Schumer Is Being Shown the Door and Handed His Hat
…. The radical Democratic group Indivisible was the first out of the block, calling on Schumer to step down as minority leader.
Schumer’s team tried to persuade the New York leaders at Indivisible not to immediately sign onto a statewide letter that called for Schumer to quit his position as minority leader, said one of the people familiar with the discussions. Schumer spoke to the New York Indivisible officials on Sunday. They called for him to step down as minority leader anyway on Monday.
“The goal was to get Sen. Schumer in front of Indivisible group leaders before they made any decisions on anything,” said a second person familiar with the meeting.
A third person described the conversations between Schumer and Indivisible as “tense and unproductive.”