GetUp!
GetUp! is an Australian progressive advocacy organization founded in 2005 by Jeremy Heimans and David Madden, graduates of Harvard Kennedy School, who modeled it after the U.S.-based MoveOn.org to facilitate internet-mediated political activism.[1][2] The group operates as a non-profit with a claimed membership exceeding one million, relying primarily on small individual donations—97% under $100—to fund operations independent of political parties.[3] GetUp! mobilizes supporters via online petitions, social media drives, protests, and door-knocking to influence policy on climate action, economic fairness, human rights, and refugees, often targeting conservative politicians and legislation through adversarial campaigns.[4][5] Among its reported achievements are contributions to marriage equality via a viral video with 16 million views and the 2016 unseating of Liberal MP Andrew Nikolic, alongside self-claimed wins like securing mental health funding and a High Court victory on related issues.[4][3] The organization has drawn significant controversy, including legal battles with the Australian Electoral Commission over donation disclosure thresholds and scrutiny of foreign-linked funding, such as questioned overseas donations, amid conservative accusations of it functioning as a proxy for Labor and Greens despite electoral rulings affirming its independence.[6][7][8] Critics, including figures like Prime Minister Scott Morrison, have highlighted its partisan electioneering and ties to international networks through its founders' other ventures like Avaaz and Purpose, raising questions about external influences on domestic politics.[8][4]