Sort of a wikipedia for progressive political action, covering both data/analysis and calls-to-action. All crowdsourced, all open, where you can see what's important and what you can do about it. I'd set it up like so:
Data:
* demographics for your city/county/state
* historical records, trends, projections
* important points of regional culture to be aware of
Public office:
* current office-holders
* historical records for office-holders
* - how popular were they?
* - what were the demographics at the time?
* - what did they run on, did it work, and did they follow through?
Private groups and associations:
* who's out there? who's in your region?
* what are they pushing?
* how do they get their message out?
* - do they employ dirty tricks?
* how successful are they?
* who funds them?
* who stands to benefit?
Media:
* who are the local/regional media players?
* who in the local media is sympathetic, i.e. who to contact for outreach?
Ideology:
* what are the important points in right-wing ideology?
* who are the thinkers behind these?
* who else is influential?
* what are the popular right-wing talking points?
* - what's wrong with these talking points (e.g. doesn't correspond to reality, doesn't treat human beings as human beings, violates social-contract ethics, and so on and so on)?
* - what's appealing about these talking points? why do people like/believe them?
* - what's right with these talking points? (hey, it could happen!)
* - concise rebuttals to talking points
What can I do?
* I have 5 minutes..
* I have 15 minutes..
* I have 60 minutes..
* - who can I call?
* - who can I email?
* - what can I say?
Thoughts? Comments? Anything like this already being done?