Which nonprofit filings (Form 990) or public disclosures reveal donations to Indivisible, MoveOn, the ACLU, United We Dream, Voto Latino or 50501 in 2025–2026?
Executive summary
A review of the supplied reporting finds no Form 990 or other nonprofit tax filings in the material that explicitly list donations made in 2025–2026 to Indivisible, MoveOn, the ACLU, United We Dream, Voto Latino or 50501; the documents and pages provided show organizational activity, membership in coalitions, or guidance on how to give, but do not produce 2025–2026 IRS disclosures of gifts to those groups [1] [2] [3] [4] [5] [6]. Historical Form 990s for Indivisible are referenced in public databases up through 2023, but the supplied material does not include 2025–2026 tax-year 990s that would demonstrate donations in those years [7] [6].
1. What the available public documents actually show about 2025–2026 donations
The sources provided document a public coalition and a wave of public actions in early 2026 — for example, the ICE Out For Good coalition listing Indivisible, MoveOn Civic Action, the ACLU, Voto Latino, United We Dream and 50501 as partners in mass mobilizations [1] [3] [4] [5] — but those press releases and event pages announce organizing partnerships and protests, not gift-level disclosures or schedules of grant payments, so they do not function as Form 990s or equivalent donor rolls that would prove donations in 2025–2026 [1] [3].
2. Where Form 990 evidence exists in the supplied reporting — and its limits
The supplied material points to publicly available Form 990s and nonprofit records for Indivisible from prior years: InfluenceWatch cites Indivisible’s Form 990 and other financial statements through 2023, and GuideStar’s profile confirms Indivisible Project is required to file 990s and that 2021–2023 returns are available via their service [7] [6]. Those references establish that historic filings exist and are accessible, but the package of sources does not include 2025 or 2026 Form 990s or any 2025–2026 filings that list donors to the named organizations [7] [6].
3. Other public-disclosure veins flagged by the reporting — but not producing 2025–2026 donation lists
Several items in the record indicate webpages that solicit donations or explain how to give — Indivisible’s “How to Give” and the ACLU’s donation page — which are fundraising mechanisms rather than donor disclosures, and thus are not substitutes for Form 990s or schedule-level public filings that itemize outside grants or contributions for a fiscal year [2] [8]. OpenSecrets is cited as a resource that has compiled donors to Indivisible Action in earlier cycles (notably 2022), but the provided OpenSecrets pointer is to historical outside-spending/donor reporting rather than a 2025–2026 Form 990 disclosure showing gifts to the organizations named [9].
4. How to verify donations through the records the reporting points toward
The trail the reporting provides suggests two concrete verification steps not completed within the supplied materials: consult the organizations’ own IRS filings and Schedule B attachments (if publicly available) via GuideStar/GuideStar’s Form 990 pages or ProPublica Nonprofit Explorer to look for 2025 fiscal-year returns (Indivisible is known to have such filings through 2023, per GuideStar and InfluenceWatch) [7] [6]; and search OpenSecrets and other outside-spending trackers for 2025–2026 cycles where independent expenditures or dark-money intermediaries may report donations to political 501(c) vehicles — the supplied OpenSecrets reference shows precedent for this method but does not itself supply 2025–2026 entries [9]. The material provided does not itself complete those searches.
5. Alternate interpretations, agendas and why the record may be thin
Advocacy press releases and mobilization pages naturally emphasize coalition activity and calls to action rather than granular financial transparency — the ACLU press release and Indivisible announcements highlight partnerships in the ICE Out For Good campaign but do not claim to disclose donor ledgers [1] [3]. InfluenceWatch and GuideStar are disclosure-focused intermediaries and cite prior Form 990s for Indivisible, which can be used to trace past funding patterns but do not constitute proof of 2025–2026 donations in the supplied dataset [7] [6]. Reporters and readers should treat coalition membership statements as organizational alliances, not as substitute evidence of third-party funding.
Conclusion: based on the documents provided, no Form 990 or comparable public nonprofit filing in 2025–2026 is presented that explicitly reveals donations to Indivisible, MoveOn, the ACLU, United We Dream, Voto Latino or 50501; the sources document coalition activity and point to historical 990 records for Indivisible but do not include 2025–2026 donor-itemized filings [1] [7] [3] [6] [9].