National Popular Vote is a U.S. nonprofit advocacy organization that seeks to guarantee the presidency to the candidate who wins the national popular vote by securing state enactment of the National Popular Vote Interstate Compact and by educating and lobbying state legislators and the public about presidential election reform.
Electoral reform and presidential election law, promotion and enactment of the National Popular Vote Interstate Compact, state-level legislation to allocate electoral votes to the national popular vote winner, voting equality and related election-administration reforms.
Primarily funded by private donations and philanthropic support, including significant financial contributions from founder John R. Koza and other individual donors.
Institute for Research on Presidential Elections (educational nonprofit founded by the same organizers), state National Popular Vote chapters and allies, and high-profile individuals associated with the campaign including founder John R. Koza, Barry Fadem, Christopher Pearson, Pam Wilmot, Saul Anuzis, and consultants such as Ted Trimpa.
Nonprofit corporation (501(c)(4))