WIN VOTES 2026

WIN Votes 2026

The June 16 DC primary will be one of the most consequential elections this city has seen in a generation. Washington Interfaith Network — 45 member institutions representing 25,000 families across all 8 Wards — is organizing to make sure our communities are informed, engaged, and showing up.

Mark Your Calendar
WIN Districtwide Candidates Forum
Evening of May 17, 2026 — East of the River — Location TBD
Mark Your Calendar
DC Democratic Primary Election
Tuesday, June 16, 2026
Featured Event

May 17th Candidates Forum

WIN is organizing a districtwide forum where mayoral and local candidates must respond to OUR agenda in front of 1,000+ organized DC residents. This is where our collective power becomes visible. We need every member institution to commit to showing up.

May 17, 2026 Evening — East of the River Goal: 1,000 Organized Residents
RSVP Now

Election Season Timeline

From February through June, here is how WIN is organizing — and how your institution can engage at every stage.

Month Focus
February WIN issue campaign training; relationship building through listening and community engagement
March–April Voter engagement and Ranked Choice Voting education; alignment on final WIN Issue Agenda
May Finalize turnout commitments; WIN Districtwide Candidates Forum — May 17th
June Democratic Primary — June 16th

Our 2026 Issue Agenda

WIN’s issue agenda is built from listening to hundreds of DC residents across all 8 Wards. These are the demands we will bring to candidates on May 17th.

Affordable Housing & Public Land Use

Create significant new affordable housing stock and ensure development on public land delivers community benefits commensurate with the public investment.

Collective Care & Mutual Aid

Organize member institutions to stand alongside migrant neighbors, unhoused neighbors, and Black youth who are disproportionately targeted by the state.

Healthy Housing

Fund the Sustainable Energy Trust Fund, pass Clean Heat legislation, and redirect ratepayer investment away from Washington Gas’s pipeline replacement plan.

Homelessness

Build genuine, consistent support for unhoused residents grounded in what this community is asking for — including access to ID and rapid response from faith institutions.

        

Public Safety & Violence Prevention

        

Fund violence interrupters, create job opportunities, invest in youth recreation, and expand evidence-based behavioral health services.

      
      
        

Black Equity Through Homeownership (BETH)

        

Black and legacy homeowners across DC face deteriorating homes, vacant neighboring properties, and shrinking pathways to affordable homeownership. WIN is working to implement the Healthy Homes Act for legacy homeowners, build on the Vacant to Vibrant Act to convert abandoned properties into homeownership opportunities, and protect legal heirs of properties left vacant through intergenerational transfer.

      

Host a Listening Session

A listening session — or house meeting — is one of WIN’s most powerful organizing tools. It is how we surface what our communities are experiencing, develop leaders, and build the collective agenda we will bring to candidates on May 17th. Sessions run 45–75 minutes and work best with 10–20 people.

1

Open: Credential and Frame

Introduce yourself, share your story, introduce WIN, and name the urgency of this moment. Frame the 2026 election cycle and mention the May 17th Candidates Forum.

2

Introductions and Rounds

Ask everyone to introduce themselves and answer a rounds question. Give people 1–2 minutes each. Model it yourself first — include a personal detail or quick anecdote to encourage others to share.

3

Move from Stories to Power

Get people to share the personal side of why they care. Move the conversation from problems to issues and demands. Connect individual stories to organized power.

4

Close with Key Asks

Name the next step: show up on May 17th. Ask who else needs to be in the room. Set a turnout goal for your institution.


Ranked Choice Voting Education

This is the first DC primary to use ranked choice voting. WIN is helping member institutions share this information with their communities. Use the resources below — produced by the DC Board of Elections — to educate the people in your network.

Voters can rank up to five candidates in order of preference. You do not have to rank all five.
Ranking additional candidates does not hurt your first choice.
Do not rank the same candidate more than once.
Do not skip rankings — for example, do not rank 1st and 3rd while leaving 2nd blank.
If your first choice does not receive enough votes, your vote counts toward your next ranked choice.

Downloads

Key materials for the 2026 organizing season. The full organizing packet will be available here soon.

Additional Resources: As the primary season develops, new materials will be added here — including candidate information, forum details, and turnout tools. Sign up for WIN’s mailing list at windc.org/signup to get updates delivered directly.

Questions about WIN’s 2026 organizing?
Contact us at 2026@windc.org or reach out to your WIN staff organizer directly.