Voter
A voter icon should be clear, friendly, and repeatable in lists, maps, and local neighborhood clusters.
Iconography
This page collects icons for the concepts that repeat throughout the product: speaking, listening, routing, campaigning, legislating, and the different people and issues inside the system.
A voter icon should be clear, friendly, and repeatable in lists, maps, and local neighborhood clusters.
When a loud voter is loud, they use their megaphone to blast waves that radiate outward.
People who receive the message are all ears. This can stand for listening, receiving, or attention landing.
Use for spreading influence, signal propagation, amplification, and chain reactions across the network.
A campaign is a public motion around a bill or issue. It gathers people, stance, and momentum.
Legislation should feel like a document, a page, or a sheet with consequences attached to it.
A transmittal is a routed message. The icon should imply sending, delivery, and movement toward an office.
Coalitions, advocacy groups, and organizer networks can use a plural icon that signals organized people rather than a single person.
Representatives need a symbol that feels official enough to suggest office and responsibility without becoming generic government clip art.
A direct education symbol for school funding, staffing, student access, and district issues.
A strong, fast-scanning symbol for animal welfare, cruelty enforcement, and shelter policy.
Use for mobility, buses, rail, commute reliability, and transportation infrastructure.
Water resilience, flood response, shutoff policy, and environmental utility concerns.
Ballot access, early voting, election administration, and rights-related participation questions.
Use for verification, privacy, trusted routing, and legitimacy cues across the product.
A reading or handbook symbol for explainers, onboarding, and pages that teach the rules of the system.