Leaders

Which Chapters Will Advance in IFAPAC Madness

Written by NAIFA | 3/20/24 10:38 PM

Time is ticking to ensure your chapter makes the cut for the deadline of the first round of play on Sunday!
Will your chapter advance or will you be knocked out at the end of the first round of IFAPAC Madness? There is still plenty of time to secure IFAPAC contributions for your state. 
Round One started on Tuesday, March 5th and will run through Sunday, March 24th. All 51 chapters will be competing to advance through the brackets. The winner will be announced on May 20, 2024, during Congressional Conference! The 2024 Champion Chapter will receive a trophy that can tour around the chapter all year.

There will be a total of six rounds of play. Round advancements will be announced on Mondays. Who will emerge as an IFAPAC Cinderella? Who will be declared the 2024 IFAPAC Madness Champion? The standings as of Monday, March 18th for each division are below. Check-in on Monday to see who advanced!

How Can You Ensure Your Team Advances?
Make an IFAPAC Contribution Today

Push your chapter to the championship by signing up to be a monthly defender or making a one-time contribution. Recruit your fellow members to contribute, too! Log in using your email address and the password: Advocacy

 

 

Contributions to IFAPAC are voluntary and are used to contribute to campaigns of candidates for elected office. Your contributions will be divided between your state chapter’s IFAPAC and IFAPAC National if you have directed NAIFA to do so. You have the right to refuse to contribute without reprisal. The amount contributed will not benefit or disadvantage you in any way. Corporate contributions to IFAPAC’s political fund are prohibited. Contributions to IFAPAC are not deductible for federal income tax purposes. For NAIFA-Massachusetts members, the division of funds will be 60%/40% up to the state limit of $500 per calendar year. For NAIFA-New York members, a contribution on an LLC account will be retained 100% by the IFAPAC administrative fund due to state campaign finance rules.