ACLU Would Like You To Ignore Partisan Activism, Mission Drift
National Legal Director David Cole insists that the critics are wrong, but he fails to contend with much of the substance of their critiques.

This week, David Cole, the American Civil Liberties Union's (ACLU) National Legal Director, wrote in The Nation that critics have accused the organization of "no longer defend[ing] those with whom we disagree." Former supporters have referred to the organization as a "caricature of its former self" that is "leaving the First Amendment behind." Cole, on the other hand, contends that the organization "continue[s] to believe that the First Amendment is the foundation of our democracy, and we defend it for precisely that reason." Despite citing plenty of commendable examples, his defense misses the degree to which internal partisan shifts have watered down the ACLU's mission.
Cole cites, as one historical example, the case of Skokie, Illinois, in which that state's ACLU chapter defended the rights of neo-Nazis to march through a town that was home to hundreds of Holocaust survivors. This case is cited as a fundamental example of free speech defense, and for good reason: The right to free speech must be defended even in the most heinous of circumstances, for the most heinous of people.
But in August 2017 after the Unite the Right rally in Charlottesville, Virginia, in which a woman was killed and dozens were injured by a white supremacist driving his car into a crowd of counterprotesters, the ACLU signaled a shift in focus. The organization's Virginia chapter had played a role in helping the rally's organizers secure a permit after they'd initially been denied.
In the months that followed, Cole chaired an internal ACLU committee that drafted new case selection guidelines for the organization. While the document does reaffirm the organization's commitment to free speech, it also takes great pains to list ways in which the organization can distance itself from its potential clients' beliefs, such as by "denouncing the views in press statements, op-eds, social media, and other available fora." "How, exactly, loudly disavowing their clients is consistent with lawyers' duty to zealously represent them was not explained," wrote Lara Bazelon, law professor at the University of San Francisco School of Law, in The Atlantic. "Speaking as a criminal-defense lawyer, I don't think it can be."
The new guidelines stated that "the ACLU generally will not represent protesters who
seek to march while armed…whether or not state law permits or prohibits the carrying of weapons in a protest." Last year, the organization even signed an amicus brief seeking to keep New York's onerous gun registration laws in place, stating that "restrictions on guns in public spaces are appropriate to make public spaces safe for democratic participation," officially making the Second Amendment subordinate to the First, in the ACLU's view.
In the last few years, the organization seems to have drifted into outright partisan political activism: Rather than simply advocating for specific civil liberties–protecting policies or ballot initiatives, in 2018, the ACLU spent $800,000 on a campaign ad for Democrat Stacey Abrams in her run for governor of Georgia. Last year, it petitioned for the government to cancel up to $50,000 in student loan debt per borrower. Regardless of the merit of either position, neither is directly related to the defense of constitutional rights or civil liberties.
Cole's defense, that the organization retains its single-minded defense of free speech for all, does not adequately recognize that today's organization is riven by internal struggles over whether free speech is compatible with social justice. Nor does Cole recognize that many of these critiques come from within the ACLU's tent. The revised case guidelines were originally leaked by Wendy Kaminer, an erstwhile ACLU board member who had grown critical of the organization. Ira Glasser, former executive director, criticized the organization for its post-Charlottesville pivot.* And David Goldberger, one of the Jewish attorneys who famously defended the Skokie neo-Nazis, said of the organization today, "I got the sense it was more important for A.C.L.U. staff to identify with clients and progressive causes than to stand on principle."
In many ways, the ACLU has drifted from its initial mission, as "the nation's premier defender of the rights enshrined in the U.S. Constitution." Cole acknowledges that "some on the left are less committed to free speech than they once were." What he fails to contend with is how that describes the ACLU as well.
*CORRECTION: This article originally included another former ACLU president as criticizing the organization post-Charlottesville. It has been corrected to include only Glasser.
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My favorite ACLU interaction was a reddit AMA a few years ago where an ACLU representative was answering questions and man, he got taken to task by the gay cohort who was upset about their gushing over some Muslim activist, and the criticisms were on point. Essentially, the mood in the thread was it would be fine for the ACLU to say "we will defend this person's right to speak, regardless of their opinions" but the ACLU had instead gone out of their way to say "they shared her values" and considered her a big fat hero.
It's well to remember that the ACLU has often had its "foibles". Before WWII, the organization made a point of always having a communist on the board of directors, an exercise in 30s style political correctness. They only booted the commie following the Nazi-Soviet pact that paved the way for the partition of Poland.
And they reversed the expulsion in 1976:
"The resolution repealing the 1940 expulsion was adopted by the current board at its April meeting and announced yesterday. It stated that the expulsion “was not consonant with the basin principles on which the A.C.L.U. was founded.” There was no evidence that [Elizabeth Gurley Flynn, the Communist in question] had ever violated these principles, the resolution states."
https://www.nytimes.com/1976/06/22/archives/aclu-reverses-ouster-of-elizabeth-gurley-flynn.html
I presume they mean "basic" not "basin"
They have never not had communists at the top of the organization.
Cole's defense, that the organization retains its single-minded defense of free speech for all, does not adequately recognize that today's organization is riven by internal struggles over whether free speech is compatible with social justice.
It's not and the ACLU was tipping their hand on this issue as far back as the 1990s when they were making public statements about the value of "equity" over "equality", although "equity" wasn't the buzzword it is today, so they had to use whole sentences to carefully explain that equality under the law was not the ultimate outcome, but that giving deference and adjusting the legal systems for those who are weaker or disenfranchised was the goal.
Oh and they can keep pointing to the Skokie case all they want, but that case caused a mass exodus in the ACLU back in the day because there wasn't a... "remarkably stable consensus" within the ranks even back then.
When people bring up Skokie as the ACLU championing free speech, I tend to ask them for similar examples since the invention of the internet. I usually get silence or stammering.
The ACLU spouting off about Skokie at this point is like Al Bundy going on about four touchdowns in one game. The case was 45 years ago. And, at this point, the ACLU's triumphs to individual liberties parallel a shoe salesman's contributions to athletic greatness.
Yes, thank you for making that point. The fact that they're bringing up a single case that's nearly 50 years old is telling.
You knocking kappernick?
You racist!
Article Summary:
"We really hate when people notice what we're doing".
Nothing to see here. And turn up the gas.
Writing Amber Heard's WaPo Op-Ed for the promise of a bucket of cash demonstrates how far it's fallen.
Seems appropriate that their view of a domestic violence ambassador is the abuser in the relationship.
I haven't heard anything about this, but I think that this week alone I'm already at two things I thought were conspiracy theories in the fever dreams of a Fox News host, only to learn it was 100% straight fact, breezily reported in Reuters or some other "trustworthy" news source.
Remember when the ACLU defended requiring one vaccine to patronize a bar or restaurant, claiming it actually protects freedom?
And remember when they "boldly" broke precedent and opposed Kavanaugh's nomination? They have no mission to drift from, just partisan hackery.
Crazy.
https://greenwald.substack.com/p/the-aclu-prior-to-covid-denounced
"Cole cites, as one historical example, the case of Skokie, Illinois"
Historical is right. 1977 it was. 2022 - 1977 = 45.
Nearly half a century. There have been a few changes since then.
"In the last few years, the organization seems to have drifted into outright partisan political activism"
What a collection of weasel words. They don't SEEM, they clearly have. Statement of fact. Not drifted, driven.
Even on the seventies they were known by those to the right of Stalin as the Anti Christian Lawsuit Union.
This is a political action committee, plain and simple.
Ask any of them for a list of gun rights cases they have taken in the last thirty years. Ask how many social media companies they have taken t court on behalf of a cancelled person from the right. How many parents have they defended from a school board accusing them of terrorism for saying boys shouldn't be in the girls bathroom.
ACLU is a bunch of partisan hacks. Who knew?
Could it be that we are all partisan hacks? I hate to get all "let he be the first to throw stones" and all, but if anything, the ACLU is merely late to the party. How many will call out their Team for betraying principles for principals? The internet means never having to be consistent.
The problem is not that the ACLU are partisan hacks.
The problem is that they are partisan hacks who insist that they are not partisan and occupy a position in which they are a source for determining if something IS partisan.
This has the effect of dragging everything leftward.
Yeah, this is like Progressives complaining about Fox News being partisan, while 95% of the media is far left wing, partisan hacks. Progressives think the MSM is not biased, while it's perfectly clear they're partisan hacks, just the same as Fox is towards the right.
With all due respect, please. Show me a person engaged in partisan hackery and I will show you a person who insists they are as pure as the driven snow when it comes to bias. That includes myself and every single commenter on this site.
Be honest with yourselves.
And they don’t even try to convince you they protect the 2nd Amendment any more. Haven’t for years.
They explicitly state they do not believe the second amendment protects an individual right. From https://www.aclu.org/other/second-amendment :
"ACLU Position
Given the reference to "a well regulated Militia" and "the security of a free State," the ACLU has long taken the position that the Second Amendment protects a collective right rather than an individual right.
[....]"
Coming from a site which features on another thread today all posters cheering on the State of Florida's punishing Disney because it's CEO exercised his 1st amendment right to criticize legislation, how seriously do we take this place as libertarian?
Not very.
A multi-national corporation was stripped of its sovereign privileges?
Whatever is the world coming to.
What do you think of Citizens United, by the way?
You're MAGA not libertarian.
The State punished a corporation because it's CEO criticized legislation, call it what you want, but that's what happened.
Citizen's Untied sucks.
The State of Florida is trying to revoke corrupt crony capitalist privileges to a gigantic, politically connected corporation. Yes, we cheer that on. Equality under the law and all that.
NYOB, it maybe that or it may not be. No one knows because it was not studied or considered. It was rammed through as a bill with no hearings, no expert comment, no citizen comment, no study, one committee hearing that rubber stamped it. Google the issue and set dates for last year - there is nothing because it has not been an issue. Disney has rights but responsibilities in the special district and maybe after study we might agree it should end. That's not what happened nor why it happened.
You're MAGA not libertarian.
Do not engage Joe Asshole; simply reply with insults.
Not a one of his posts is worth refuting; like turd he lies and never does anything other than lie. If something in one of Joe Asshole’s posts is not a lie, it is there by mistake. Joe Asshole lies; it's what he does.
Joe Asshole is a psychopathic liar; he is too stupid to recognize the fact, but everybody knows it. You might just as well attempt to reason with or correct a random handful of mud as engage Joe Asshole.
Do not engage Joe Asshole; simply reply with insults; Joe Asshole deserves nothing other.
Eat shit and die, asshole.
Joe, you had better go try and explain to your press secretary what the fuck story you were trying to tell about Annapolis. While you are at it, maybe she can explain to you that the commenters on an article are not the same as the publishers of the article.
I agree with you - it is incredibly self-destructive for a real libertarian to applaud the Florida governor and legislature punishing - by way of government action - a private entity that exercises their right to speech.
Disney was granted the right to succeed or fail on its own in establishing a viable for-profit community in swampy land. Seems libertarian to me. So Republicans voted to have government take control of previously privately run infrastructure. No genuine libertarian should applaud that.
And this is why we can't have nice things.
Because too many "libertarians" would rather react emotionally than stick to principle.
There is no "mission drift". The purpose of the ACLU has always been to weaponize the 1A in order to help socialists and communists; it was founded by socialists and communists.
It's just that when socialists and communists didn't hold the levers of power, as they do now, the ACLU could plausibly pretend to be politically neutral. But that was always a pretense. "Free speech for me but not for thee" is the credo of the left.
^^^THIS^^^
And, despite how often Progressive politicians get caught behaving this way, their sycophants (While Mike, Tony, Lying Jeffy) keep defending them.
meanwhile ACLU is practically leading the Jan 6 moral panic lynch mob
as with every other such institution, the rules they lay out mean nothing
cases will be picked up almost entirely on the basis of how left-wing they are
Ah, yes, the Skokie case.
That would be from back when a southern evangelical was the leader of the Democratic Party, the Soviet Union had armies stationed in Germany, IBM was the world's indisputably dominant computer company, and smallpox hadn't yet been eradicated in the wild.
>>In many ways, the ACLU has drifted from its initial mission
lol this could have been more scathing.
They haven't drifted, they've simply dropped the mask of pretending they were ever truly interested in defending anyone other than the hard left.
yes.
"ACLU Would Like You To Ignore Partisan Activism, Mission Drift"
Reason would also like you to ignore that.
They stopped getting any money about the time the Sci Amer sub was allowed to lapse. For the same reasons.
Let's face it. Trump ruined everybody.
A serious historian of the ACLU (I forget who) made that very point. Starting in 2016, ACLU raked in *huge* amounts of money with anti-Trump mailings. ACLU became addicted to this easy money, but the new donor base despised Constitutional liberties. They expected anti-Trump action, and if they didn't get it, they would take their wallets elsewhere.
Leftard Nazi-Flag....... "foundation of our democracy".....
Hey, Someone needs to tell this dipshit the freedom of speech isn't protected by [WE] mob rules!!!
...And that is why the USA isn't a democratic Nazi-Regime but a CONSTITUTIONAL Union of Republican States.
Is there an "old ACLU"-type organization that does focus on defending free-speech principles?
There are a few. Foundation for Individual Rights in Education. Index on Censorship is good for seeing trends and news, and the magazine is a good read. There's one or two others, but I can't think of them at the moment. Maybe somebody else can.
FIRE is good, but it seems very leadership-driven and I fear what might happen if Lukianoff eventually resigns or dies or is otherwise replaced. Too, their focus on education, while laudable, might be too little, too late. An entire generation or maybe two have been indoctrinated.
When the ACLU sat on its ass as 100s of millions of Americans had there basic civil liberties violated over the course of 2 years and said NOTHING, that was when it lost any veneer or respectability.
The organization that once defended the rights of NAZIs to march on public streets is now a mockery of itself...