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American Civil Liberties Union
American Civil Liberties Union
from Wikipedia

The American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) is an American nonprofit civil rights organization founded in 1920. ACLU affiliates are active in all 50 states, Washington, D.C., and Puerto Rico. The budget of the ACLU in 2024 was $383 million.

Key Information

The ACLU provides legal assistance in cases where it considers civil liberties at risk with advocacy from a secularist stance against excessive religious entanglement over the United States government. Legal support from the ACLU can take the form of direct legal representation or preparation of amicus curiae briefs expressing legal arguments when another law firm is already providing representation. In addition to representing persons and organizations in lawsuits, the ACLU lobbies for policy positions established by its board of directors.

The ACLU's current positions include opposing the death penalty; supporting same-sex marriage and the right of LGBTQ+ people to adopt; supporting reproductive rights such as birth control and abortion rights; eliminating discrimination against women, minorities, and LGBTQ+ people; decarceration in the United States; protecting housing and employment rights of veterans; reforming sex offender registries and protecting housing and employment rights of convicted first-time offenders; supporting the rights of prisoners and opposing torture; upholding the separation of church and state by opposing government preference for religion over nonbelief in religious doctrine or for particular faiths over others; and supporting the legality of gender-affirming treatments, including those that are government funded, for transgender youth.

Leadership

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The ACLU is led by a president and an executive director, Deborah Archer and Anthony D. Romero, respectively, as of March 2024.[6][7][8] The president acts as chair of the ACLU's board of directors, leads fundraising, and facilitates policy-setting. The executive director manages the day-to-day operations of the organization.[9] The board of directors consists of 80 persons, including representatives from each state affiliate and at-large delegates. The organization has its headquarters in 125 Broad Street, a 40-story skyscraper located in Lower Manhattan, New York City.[10]

The leadership of the ACLU does not always agree on policy decisions; differences of opinion within the ACLU leadership have sometimes grown into major debates. In 1937, an internal debate erupted over whether to defend Henry Ford's right to distribute anti-union literature.[11] In 1939, a heated debate took place over whether to prohibit communists from serving in ACLU leadership roles.[12] During the early 1950s and Cold War McCarthyism, the board was divided on whether to defend communists.[13] In 1968, a schism formed over whether to represent Benjamin Spock's anti-war activism.[14] In 1973, as the Watergate Scandal continued to unfold, leadership was initially divided over whether to call for President Richard Nixon's impeachment and removal from office.[15] In 2005, there was internal conflict about whether or not a gag rule should be imposed on ACLU employees to prevent the publication of internal disputes.[16]

Funding

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Amounts reported to IRS as "Contributions, Gifts, Grants and Other Similar Amounts" by ACLU and ACLU Foundation.[17] Graph reflects an increase in donations following U.S. President Trump's January 2017 executive order barring millions of refugees and citizens of seven Muslim-majority countries.[18]

The ACLU solicits donations to its charitable foundation. The local affiliates solicit their own funding; however, some also receive funds from the national ACLU, with the distribution and amount of such assistance varying from state to state. At its discretion, the national organization provides subsidies to smaller affiliates that lack sufficient resources to be self-sustaining; for example, the Wyoming ACLU chapter received such subsidies until April 2015, when, as part of a round of layoffs at the national ACLU, the Wyoming office was closed.[19][20]

In October 2004, the ACLU rejected $1.5 million from both the Ford Foundation and Rockefeller Foundation because the foundations had adopted language from the USA PATRIOT Act in their donation agreements, including a clause stipulating that none of the money would go to "underwriting terrorism or other unacceptable activities". The ACLU views this clause, both in federal law and in the donors' agreements, as a threat to civil liberties, saying it is overly broad and ambiguous.[21][22]

Due to the nature of its legal work, the ACLU is often involved in litigation against governmental bodies, which are generally protected from adverse monetary judgments; a town, state, or federal agency may be required to change its laws or behave differently, but not to pay monetary damages except by an explicit statutory waiver. In some cases, the law permits plaintiffs who successfully sue government agencies to collect money damages or other monetary relief. In particular, the Civil Rights Attorney's Fees Award Act of 1976 leaves the government liable in some civil rights cases. Fee awards under this civil rights statute are considered "equitable relief" rather than damages, and government entities are not immune from equitable relief.[23] Under laws such as this, the ACLU and its state affiliates sometimes share in monetary judgments against government agencies. In 2006, the Public Expressions of Religion Protection Act sought to prevent monetary judgments in the particular case of violations of church-state separation.[24]

The ACLU has received court-awarded fees from opponents; for example, the Georgia affiliate was awarded $150,000 in fees after suing a county demanding the removal of a Ten Commandments display from its courthouse;[25] a second Ten Commandments case in the state, in a different county, led to a $74,462 judgment.[26] The State of Tennessee was required to pay $50,000, the State of Alabama $175,000, and the State of Kentucky $121,500, in similar Ten Commandments cases.[27][28]

In 2024, the ACLU received $268M in grants and donations from supporters.[3]: 22–3 

Policy positions

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The ACLU's 2024 annual report states that it engages in legal advocacy in support of civil rights, including abortion rights, LGBTQ equality, immigrants' rights, criminal law reform, free speech, and voting rights.[3]: 3–4 

When the ACLU was formed in 1919, free speech was the civil right that it concentrated on. The ACLU has supported free speech, even when the speech is unpopular or offensive. The ACLU opposes limits on campaign contributions, since such limits generally limit free speech and could be used to restrict the rights of unions.[3]: 12–13 [29][30] The ACLU also opposes state censorship of the Confederate flag.[31] Free speech on college campuses has been the subject of several lawsuits the ACLU has supported.[32] In the employment realm, the ACLU has supported the rights of employees to engage in free speech.[33][34] Protests outside religious buildings are supported by the ACLU, even when perceived as offensive.[35]

Combating discrimination based on race, religion, ethnicity, or gender has been a focus of the ACLU since the civil rights era in the 1960s. The ACLU frequently participates in legal actions in support of the LGBTQ community.[3]: 14–15 [36][37][38][39]

Criminal justice has been long-standing goal of the ACLU, focusing on constitutional issues such as excessive punishment and the right to an attorney.[3]: 18–19 [40][41] Immigrant rights, for undocumented immigrants in particular, is an area of the law that the ACLU frequently acts as an advocate.[3]: 16–17 [42][43][44][45][46]

Many of the ACLU positions are rooted in the U.S. Constitution, such as the Second Amendment: the ACLU opposes any effort to create a national registry of gun owners and has worked with the National Rifle Association of America to prevent a registry from being created, and it has favored protecting the right to carry guns under the Second Amendment.[47][48] However, the ACLU also supports some degree of gun control.[49]

The ACLU supports women's rights to make health care decisions, including access to abortions.[3]: 10–11 [50][51][52][53]

Support and opposition

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A variety of persons and organizations support the ACLU. Allies of the ACLU in legal actions have included the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People,[54] the American Jewish Congress,[55] the National Rifle Association of America,[56] Planned Parenthood,[57][58] the Electronic Frontier Foundation,[59] and Americans United for Separation of Church and State.[60]

The ACLU has been criticized by liberals, such as when it excluded communists from its leadership ranks, when it defended Neo-Nazis, when it declined to defend Paul Robeson, or when it opposed the passage of the National Labor Relations Act.[61][62] In 2014, an ACLU affiliate supported anti-Islam protesters,[63] and in 2018 the ACLU was criticized when it supported the NRA.[64][65]

Conversely, it has been criticized by conservatives such as when it argued against official prayer in public schools or when it opposed the Patriot Act.[66][67]

The ACLU has supported conservative figures such as Rush Limbaugh,[68] George Wallace,[69] Henry Ford[70] and Oliver North;[71] as well as liberal figures such as Dick Gregory,[72] Rockwell Kent,[73] and Benjamin Spock.[14][74]

The ACLU is often criticized when it represents an individual or organization that promotes offensive or unpopular viewpoints, such as the Ku Klux Klan, neo-Nazis, the Nation of Islam, the North American Man/Boy Love Association, the Westboro Baptist Church or the Unite the Right rally.[75][76][77] The ACLU's official policy is "... [we have] represented or defended individuals engaged in some truly offensive speech. We have defended the speech rights of communists, Nazis, Ku Klux Klan members, accused terrorists, pornographers, anti-LGBTQ activists, and flag burners. That's because the defense of freedom of speech is most necessary when the message is one most people find repulsive. Constitutional rights must apply to even the most unpopular groups if they're going to be preserved for everyone."[78][79]

Organization and state affiliants

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Howard Simon, executive director of the ACLU of Florida, joins in a protest of the Guantanamo Bay detentions with Amnesty International.

At the national level, the ACLU consists of two legal entities: the American Civil Liberties Union, a 501(c)(4) social welfare group; and the ACLU Foundation, a 501(c)(3) public charity. Both are non-profit organizations that engage in civil rights litigation, advocacy, and education. The two organizations are closely related, and share common goals and some common leadership. Donations to the 501(c)(3) foundation are tax-deductible, but donations to the 501(c)(4) are not. The 501(c)(4) group can engage in unlimited political advocacy (including lobbying), but the 501(c)(3) foundation cannot.[80][81]

Most of the organization's workload is performed by its local affiliates. There is at least one affiliate organization in each state, as well as one in Washington, D.C., and in Puerto Rico. California has three affiliates.[82] The affiliates operate autonomously from the national organization; each affiliate has its own staff, executive director, board of directors, and budget. Each affiliate consists of two non-profit corporations: a 501(c)(3) corporation–called the ACLU Foundation–that does not perform lobbying, and a 501(c)(4) corporation–called ACLU–which is entitled to lobby. Both organizations share staff and offices.[83][84][85]

ACLU affiliates are the basic unit of the ACLU's organization and engage in litigation, lobbying, and public education. For example, in 2020, the ACLU's New Jersey chapter argued 26 cases before the New Jersey Supreme Court, about one-third of the total cases heard in that court. They sent over 50,000 emails to officials or agencies and had 28 full-time staff.[86]

American Civil Liberties Union state affiliates

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State ACLU state affiliate
Alabama ACLU of Alabama
Alaska ACLU of Alaska
Arizona ACLU of Arizona
Arkansas ACLU of Arkansas
California ACLU of Northern California [Wikidata]
ACLU of Southern California [Wikidata][87]
ACLU of San Diego & Imperial Counties
Colorado ACLU of Colorado
Connecticut ACLU of Connecticut
Delaware ACLU of Delaware
District of Columbia ACLU of the District of Columbia
Florida ACLU of Florida [Wikidata]
Georgia ACLU of Georgia [Wikidata]
Hawaii ACLU of Hawai'i
Idaho ACLU of Idaho [Wikidata]
Illinois ACLU of Illinois [Wikidata]
Indiana ACLU of Indiana
Iowa ACLU of Iowa
Kansas ACLU of Kansas [Wikidata]
Kentucky ACLU of Kentucky
Louisiana ACLU of Louisiana
Maine ACLU of Maine
Maryland ACLU of Maryland [Wikidata]
Massachusetts ACLU of Massachusetts
Michigan ACLU of Michigan [Wikidata]
Minnesota ACLU of Minnesota [Wikidata]
Mississippi ACLU of Mississippi
Missouri ACLU of Missouri [Wikidata]
Montana ACLU of Montana
Nebraska ACLU of Nebraska
Nevada ACLU of Nevada [Wikidata]
New Hampshire ACLU of New Hampshire
New Jersey American Civil Liberties Union of New Jersey
New Mexico ACLU of New Mexico
New York New York Civil Liberties Union
North Carolina ACLU of North Carolina [Wikidata]
North Dakota ACLU of North Dakota
Ohio ACLU of Ohio [Wikidata]
Oklahoma ACLU of Oklahoma
Oregon ACLU of Oregon [Wikidata]
Pennsylvania ACLU of Pennsylvania [Wikidata]
Puerto Rico ACLU of Puerto Rico National Chapter
Rhode Island ACLU of Rhode Island
South Carolina ACLU of South Carolina
South Dakota ACLU of South Dakota
Tennessee ACLU of Tennessee
Texas ACLU of Texas[88]
Utah ACLU of Utah [Wikidata]
Vermont ACLU of Vermont
Virginia ACLU of Virginia [Wikidata][89]
Washington ACLU of Washington [Wikidata]
West Virginia ACLU of West Virginia
Wisconsin ACLU of Wisconsin
Wyoming ACLU of Wyoming

History

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1910s and '20s

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Origins

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Crystal Eastman was one of the co-founders of the CLB, the predecessor to the ACLU.

The ACLU developed from the National Civil Liberties Bureau (CLB), co-founded in 1917 during World War I by Crystal Eastman, an attorney activist, and Roger Nash Baldwin.[90] The focus of the CLB was on freedom of speech, primarily anti-war speech, and on supporting conscientious objectors who did not want to serve in World War I.[91] In 1918, Crystal Eastman resigned from the organization due to health issues.[92] After assuming sole leadership of the CLB, Baldwin insisted that the organization be reorganized. He wanted to change its focus from litigation to direct action and public education.[1]

The CLB directors concurred, and on January 19, 1920, they formed an organization under a new name, the American Civil Liberties Union.[1] Although a handful of other organizations in the United States at that time focused on civil rights, such as the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) and Anti-Defamation League (ADL), the ACLU was the first that did not represent a particular group of persons or a single theme.[1] Like the CLB, the NAACP pursued litigation to work on civil rights, including efforts to overturn the disfranchisement of African Americans in the South that had taken place since the turn of the century.

During the first decades of the ACLU, Baldwin continued as its leader. His charisma and energy attracted many supporters to the ACLU board and leadership ranks.[93] The ACLU was directed by an executive committee and was not particularly democratic or egalitarian. New Yorkers dominated the ACLU's headquarters.[94] Most ACLU funding came from philanthropies, such as the Garland Fund.[95]

Lucille Bernheimer Milner was cofounder of the American Civil Liberties Union. She also served for a time as Executive Secretary.[96]

Free speech era

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Norman Thomas was one of the early leaders of the ACLU.

During the 1920s, the ACLU's primary focus was on freedom of speech in general and speech within the labor movement particularly.[97] Because most of the ACLU's efforts were associated with the labor movement, the ACLU itself came under heavy attack from conservative groups, such as the American Legion, the National Civic Federation, and Industrial Defense Association and the Allied Patriotic Societies.[98] ACLU leadership was divided on how to challenge civil rights violations. One faction, including Baldwin, Arthur Garfield Hays, and Norman Thomas, believed that direct, militant action was the best path.[99] Another group, including Walter Nelles and Walter Pollak, felt that lawsuits taken to the Supreme Court were the best way to achieve change.[100] In addition to labor, the ACLU also led efforts in non-labor arenas, for example, promoting free speech in public schools.[101] The ACLU was banned from speaking in New York public schools in 1921.[102] The ACLU, working with the NAACP, also supported racial discrimination cases.[54] The ACLU defended free speech regardless of espoused opinions. For example, the reactionary, anti-Catholic, anti-black Ku Klux Klan (KKK) was a frequent target of ACLU efforts, but the ACLU defended the KKK's right to hold meetings in 1923.[103] There were some civil rights that the ACLU did not make an effort to defend in the 1920s, including censorship of the arts, government search and seizure issues, right to privacy, or wiretapping.[104]

Government officials routinely hounded the Communist Party USA, leading it to be the primary client of the ACLU.[105] At the same time, the Communists were very aggressive in their tactics, often engaging in illegal conduct such as denying their party membership under oath. This led to frequent conflicts between the Communists and ACLU.[105] Communist leaders sometimes attacked the ACLU, particularly when the ACLU defended the free speech rights of conservatives, whereas Communists tried to disrupt speeches by critics of the USSR.[105] This uneasy relationship between the two groups continued for decades.[105]

Public schools

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Five years after the ACLU was formed, the organization had virtually no success to show for its efforts.[106] That changed in 1925, when the ACLU persuaded John T. Scopes to defy Tennessee's anti-evolution law in The State of Tennessee v. John Thomas Scopes. Clarence Darrow, a member of the ACLU National Committee, headed Scopes' legal team. The prosecution, led by William Jennings Bryan, contended that the Bible should be interpreted literally in teaching creationism in school. The ACLU lost the case, and Scopes was fined $100. The Tennessee Supreme Court later upheld the law. Still, it overturned the conviction on a technicality.[107][108]

The Scopes trial was a phenomenal public relations success for the ACLU.[109] The ACLU became well known across America, and the case led to the first endorsement of the ACLU by a major US newspaper.[110] The ACLU continued to fight for the separation of church and state in schoolrooms, decade after decade, including the 1982 case McLean v. Arkansas and the 2005 case Kitzmiller v. Dover Area School District.[111]

Baldwin was involved in a significant free speech victory of the 1920s after he was arrested for attempting to speak at a rally of striking mill workers in New Jersey. Although the decision was limited to the state of New Jersey, the appeals court's judgment in 1928 declared that constitutional guarantees of free speech must be given "liberal and comprehensive construction", and it marked a major turning point in the civil rights movement, signaling the shift of judicial opinion in favor of civil rights.[112]

The most important ACLU case of the 1920s was Gitlow v. New York, in which Benjamin Gitlow was arrested for violating a state law against inciting anarchy and violence when he distributed literature promoting communism.[113] Although the Supreme Court did not overturn Gitlow's conviction, it adopted the ACLU's stance (later termed the incorporation doctrine) that the First Amendment freedom of speech applied to state laws, as well as federal laws.[114]

The Oregon Compulsory Education Act required almost all children in Oregon between eight and sixteen years of age to attend public school by 1926.[115] Associate Director Roger Nash Baldwin, a personal friend of Luke E. Hart, the then–Supreme Advocate and future Supreme Knight of the Knights of Columbus, offered to join forces with the Knights to challenge the law. The Knights of Columbus pledged an immediate $10,000 to fight the law and any additional funds necessary to defeat it.[116] The case became known as Pierce v. Society of Sisters, a United States Supreme Court decision that significantly expanded coverage of the Due Process Clause in the Fourteenth Amendment. In a unanimous decision, the court held that the act was unconstitutional and that parents, not the state, had the authority to educate children as they thought best.[117] It upheld the religious freedom of parents to educate their children in religious schools.

Free speech expansion

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Leaders of the ACLU were divided on the best tactics to use to promote civil liberties. Felix Frankfurter felt that legislation was the best long-term solution because the Supreme Court could not mandate liberal interpretations of the Bill of Rights. But Walter Pollak, Morris Ernst, and other leaders felt that Supreme Court decisions were the best path to guarantee civil liberties.[118] A series of Supreme Court decisions in the 1920s foretold a changing national atmosphere; anti-radical emotions were diminishing, and there was a growing willingness to protect freedom of speech and assembly via court decisions.[119]

The ACLU defended H. L. Mencken when he was arrested for distributing banned literature.

Starting in 1926, the ACLU expanded its free speech activities to encompass censorship of art and literature.[74] In that year, H. L. Mencken deliberately broke Boston law by distributing copies of his banned American Mercury magazine; the ACLU defended him and won an acquittal.[74] The ACLU went on to win additional victories, including the landmark case United States v. One Book Called Ulysses in 1933, which reversed a ban by the Customs Department against the book Ulysses by James Joyce.[120] The ACLU only achieved mixed results in the early years, and it was not until 1966 that the Supreme Court finally clarified the obscenity laws in the Roth v. United States and Memoirs v. Massachusetts cases.

The Comstock laws banned the distribution of sex education information based on the premise that it was obscene and led to promiscuous behavior.[121] Mary Ware Dennett was fined $300 in 1928 for distributing a pamphlet containing sex education material. The ACLU, led by Morris Ernst, appealed her conviction and won a reversal, in which judge Learned Hand ruled that the pamphlet's primary purpose was to "promote understanding".[121] The success prompted the ACLU to broaden their freedom of speech efforts beyond labor and political speech to encompass movies, press, radio, and literature.[121] The ACLU formed the National Committee on Freedom from Censorship in 1931 to coordinate this effort.[121] By the early 1930s, censorship in the United States was diminishing.[120]

Two major victories in the 1930s cemented the ACLU's campaign to promote free speech. In Stromberg v. California, decided in 1931, the Supreme Court sided with the ACLU and affirmed the right of a communist party member to salute a communist flag. The result was the first time the Supreme Court used the Due Process Clause of the 14th amendment to subject states to the requirements of the First Amendment.[122] In Near v. Minnesota, also decided in 1931, the Supreme Court ruled that states may not exercise prior restraint and prevent a newspaper from publishing, simply because the newspaper had a reputation for being scandalous.[123]

1930s

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The late 1930s saw the emergence of a new era of tolerance in the United States.[124] National leaders hailed the Bill of Rights, particularly as it protected minorities, as the essence of democracy.[124] The 1939 Supreme Court decision in Hague v. Committee for Industrial Organization affirmed the right of communists to promote their cause.[124] Even conservative elements, such as the American Bar Association, began to campaign for civil liberties, which were long considered to be the domain of left-leaning organizations. By 1940, the ACLU had achieved many of the goals it set in the 1920s, and many of its policies were the law of the land.[124]

In 1929, after the Scopes and Dennett victories, Baldwin perceived that there was vast, untapped support for civil liberties in the United States.[120] Baldwin proposed an expansion program for the ACLU, focusing on police brutality, Native American rights, African American rights, censorship in the arts, and international civil liberties.[120] The board of directors approved Baldwin's expansion plan, except for the international efforts.[125]

The ACLU played a significant role in passing the 1932 Norris–La Guardia Act, a federal law that prohibited employers from preventing employees from joining unions and stopped the practice of outlawing strikes, marriages, and labor organizing activities with the use of injunctions.[125] The ACLU also played a key role in initiating a nationwide effort to reduce misconduct (such as extracting false confessions) within police departments by publishing the report Lawlessness in Law Enforcement in 1931, under the auspices of Herbert Hoover's Wickersham Commission.[125] In 1934, the ACLU lobbied for the passage of the Indian Reorganization Act, which restored some autonomy to Native American tribes, and established penalties for kidnapping Native American children.[125]

Although the ACLU deferred to the NAACP for litigation promoting civil liberties for African Americans, the ACLU engaged in educational efforts and published Black Justice in 1931, a report which documented institutional racism throughout the South, including lack of voting rights, segregation, and discrimination in the justice system.[126] Funded by the Garland Fund, the ACLU also participated in producing the influential Margold Report, which outlined a strategy to fight for civil rights for blacks.[127][128] The ACLU planned to demonstrate that the "separate but equal" policies governing the Southern discrimination were illegal because blacks were never, in fact, treated equally.[127]

In 1932 – twelve years after the ACLU was founded – it had achieved significant success; the Supreme Court had embraced the free speech principles espoused by the ACLU, and the general public was becoming more supportive of civil rights in general.[129] But the Great Depression brought new assaults on civil liberties; the year 1930 saw a large increase in the number of free speech prosecutions, a doubling of the number of lynchings, and all meetings of unemployed persons were banned in Philadelphia.[130] The Franklin D. Roosevelt administration proposed the New Deal to combat the depression. ACLU leaders were of mixed opinions about the New Deal since many felt that it represented an increase in government intervention into personal affairs and because the National Recovery Administration suspended antitrust legislation.[131] The economic policies of the New Deal leaders were often aligned with ACLU goals, but social goals were not.[132] In particular, movies were subject to a barrage of local ordinances that banned screenings deemed immoral or obscene.[133] Even public health films portraying pregnancy and birth were banned, as was Life magazine's April 11, 1938, issue, which included photos of the birth process. The ACLU fought these bans but did not prevail.[134] The Catholic Church attained increasing political influence in the 1930s; it used its influence to promote the censorship of movies and to discourage the publication of birth control information. This conflict between the ACLU and the Catholic Church led to the resignation of the last Catholic priest from ACLU leadership in 1934; a Catholic priest would not be represented again until the 1970s.[135] The first decision that marked the Supreme Court's major shift in policy—no longer applying strict constitutional limits to government programs, and taking a more active role in protecting civil liberties—was De Jonge v. Oregon, in which a communist labor organizer was arrested for calling a meeting to discuss unionization.[136] The ACLU attorney Osmond Fraenkel, working with International Labor Defense, defended De Jonge in 1937 and won a major victory when the Supreme Court ruled that "peaceable assembly for lawful discussion cannot be made a crime."[137] The De Jonge case marked the start of an era lasting for a dozen years, during which Roosevelt appointees (led by Hugo Black, William O. Douglas, and Frank Murphy) established a body of civil liberties law.[136] In 1938, Justice Harlan F. Stone wrote the famous "footnote four" in United States v. Carolene Products Co. in which he suggested that state laws which impede civil liberties would – henceforth – require compelling justification.[138]

Senator Robert F. Wagner proposed the National Labor Relations Act in 1935, which empowered workers to unionize. Ironically, after 15 years of fighting for workers' rights, the ACLU initially opposed the act (it later took no stand on the legislation) because some ACLU leaders feared the increased power the bill gave to the government.[139] The newly formed National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) posed a dilemma for the ACLU because, in 1937, it issued an order to Henry Ford, prohibiting Ford from disseminating anti-union literature.[11] Part of the ACLU leadership habitually took the side of labor, and that faction supported the NLRB's action.[11] But part of the ACLU supported Ford's right to free speech.[11] ACLU leader Arthur Garfield Hays proposed a compromise (supporting the auto workers union, yet also endorsing Ford's right to express personal opinions), but the schism highlighted a deeper divide that would become more prominent in the years to come.[11]

The ACLU's support of the NLRB was a significant development for the ACLU because it marked the first time it accepted that a government agency could be responsible for upholding civil liberties.[140] Until 1937, the ACLU felt that citizens and private organizations best upheld civil rights.[140]

Some factions in the ACLU proposed new directions for the organization. In the late 1930s, some local affiliates proposed shifting their emphasis from civil liberties appellate actions to becoming a legal aid society centered on store front offices in low-income neighborhoods. The ACLU directors rejected that proposal.[141] Other ACLU members wanted the ACLU to shift focus into the political arena and be more willing to compromise their ideals to strike deals with politicians. The ACLU leadership also rejected this initiative.[141]

The ACLU's support of defendants with unpopular, sometimes extreme, viewpoints has produced many landmark court cases and established new civil liberties.[138] One such defendant was the Jehovah's Witnesses, who were involved in a large number of Supreme Court cases.[138][142] The most important cases involved statutes requiring flag salutes.[143] The Jehovah's Witnesses felt that saluting a flag was contrary to their religious beliefs. Two children were convicted in 1938 of not saluting the flag.[143] The ACLU supported their appeal to the Supreme Court, but the court affirmed the conviction in 1940.[144] But three years later, in West Virginia State Board of Education v. Barnette, the Supreme court reversed itself.[144][145]

Communism and totalitarianism

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Elizabeth Gurley Flynn was voted off the ACLU board in 1940 because of her Communist Party membership but reinstated posthumously in 1970.

The rise of totalitarian regimes in Germany, Russia, and other countries that rejected freedom of speech and association greatly impacted the civil liberties movement in the US; anti-Communist sentiment rose, and civil liberties were curtailed.[146]

The ACLU leadership was divided over whether or not to defend pro-Nazi speech in the United States; pro-labor elements within the ACLU were hostile towards Nazism and fascism and objected when the ACLU defended Nazis.[147] The ACLU defended numerous pro-Nazi groups, defending their rights to free speech and free association.[148] In the late 1930s, the ACLU allied itself with the Popular Front, a coalition of liberal organizations coordinated by the United States Communist Party.[149] The ACLU benefited because affiliates from the Popular Front could often fight local civil rights battles much more effectively than the New York-based ACLU.[149] The association with the Communist Party led to accusations that the ACLU was a "Communist front", particularly because Harry F. Ward was both chairman of the ACLU and chairman of the American League Against War and Fascism, a Communist organization.[150]

The House Un-American Activities Committee (HUAC) was created in 1938 to uncover sedition and treason within the United States.[151] When witnesses testified at its hearings, the ACLU was mentioned several times, leading the HUAC to mention the ACLU prominently in its 1939 report.[152] This damaged the ACLU's reputation severely, even though the report said that it could not "definitely state whether or not" the ACLU was a Communist organization.[152] While the ACLU rushed to defend its image against allegations of being a Communist front, it also protected witnesses harassed by the HUAC.[153] The ACLU was one of the few organizations to protest (unsuccessfully) against the passage of the Smith Act in 1940, which would later be used to imprison many persons who supported Communism.[154][155] The ACLU defended many persons who were prosecuted under the Smith Act, including labor leader Harry Bridges.[156]

ACLU leadership was split on whether to purge its leadership of Communists. Norman Thomas, John Haynes Holmes, and Morris Ernst were anti-Communists who wanted to distance the ACLU from Communism; opposing them were Harry F. Ward, Corliss Lamont, and Elizabeth Gurley Flynn, who rejected any political test for ACLU leadership.[157] A bitter struggle ensued throughout 1939, and the anti-Communists prevailed in February 1940 when the board voted to prohibit anyone who supported totalitarianism from ACLU leadership roles. Ward immediately resigned, and – following a contentious six-hour debate – Flynn was voted off the ACLU's board.[12] The 1940 resolution was considered by many to be a betrayal of its fundamental principles. The resolution was rescinded in 1968, and Flynn was posthumously reinstated to the ACLU in 1970.[156]

1940s

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World War II

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The ACLU had a decidedly mixed civil liberties record during World War II. While there were far fewer sedition prosecutions than in World War I, this did not mean that President Roosevelt was more tolerant of dissent than Wilson had been. The primary explanation was that prosecutors, working under similar laws, had fewer plausible targets because almost everyone rallied to the war effort after the attack on Pearl Harbor.[158]

Roosevelt put constant pressure on Attorney General Francis Biddle to take legal action against his prominent pre-war critics.[159] Partly to appease the president, Biddle finally charged thirty lesser-known individuals for violating the Smith Act. Although many of the defendants did not know each other, and most lived in scattered locations in the U.S., they were all tried at once in Washington, D.C., in the Sedition Trial of 1944. Despite efforts by Roger N. Baldwin, Norman Thomas, Thurgood Marshall, and others in the leadership to get the ACLU to go on record condemning the trial (Baldwin called it "monstrous"), the board of directors overruled them.[160]

The ACLU also had a mixed record on fighting wartime restrictions on the press. It was silent when the U.S. Post Office revoked the second class mailing privileges of Social Justice, the magazine of Father Charles E. Coughlin. On the other hand, it extended legal aid to the publishers of the Militant of the Socialist Workers Party and the Boise Valley Herald when their mailing rights were revoked. The ACLU was unable to prevent extensive extralegal harassment of the black press by the FBI and other agencies. The ACLU's shortcomings in defending civil liberties inspired the contemporary saying "born in World War I and died in World War II."[161]

The ACLU was internally divided when it came to defending the rights of Japanese Americans who had been forcibly relocated to internment camps.

Two months after the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor, Roosevelt authorized the creation of military "exclusion zones" with Executive Order 9066, paving the way for the detention of all West Coast Japanese Americans in inland camps. In addition to the non-citizen Issei (prohibited from naturalization as members of an "unassimilable" race), over two-thirds of those swept up were American-born citizens.[162] Opinions within the organization became increasingly divided as the Army began the "evacuation" of the West Coast. The board decided not to challenge the eviction of Japanese American citizens; on June 22, instructions were sent to West Coast branches not to support cases that argued the government had no constitutional right to do so.[163] The ACLU offices on the West Coast had been more directly involved in addressing the tide of anti-Japanese prejudice from the start, as they were geographically closer to the issue and were already working on cases challenging the exclusion by this time. The Seattle office, assisting in Gordon Hirabayashi's lawsuit, created an unaffiliated committee to continue the work the ACLU had started, while in Los Angeles, attorney A.L. Wirin continued to represent Ernest Kinzo Wakayama but without addressing the case's constitutional questions.[163] Wirin would lose private clients because of his defense of Wakayama and other Japanese Americans;[164] however, the San Francisco branch, led by Ernest Besig, refused to discontinue its support for Fred Korematsu, whose case had been taken on before the June 22 directive, and attorney Wayne Collins, with Besig's full support, centered his defense on the illegality of Korematsu's exclusion.[163]

The West Coast offices had wanted a test case to take to court. However, they had a difficult time finding a Japanese American who was both willing to violate the internment orders and able to meet the ACLU's desired criteria of a sympathetic, Americanized plaintiff. Of the 120,000 Japanese Americans affected by the order, only 12 disobeyed, and Korematsu, Hirabayashi, and two others were the only resisters whose cases eventually made it to the Supreme Court.[165] Hirabayashi v. United States came before the Court in May 1943, and the justices upheld the government's right to exclude Japanese Americans from the West Coast;[166] although it had earlier forced its local office in L.A. to stop aiding Hirabayashi, the ACLU donated $1,000 to the case (over a third of the legal team's total budget) and submitted an amicus brief. Besig, dissatisfied with Osmond Fraenkel's tamer defense, filed an additional amicus brief that directly addressed Hirabayashi's constitutional rights. In the meantime, A.L. Wirin served as one of the attorneys in Yasui v. United States (decided the same day as the Hirabayashi case and with the same results). Still, he kept his arguments within the national office's parameters. The only case to receive a favorable ruling, ex parte Endo, was also aided by two amicus briefs from the ACLU, one from the more conservative Fraenkel and another from the more putative Wayne Collins.[163]

Korematsu v. United States proved to be the most controversial of these cases, as Besig and Collins refused to bow to the national ACLU office's pressure to pursue the case without challenging the government's right to remove citizens from their homes. The ACLU board threatened to revoke the San Francisco branch's national affiliation. At the same time, Baldwin tried unsuccessfully to convince Collins to step down so he could replace him as lead attorney in the case. Eventually, Collins agreed to present the case alongside Charles Horsky; however, their arguments before the Supreme Court remained based on the unconstitutionality of the exclusion order Korematsu had disobeyed.[163] The case was decided in December 1944, when the Court once again upheld the government's right to relocate Japanese Americans,[167] although Korematsu's, Hirabayashi's and Yasui's convictions were later overturned in coram nobis proceedings in the 1980s.[168] Legal scholar Peter Irons later asserted that the national office of the ACLU's decision not to challenge the constitutionality of Executive Order 9066 directly had "crippled the effective presentation of these appeals to the Supreme Court".[163]

The national office of the ACLU was even more reluctant to defend anti-war protesters. A majority of the board passed a resolution in 1942 that declared the ACLU unwilling to defend anyone who interfered with the United States' war effort.[169] Included in this group were the thousands of Nisei who renounced their US citizenship during the war but later regretted the decision and tried to revoke their applications for "repatriation". (A significant number of those slated to "go back" to Japan had never actually been to the country and were being deported rather than repatriated.) Ernest Besig had in 1944 visited the Tule Lake Segregation Center, where the majority of these "renunciants" were concentrated, and subsequently enlisted Wayne Collins' help to file a lawsuit on their behalf, arguing the renunciations had been given under duress. The national organization prohibited local branches from representing the renunciants, forcing Collins to pursue the case independently, although Besig and the Northern California office provided some support.[170]

Cold War era

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Anti-Communist sentiment gripped the United States during the Cold War beginning in 1946. Federal investigations caused many persons with Communist or left-leaning affiliations to lose jobs, become blocklisted, or be jailed.[171] The ACLU was internally divided when it purged Communists from its leadership in 1940, and that ambivalence continued as it decided whether to defend alleged Communists during the late 1940s. Some ACLU leaders were anti-Communist and felt that the ACLU should not defend any victims. Some ACLU leaders felt that Communists were entitled to free speech protections and that the ACLU should defend them. Other ACLU leaders were uncertain about the threat posed by Communists and tried to establish a compromise between the two extremes.[172] This ambivalent state of affairs would last until 1954, when the civil liberties faction prevailed, leading to most anti-Communist leaders' resignations.[13] In 1947, President Truman issued Executive Order 9835, which created the Federal Loyalty Program. This program authorized the Attorney General to create a list of organizations that were deemed to be subversive.[173] Listed organizations were not notified that they were being considered for the list, nor did they have an opportunity to present counterarguments; nor did the government divulge any factual basis for inclusion in the list.[174] Although ACLU leadership was divided on whether to challenge the Federal Loyalty Program, some challenges were successfully made.[174]

Also in 1947, the House Un-American Activities Committee (HUAC) subpoenaed ten Hollywood directors and writers, the Hollywood Ten, intending to ask them to identify Communists, but the witnesses refused to testify. All were imprisoned for contempt of Congress. The ACLU supported several artists' appeals but lost on appeal.[175] The Hollywood establishment panicked after the HUAC hearings and created a blacklist that prohibited anyone with leftist associations from working. The ACLU supported legal challenges to the blocklist, but those challenges failed.[175] The ACLU was more successful with an education effort; the 1952 report The Judges and the Judged, prepared at the ACLU's direction in response to the blocklisting of actress Jean Muir, described the unfair and unethical actions behind the blocklisting process, and it helped gradually turn public opinion against McCarthyism.[176]

The ACLU chose not to support Eugene Dennis or other leaders of the US Communist Party, and they were all imprisoned, along with their attorneys.

The federal government took direct aim at the US Communist Party in 1948 when it indicted its top twelve leaders in the Foley Square trial.[177] The case hinged on whether or not mere membership in a totalitarian political party was sufficient to conclude that members advocated the overthrow of the United States government.[177] The ACLU chose not to represent any of the defendants, and they were all found guilty.[177] In a change of heart, the ACLU supported the party leaders during their appeal process. The Supreme Court upheld the convictions in the Dennis v. United States decision by softening the free speech requirements from a "clear and present danger" test to a "grave and probable" test.[178] The ACLU issued a public condemnation of the Dennis decision, and resolved to fight it.[178] One reason for the Supreme Court's support of Cold War legislation was the 1949 deaths of Supreme Court justices Frank Murphy and Wiley Rutledge, leaving Hugo Black and William O. Douglas as the only remaining civil libertarians on the Court.[179]

The Dennis decision paved the way for the prosecution of hundreds of other Communist party members.[180] The ACLU supported many Communists during their appeals (although most of the initiative originated with local ACLU affiliates, not the national headquarters), but most convictions were upheld.[180] The two California affiliates, in particular, felt the national ACLU headquarters was not supporting civil liberties strongly enough, and they initiated more cold war cases than the national headquarters did.[179]

The ACLU challenged many loyalty oath requirements across the country, but the courts upheld most loyalty oath laws.[181] The Supreme Court, until 1957, upheld nearly every law which restricted the liberties of Communists.[182] The ACLU, even though it scaled back its defense of Communists during the Cold War, still came under heavy criticism as a "front" for Communism. Critics included the American Legion, Senator Joseph McCarthy, the HUAC, and the FBI.[183] Several ACLU leaders were sympathetic to the FBI, and as a consequence, the ACLU rarely investigated any of the many complaints alleging abuse of power by the FBI during the Cold War.[184]

1950s

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In 1950, the ACLU board of directors asked executive director Baldwin to resign, feeling he lacked the organizational skills to lead the 9,000 (and growing) member organization. Baldwin objected, but a majority of the board elected to remove him from the position, and he was replaced by Patrick Murphy Malin.[185] Under Malin's guidance, membership tripled to 30,000 by 1955 – the start of 24 years of continual growth leading to 275,000 members in 1974.[186] Malin also presided over an expansion of local ACLU affiliates.[186]

The ACLU, controlled by an elite of a few dozen New Yorkers, became more democratic in the 1950s. In 1951, the ACLU amended its bylaws to permit the local affiliates to participate directly in voting on ACLU policy decisions.[187] A bi-annual conference, open to the entire membership, was instituted in the same year; in later decades, it became a pulpit for activist members, who suggested new directions for the ACLU, including abortion rights, death penalty, and rights of the poor.[187]

McCarthy era

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In the 1950s, the ACLU chose not to support Paul Robeson and other leftist defendants, a decision that would later be heavily criticized.

During the early 1950s, the ACLU continued to steer a moderate course through the Cold War. When singer Paul Robeson was denied a passport in 1950, even though he was not accused of any illegal acts, the ACLU chose not to defend him.[188] The ACLU later reversed their stance and supported William Worthy and Rockwell Kent in their passport confiscation cases, which resulted in legal victories in the late 1950s.[189]

In response to communist witch-hunts, many witnesses and employees chose to use the fifth amendment protection against self-incrimination to avoid divulging information about their political beliefs.[190] Government agencies and private organizations, in response, established policies which inferred communist party membership for anyone who invoked the fifth amendment.[191] The national ACLU was divided on whether to defend employees who had been fired merely for pleading the fifth amendment, but the New York affiliate successfully assisted teacher Harry Slochower in his Supreme Court case, which reversed his termination.[192]

The fifth amendment issue became the catalyst for a watershed event in 1954, which finally resolved the ACLU's ambivalence by ousting the anti-communists from ACLU leadership.[193] In 1953, the anti-communists, led by Norman Thomas and James Fly, proposed a set of resolutions that inferred guilt of persons that invoked the fifth amendment.[187] These resolutions were the first that fell under the ACLU's new organizational rules permitting local affiliates to participate in the vote; the affiliates outvoted the national headquarters and rejected the anti-communist resolutions.[194] Anti-communist leaders refused to accept the results of the vote and brought the issue up for discussion again at the 1954 bi-annual convention.[195] ACLU member Frank Graham, president of the University of North Carolina, attacked the anti-communists with a counter-proposal, which stated that the ACLU "stand[s] against guilt by association, judgment by accusation, the invasion of privacy of personal opinions and beliefs, and the confusion of dissent with disloyalty".[195][196] The anti-communists continued to battle Graham's proposal but were outnumbered by the affiliates. The anti-communists finally gave up and departed the board of directors in late 1954 and 1955, ending an eight-year ambivalence within the ACLU leadership ranks.[197] After that, the ACLU proceeded with firmer resolve against Cold War anti-communist legislation.[198] The period from the 1940 resolution (and the purge of Elizabeth Flynn) to the 1954 resignation of the anti-communist leaders is considered by many to be an era in which the ACLU abandoned its core principles.[198][199]

McCarthyism declined in late 1954 after television journalist Edward R. Murrow and others publicly chastised McCarthy.[200] The controversies over the Bill of Rights that the Cold War generated ushered in a new era in American Civil liberties. In 1954, in Brown v. Board of Education, the Supreme Court unanimously overturned state-sanctioned school segregation, and after that, a flood of civil rights victories dominated the legal landscape.[201]

The Supreme Court handed the ACLU two key victories in 1957, in Watkins v. United States and Yates v. United States, both of which undermined the Smith Act and marked the beginning of the end of communist party membership inquiries.[202] In 1965, the Supreme Court produced some decisions, including Lamont v. Postmaster General (in which the plaintiff was Corliss Lamont, a former ACLU board member), which upheld fifth amendment protections and brought an end to restrictions on political activity.[203]

1960s

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The decade from 1954 to 1964 was the most successful period in the ACLU's history.[204] Membership rose from 30,000 to 80,000, and by 1965 it had affiliates in seventeen states.[204][205] During the ACLU's bi-annual conference in Colorado in 1964, the Supreme Court issued rulings on eight cases involving the ACLU; the ACLU prevailed on seven of the eight.[206] The ACLU played a role in Supreme Court decisions reducing censorship of literature and arts, protecting freedom of association, prohibiting racial segregation, excluding religion from public schools, and providing due process protection to criminal suspects.[204] The ACLU's success arose from changing public attitudes; the American populace was more educated, tolerant, and willing to accept unorthodox behavior.[204]

Supreme Court justice Hugo Black often endorsed the ACLU's position on the separation of church and state.

Legal battles concerning the separation of church and state originated in laws dating to 1938, which required religious instruction in school or provided state funding for religious schools.[55] The Catholic church was a leading proponent of such laws, and the primary opponents (the "separationists") were the ACLU, Americans United for Separation of Church and State, and the American Jewish Congress.[55] The ACLU led the challenge in the 1947 Everson v. Board of Education case, in which Justice Hugo Black wrote "[t]he First Amendment has erected a wall between church and state.... That wall must be kept high and impregnable."[55][207][208] It was not clear that the Bill of Rights forbid state governments from supporting religious education, and strong legal arguments were made by religious proponents, arguing that the Supreme Court should not act as a "national school board", and that the Constitution did not govern social issues.[209] However, the ACLU and other advocates of church/state separation persuaded the Court to declare such activities unconstitutional.[209] Historian Samuel Walker writes that the ACLU's "greatest impact on American life" was its role in persuading the Supreme Court to "constitutionalize" so many public controversies.[209]

In 1948, the ACLU prevailed in the McCollum v. Board of Education case, which challenged public school religious classes taught by clergy paid for by private funds.[209] The ACLU also won cases challenging schools in New Mexico that were taught by clergy and had crucifixes hanging in the classrooms.[210] In the 1960s, the ACLU, in response to member insistence, turned its attention to the in-class promotion of religion.[211] In 1960, 42 percent of American schools included Bible reading.[211] In 1962, the ACLU published a policy statement condemning in-school prayers, observation of religious holidays, and Bible reading.[211] The Supreme Court concurred with the ACLU's position when it prohibited New York's in-school prayers in the 1962 Engel v. Vitale decision.[212] Religious factions across the country rebelled against the anti-prayer decisions, leading them to propose the School Prayer Constitutional Amendment, which declared in-school prayer legal.[213] The ACLU participated in a lobbying effort against the amendment, and the 1966 congressional vote failed to obtain the required two-thirds majority.[213]

However, not all cases were victories; ACLU lost cases in 1949 and 1961 which challenged state laws requiring commercial businesses to close on Sunday, the Christian Sabbath.[210] The Supreme Court has never overturned such laws, although some states subsequently revoked many of the laws under pressure from commercial interests.[210]

Cities across America routinely banned movies because they were deemed to be "harmful", "offensive", or "immoral" – censorship which was validated by the 1915 Mutual v. Ohio Supreme Court decision which held movies to be mere commerce, undeserving of first amendment protection.[214] The film The Miracle was banned in New York in 1951 at the behest of the Catholic Church, but the ACLU supported the film's distributor in an appeal of the ban, and won a major victory in the 1952 decision Joseph Burstyn, Inc. v. Wilson.[214] Further legal actions by the ACLU successfully defended films such as M and la Ronde, leading the eventual dismantling of movie censorship.[214][215] Hollywood continued employing self-censorship with its own Production Code, but in 1956 the ACLU called on Hollywood to abolish the Code.[216] The ACLU lost an important press censorship case when, in 1957, the Supreme Court upheld the obscenity conviction of publisher Samuel Roth for distributing adult magazines.[217] As late as 1953, books such as Tropic of Cancer and From Here to Eternity were still banned.[218] But public standards rapidly became more liberal through the 1960s, and obscenity was notoriously difficult to define, so by 1971, obscenity prosecutions had halted.[206][218]

Racial discrimination

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Several civil liberties organizations worked together for progress on the civil rights movement, including the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP), the ACLU, and the American Jewish Congress.[219] The NAACP took primary responsibility for Supreme Court cases (often led by lead NAACP attorney Thurgood Marshall), with the ACLU focusing on police misconduct, and supporting the NAACP with amicus briefs.[219] In 1954, the ACLU filed an amicus brief in the case of Brown v. Board of Education, which led to the ban on racial segregation in US public schools.[220] Southern states instituted a McCarthyism-style witch-hunt against the NAACP, attempting to force it to disclose membership lists. The ACLU's fight against racism was not limited to segregation; in 1964, the ACLU provided key support to plaintiffs, primarily lower-income urban residents, in Reynolds v. Sims, which required states to establish the voting districts following the "one person, one vote" principle.[221]

Police misconduct

[edit]

The ACLU regularly tackled police misconduct issues, starting with the 1932 case Powell v. Alabama (right to an attorney), and including 1942's Betts v. Brady (right to an attorney), and 1951's Rochin v. California (involuntary stomach pumping).[203] In the late 1940s, several ACLU local affiliates established permanent committees to address policing issues.[222] During the 1950s and 1960s, the ACLU was responsible for substantially advancing the legal protections against police misconduct.[223] In 1958, the Philadelphia affiliate was responsible for causing the City of Philadelphia to create the nation's first civilian police review board.[224] In 1959, the Illinois affiliate published the first report in the nation, Secret Detention by the Chicago Police which documented unlawful detention by police.[225]

Some of the most notable ACLU successes came in the 1960s when the ACLU prevailed in a string of cases limiting the power of police to gather evidence; in 1961's Mapp v. Ohio, the Supreme court required states to obtain a warrant before searching a person's home.[226] The Gideon v. Wainwright decision in 1963 provided legal representation to indigents.[227] In 1964, the ACLU persuaded the Court, in Escobedo v. Illinois, to permit suspects to have an attorney present during questioning.[228] And, in 1966, Miranda v. Arizona federal decision required police to notify suspects of their constitutional rights, which was later extended to juveniles in the following year's in re Gault (1967) federal ruling.[229] Although many law enforcement officials criticized the ACLU for expanding the rights of suspects, police officers also used the services of the ACLU. For example, when the ACLU represented New York City policemen in their lawsuit, which objected to searches of their workplace lockers.[230] In the late 1960s, civilian review boards in New York City and Philadelphia were abolished, over the ACLU's objection.[231]

Civil liberties revolution

[edit]

The 1960s was a tumultuous era in the United States, and public interest in civil liberties underwent explosive growth.[232] Civil liberties actions in the 1960s were often led by young people and often employed tactics such as sit ins and marches. Protests were often peaceful but sometimes employed militant tactics.[233] The ACLU played a central role in all major civil liberties debates of the 1960s, including new fields such as gay rights, prisoner's rights, abortion, rights of the poor, and the death penalty.[232] Membership in the ACLU increased from 52,000 at the beginning of the decade to 104,000 in 1970.[234] In 1960, there were affiliates in seven states, and by 1974 there were affiliates in 46 states.[234][235] During the 1960s, the ACLU underwent a major transformation in tactics; it shifted emphasis from legal appeals (generally involving amicus briefs submitted to the Supreme Court) to direct representation of defendants when they were initially arrested.[234] At the same time, the ACLU transformed its style from "disengaged and elitist" to "emotionally engaged".[236] The ACLU published a breakthrough document in 1963, titled How Americans Protest, which was borne of frustration with the slow progress in battling racism, and which endorsed aggressive, even militant protest techniques.[237]

After four African-American college students staged a sit-in in a segregated North Carolina department store, the sit-in movement gained momentum across the United States.[238] During 1960–61, the ACLU defended black students arrested for demonstrating in North Carolina, Florida, and Louisiana.[239] The ACLU also provided legal help for the Freedom Rides in 1961, the integration of the University of Mississippi, the Birmingham campaign in 1963, and the 1964 Freedom Summer.[239] The NAACP was responsible for managing most sit-in related cases that made it to the Supreme Court, winning nearly every decision.[240] But it fell to the ACLU and other legal volunteer efforts to provide legal representation to hundreds of protestors – white and black – who were arrested while protesting in the South.[240] The ACLU joined with other civil liberties groups to form the Lawyers Constitutional Defense Committee (LCDC), which provided legal representation to many protesters.[241] The ACLU provided the majority of the funding for the LCDC.[242]

In 1964, the ACLU opened up a major office in Atlanta, Georgia, dedicated to serving Southern issues.[243] Much of the ACLU's progress in the South was due to Charles Morgan Jr., the charismatic leader of the Atlanta office. Morgan was responsible for desegregating juries (Whitus v. Georgia), desegregating prisons (Lee v. Washington), and reforming election laws.[244] In 1966, the southern office successfully represented African-American congressman Julian Bond in Bond v. Floyd, after the Georgia House of Representatives refused to admit Bond into the legislature on the basis that he was an admitted pacifist opposed to the ongoing Vietnam War.[245] Another widely publicized case defended by Morgan was that of Army doctor Howard Levy, who was convicted of refusing to train Green Berets. Despite raising the defense that the Green Berets were committing war crimes in Vietnam, Levy lost on appeal in Parker v. Levy, 417 US 733 (1974).[246]

In 1969, the ACLU won a significant victory for free speech when it defended Dick Gregory after he was arrested for peacefully protesting against the mayor of Chicago. The court ruled in Gregory v. Chicago that a speaker cannot be arrested for disturbing the peace when hostility is initiated by someone in the audience, as that would amount to a "heckler's veto".[247]

Vietnam War

[edit]

The ACLU was at the center of several legal aspects of the Vietnam war: defending draft resisters, challenging the constitutionality of the war, the potential impeachment of Richard Nixon, and the use of national security concerns to preemptively censor newspapers.

David J. Miller was the first person prosecuted for burning his draft card. The New York affiliate of the ACLU appealed his 1965 conviction (367 F.2d 72: United States of America v. David J. Miller, 1966), but the Supreme Court refused to hear the appeal. Two years later, the Massachusetts affiliate took the card-burning case of David O'Brien to the Supreme Court, arguing that the act of burning was a form of symbolic speech, but the Supreme Court upheld the conviction in United States v. O'Brien, 391 US 367 (1968).[248] Thirteen-year-old Junior High student Mary Tinker wore a black armband to school in 1965 to object to the war and was suspended from school. The ACLU appealed her case to the Supreme Court and won a victory in Tinker v. Des Moines Independent Community School District. This critical case established that the government may not establish "enclaves" such as schools or prisons where all rights are forfeited.[248]

The ACLU contends that the Bill of Rights protects individuals who burn the U.S. flag as a form of expression.

The ACLU defended Sydney Street, who was arrested for burning an American flag to protest the reported assassination of civil rights leader James Meredith. In the Street v. New York decision, the court agreed with the ACLU that encouraging the country to abandon one of its national symbols was a constitutionally protected form of expression.[249] The ACLU successfully defended Paul Cohen, who was arrested for wearing a jacket with the words "fuck the draft" on its back while he walked through the Los Angeles courthouse. The Supreme Court, in Cohen v. California, held that the vulgarity of the wording was essential to convey the intensity of the message.[250]

Non-war-related free speech rights were also advanced during the Vietnam war era; in 1969, the ACLU defended a Ku Klux Klan member who advocated long-term violence against the government, and the Supreme Court concurred with the ACLU's argument in the landmark decision Brandenburg v. Ohio, which held that only speech which advocated imminent violence could be outlawed.[250]

A major crisis gripped the ACLU in 1968 when a debate erupted over whether to defend Benjamin Spock and the Boston Five against federal charges that they encouraged draftees to avoid the draft. The ACLU board was deeply split over whether to defend the activists; half the board harbored anti-war sentiments and felt that the ACLU should lend its resources to the cause of the Boston Five. The other half of the board believed that civil liberties were not at stake and the ACLU would be taking a political stance. Behind the debate was the longstanding ACLU tradition that it was politically impartial and provided legal advice without regard to the defendants' political views. The board finally agreed to a compromise solution that permitted the ACLU to defend the anti-war activists without endorsing the activist's political views. Some critics of the ACLU suggest that the ACLU became a partisan political organization following the Spock case.[14] After the Kent State shootings in 1970, ACLU leaders took another step toward politics by passing a resolution condemning the Vietnam War. The resolution was based on various legal arguments, including civil liberties violations and claiming that the war was illegal.[251]

Also in 1968, the ACLU held an internal symposium to discuss its dual roles: providing "direct" legal support (defense for accused in their initial trial, benefiting only the individual defendant) and appellate support (providing amicus briefs during the appeal process, to establish widespread legal precedent).[252] Historically, the ACLU was known for its appellate work, which led to landmark Supreme Court decisions, but by 1968, 90% of the ACLU's legal activities involved direct representation. The symposium concluded that both roles were valid for the ACLU.[252]

1970s

[edit]

Watergate era

[edit]
The ACLU was the first national organization to call for the impeachment of Richard Nixon.

The ACLU supported The New York Times in its 1971 suit against the government, requesting permission to publish the Pentagon Papers. The court upheld the Times and ACLU in the New York Times Co. v. United States ruling, which held that the government could not preemptively prohibit the publication of classified information and had to wait until after it was published to take action.[253]

On September 30, 1973, the ACLU became first national organization to publicly call for the impeachment and removal from office of President Richard Nixon.[254] Six civil liberties violations were cited as grounds: "specific proved violations of the rights of political dissent; usurpation of Congressional war-making powers; establishment of a personal secret police which committed crimes; attempted interference in the trial of Daniel Ellsberg; distortion of the system of justice and perversion of other Federal agencies".[255] One month later, after the House of Representatives began an impeachment inquiry against him, the organization released a 56-page handbook detailing "17 things citizens could do to bring about the impeachment of President Nixon".[256] This resolution, when placed beside the earlier resolution opposing the Vietnam war, convinced many ACLU critics, particularly conservatives, that the organization had transformed into a liberal political organization.[257]

Enclaves and new civil liberties

[edit]

The decade from 1965 to 1975 saw an expansion of civil liberties. Administratively, the ACLU responded by appointing Aryeh Neier to take over from Pemberton as executive director in 1970. Neier embarked on an ambitious program to expand the ACLU; he created the ACLU Foundation to raise funds and created several new programs to focus the ACLU's legal efforts. By 1974, ACLU membership had reached 275,000.[258]

During those years, the ACLU worked to expand legal rights in three directions: new rights for persons within government-run "enclaves", new rights for members of what it called "victim groups", and privacy rights for citizens in general.[259] At the same time, the organization grew substantially. The ACLU helped develop the field of constitutional law that governs "enclaves", which are groups of persons that live in conditions under government control. Enclaves include mental hospital patients, military members, prisoners, and students (while at school). The term enclave originated with Supreme Court justice Abe Fortas's use of the phrase "schools may not be enclaves of totalitarianism" in the Tinker v. Des Moines decision.[260]

The ACLU initiated the legal field of student's rights with the Tinker v. Des Moines case and expanded it with cases such as Goss v. Lopez, which required schools to provide students an opportunity to appeal suspensions.[261]

As early as 1945, the ACLU had taken a stand to protect the rights of the mentally ill when it drafted a model statute governing mental commitments.[262] In the 1960s, the ACLU opposed involuntary commitments unless it could be demonstrated that the person was a danger to himself or the community.[262] In the landmark 1975 O'Connor v. Donaldson decision, the ACLU represented a non-violent mental health patient who had been confined against his will for 15 years and persuaded the Supreme Court to rule such involuntary confinements illegal.[262] The ACLU has also defended the rights of mentally ill individuals who are not dangerous but create disturbances. The New York chapter of the ACLU defended Billie Boggs, a woman with mental illness who exposed herself and defecated and urinated in public.[263]

Before 1960, prisoners had virtually no recourse to the court system because courts considered prisoners to have no civil rights.[264] That changed in the late 1950s, when the ACLU began representing prisoners subject to police brutality or deprived of religious reading material.[265] In 1968, the ACLU successfully sued to desegregate the Alabama prison system; in 1969, the New York affiliate adopted a project to represent prisoners in New York prisons. Private attorney Phil Hirschkop discovered degrading conditions in Virginia prisons following the Virginia State Penitentiary strike and won an important victory in 1971's Landman v. Royster which prohibited Virginia from treating prisoners in inhumane ways.[266] In 1972, the ACLU consolidated several prison rights efforts across the nation and created the National Prison Project. The ACLU's efforts led to landmark cases such as Ruiz v. Estelle (requiring reform of the Texas prison system), and in 1996 US Congress enacted the Prison Litigation Reform Act (PLRA) which codified prisoners' rights.

Victim groups

[edit]
Ruth Bader Ginsburg co-founded the ACLU's Women's Rights Project in 1971.[267] She was later appointed to the Supreme Court of the United States by President Bill Clinton.

During the 1960s and 1970s, the ACLU expanded its scope to include what it referred to as "victim groups", namely women, the poor, and homosexuals.[268] Heeding the call of female members, the ACLU endorsed the Equal Rights Amendment in 1970[269] and created the Women's Rights Project in 1971. The Women's Rights Project dominated the legal field, handling more than twice as many cases as the National Organization for Women, including breakthrough cases such as Reed v. Reed, Frontiero v. Richardson, and Taylor v. Louisiana.[270]

ACLU leader Harriet Pilpel raised the issue of the rights of homosexuals in 1964, and two years later, the ACLU formally endorsed gay rights. In 1972, ACLU cooperating attorneys in Oregon filed the first federal civil rights case involving a claim of unconstitutional discrimination against a gay or lesbian public school teacher. The US District Court held that a state statute that authorized school districts to fire teachers for "immorality" was unconstitutionally vague, and awarded monetary damages to the teacher. The court refused to reinstate the teacher, and the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals affirmed that refusal by a 2-to-1 vote. In 1973, the ACLU created the Sexual Privacy Project (later the Gay and Lesbian Rights Project), which combated discrimination against homosexuals.[271] This support continued into the 2000s. For example, after then-Senator Larry Craig was arrested for soliciting sex in a public restroom in 2007, the ACLU wrote an amicus brief for Craig, saying that sex between consenting adults in public places was protected under privacy rights.[272]

The rights of the poor were another area that the ACLU expanded. In 1966 and again in 1968, activists within the ACLU encouraged the organization to adopt a policy overhauling the welfare system and guaranteeing low-income families a baseline income; but the ACLU board did not approve the proposals.[273] However, the ACLU played a key role in the 1968 King v. Smith decision, where the Supreme Court ruled that welfare benefits for children could not be denied by a state simply because the mother cohabited with a boyfriend.[273]

Reproductive Freedom Project

[edit]

The ACLU founded the Reproductive Freedom Project in 1974 to defend individuals the government obstructs in cases involving access to abortions, birth control, or sexual education. According to its mission statement, the project works to provide access to reproductive health care for individuals.[274] The project also opposes abstinence-only sex education, arguing that it promotes an unwillingness to use contraceptives.[275][276][277]

In 1980, the Project filed Poe v. Lynchburg Training School & Hospital which attempted to overturn Buck v. Bell, the 1927 US Supreme Court decision which had allowed the Commonwealth of Virginia to legally sterilize persons it deemed to be mentally defective without their permission. Though the Court did not overturn Buck v.Bell, in 1985, the state agreed to provide counseling and medical treatment to the survivors among the 7,200 to 8,300 people sterilized between 1927 and 1979.[278] In 1977, the ACLU took part in and litigated Walker v. Pierce, the federal circuit court case that led to federal regulations to prevent Medicaid patients from being sterilized without their knowledge or consent.[279] In 1981–1990, the Project litigated Hodgson v. Minnesota, which resulted in the Supreme Court overturning a state law requiring both parents to be notified before a minor could legally have an abortion.[280] In the 1990s, the Project provided legal assistance and resource kits to those who were being challenged for educating about sexuality and AIDS. In 1995, the Project filed an amicus brief in Curtis v. School Committee of Falmouth, which allowed for the distribution of condoms in a public school.[281]

The Reproductive Freedom Project focuses on three ideas: (1) to "reverse the shortage of trained abortion providers throughout the country" (2) to "block state and federal welfare "reform" proposals that cut off benefits for children who are born to women already receiving welfare, unmarried women, or teenagers"[282] and (3) to "stop the elimination of vital reproductive health services as a result of hospital mergers and health care networks".[283] The Project proposes to achieve these goals through legal action and litigation.

Privacy

[edit]

The right to privacy is not explicitly identified in the US Constitution, but the ACLU led the charge to establish such rights in the indecisive Poe v. Ullman (1961) case, which addressed a state statute outlawing contraception. The issue arose again in Griswold v. Connecticut (1965), and this time the Supreme Court adopted the ACLU's position and formally declared a right to privacy.[284] The New York affiliate of the ACLU pushed to eliminate anti-abortion laws starting in 1964, a year before Griswold was decided; in 1967 the ACLU itself formally adopted the right to abortion as a policy.[285] The ACLU led the defense in United States v. Vuitch (1971), which expanded the right of physicians to determine when abortions were necessary.[286] These efforts culminated in one of the most controversial Supreme Court decisions, Roe v. Wade (1973), which legalized abortion throughout the United States.[287] The ACLU successfully argued against state bans on interracial marriage, in the case of Loving v. Virginia (1967).

Related to privacy, the ACLU engaged in several battles to ensure that government records about individuals were kept private and to give individuals the right to review their records. The ACLU supported several measures, including the 1970 Fair Credit Reporting Act, which required credit agencies to divulge credit information to individuals; the 1973 Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act, which provided students the right to access their records; and the 1974 Privacy Act, which prevented the federal government from disclosing personal information without good cause.[288]

Allegations of bias

[edit]

In the early 1970s, conservatives and libertarians began to criticize the ACLU for being too political and too liberal.[289] Legal scholar Joseph W. Bishop wrote that the ACLU's trend to partisanship started with its defense of Spock's anti-war protests.[290] Critics also blamed the ACLU for encouraging the Supreme Court to embrace judicial activism.[291] Critics claimed that the ACLU's support of controversial decisions like Roe v. Wade and Griswold v. Connecticut violated the intention of the authors of the Bill of Rights.[291] The ACLU became an issue in the 1988 presidential campaign, when Republican candidate George H. W. Bush accused Democratic candidate Michael Dukakis (a member of the ACLU) of being a "card carrying member of the ACLU".[292]

Skokie case

[edit]

In 1977, the National Socialist Party of America, led by Frank Collin, applied to the town of Skokie, Illinois, for a permit to hold a demonstration in the town park. Skokie at the time had a majority population of Jews, totaling 40,000 of 70,000 citizens, some of whom were survivors of Nazi concentration camps. Skokie refused to grant the NSPA a permit and passed ordinances against hate speech and military wear, in addition to requiring an insurance bond. Skokie's Village Council ordered village attorney, Harvey Schwartz, to seek an injunction to stop the demonstration. The ACLU assisted Collin and appealed to federal court, eventually prevailing in NSPA v. Village of Skokie.[293]

The Skokie case was heavily publicized across America, partially because Jewish groups such as the Jewish Defense League and Anti Defamation League strenuously objected to the demonstration, leading many members of the ACLU to cancel their memberships.[62] The Illinois affiliate of the ACLU lost about 25% of its membership and nearly one-third of its budget.[294][295][296][297] The financial strain from the controversy led to layoffs at local chapters.[298] After the membership crisis died down, the ACLU sent out a fund-raising appeal which explained their rationale for the Skokie case and raised over $500,000 ($2,594,454 in 2024 dollars).[299][300]

1980s

[edit]

Reagan era

[edit]
The ACLU defended Oliver North in 1990, arguing that his conviction was tainted by coerced testimony.

The inauguration of Ronald Reagan as president in 1981 ushered in a twelve-year period of conservative leadership in the US government. Under the leadership of Reagan and Bush, the government pushed a conservative social agenda.

The Arkansas 1981 creationism statute, which required schools to teach the biblical account of creation as a scientific alternative to evolution. The ACLU won the case in the McLean v. Arkansas decision.[301]

In 1982, the ACLU became involved in a case involving the distribution of child pornography (New York v. Ferber). In an amicus brief, the ACLU argued that child pornography that violates the three prong obscenity test should be outlawed. However, the law was overly restrictive because it banned artistic displays and non-obscene material. The court did not adopt the ACLU's position.[302]

During the 1988 presidential election, Vice President George H. W. Bush noted that his opponent Massachusetts Governor Michael Dukakis had described himself as a "card-carrying member of the ACLU" and used that as evidence that Dukakis was "a strong, passionate liberal" and "out of the mainstream".[303] The phrase subsequently was used by the organization in an advertising campaign.[304]

1990s

[edit]

Free speech

[edit]

In 1997, ruling unanimously in the case of Reno v. American Civil Liberties Union, the Supreme Court voided the anti-indecency provisions of the Communications Decency Act (the CDA), finding they violated the freedom of speech provisions of the First Amendment. In their decision, the Supreme Court held that the CDA's "use of the undefined terms 'indecent' and 'patently offensive' will provoke uncertainty among speakers about how the two standards relate to each other and just what they mean."[305] In 2000, Marvin Johnson, a legislative counsel for the ACLU, stated that proposed anti-spam legislation infringed on free speech by denying anonymity and by forcing spam to be labeled as such, "Standardized labeling is compelled speech." He also stated, "It's relatively simple to click and delete."[306] The debate found the ACLU joining with the Direct Marketing Association and the Center for Democracy and Technology in 2000 in criticizing a bipartisan bill in the House of Representatives. As early as 1997, the ACLU had taken a strong position that nearly all spam legislation was improper, although it has supported "opt-out" requirements in some cases. The ACLU opposed the 2003 CAN-SPAM act[307] suggesting that it could have a chilling effect on speech in cyberspace. It has been criticized for this position.

2000s

[edit]

In 2006, the ACLU of Washington State joined with a pro-gun rights organization, the Second Amendment Foundation, and prevailed in a lawsuit against the North Central Regional Library District (NCRL) in Washington for its policy of refusing to disable restrictions upon an adult patron's request. Library patrons attempting to access pro-gun web sites were blocked, and the library refused to remove the blocks.[308] In 2012, the ACLU sued the same library system for refusing to disable temporarily, at the request of an adult patron, Internet filters which blocked access to Google Images.[309] In 2006, the ACLU challenged a Missouri law prohibiting picketing outside veterans' funerals. The ACLU filed the suit in support of the Westboro Baptist Church and Shirley Phelps-Roper, who were threatened with arrest.[310][311] The Westboro Baptist Church is well known for its picket signs that contain messages such as "God Hates Fags", "Thank God for Dead Soldiers", and "Thank God for 9/11". The ACLU issued a statement calling the legislation a "law that infringes on Shirley Phelps-Roper's rights to religious liberty and free speech."[312] The ACLU prevailed in the lawsuit.[313]

The ACLU argued in an amicus brief to the Supreme Court that a decision on the constitutionality of a Massachusetts law required the consideration of additional evidence because lower courts have undervalued the right to engage in sidewalk counseling.[314] The law prohibited sidewalk counselors from approaching women outside abortion facilities and offering them alternatives to abortion but allowed escorts to speak with them and accompany them into the building.[315] In overturning the law in McCullen v. Coakley, the Supreme Court unanimously ruled that it violated the counselors' freedom of speech and constituted viewpoint discrimination.

In 2009, the ACLU filed an amicus brief in Citizens United v. FEC, arguing that the Bipartisan Campaign Reform Act of 2002 violated the First Amendment right to free speech by curtailing political speech.[316] This stance on the landmark Citizens United case caused considerable disagreement within the organization, resulting in a discussion about its future stance during a quarterly board meeting in 2010.[317] On March 27, 2012, the ACLU reaffirmed its stance in support of the Supreme Court's Citizens United ruling, at the same time voicing support for expanded public financing of election campaigns and stating the organization would firmly oppose any future constitutional amendment limiting free speech.[318]

2010s

[edit]

In 2012, the ACLU filed suit on behalf of the Ku Klux Klan of Georgia, claiming that the KKK was unfairly rejected from the state's "Adopt-a-Highway" program. The ACLU prevailed in the lawsuit.[319]

Allegations of prioritizing civil rights over civil liberties

[edit]

Some have claimed the ACLU is reducing its support of unpopular free speech (specifically, by declining to defend speech made by conservatives) in favor of identity politics, political correctness, and progressivism.[320] Instead, critics contend that the organization has become a progressive advocacy organization intensely focused on identity politics.[321]

One basis of these allegations was a 2017 statement the ACLU president made to a reporter after the death of a counter-protester during the 2017 Unite the Right rally in Virginia, where Romero told a reporter that the ACLU would no longer support legal cases of activists that wish to carry guns at their protests.[322] Another basis for these claims was an internal ACLU memo dated June 2018, discussing factors to evaluate when deciding whether to take a case. The memo listed several factors to consider, including "the extent to which the speech may assist in advancing the goals of white supremacists or others whose views are contrary to our values."

Some analysts viewed this as a retreat from the ACLU's historically strong support of First Amendment rights, regardless of whether minorities were negatively impacted by the speech, citing the ACLU's past support for certain KKK and Nazi legal cases.[323][324][325][326][327] The memo's authors stated that the memo did not define a change in official ACLU policy, but was intended as a guideline to assist ACLU affiliates in deciding which cases to take.[328]

2020s

[edit]

In 2021, the ACLU responded to the criticisms by denying that they are reducing their support for unpopular First Amendment causes and listing 27 cases from 2017 to 2021 where the ACLU supported a party holding an unpopular or repugnant viewpoint. The cases included one which challenged college restrictions on hate speech; a case defending a Catholic school's right to discriminate in hiring; and a case that defended antisemitic protesters who marched outside a synagogue.[329]

In 2024, the National Labor Relations Board sued the ACLU in an unfair labor practice case after the ACLU fired an Asian attorney for criticizing her Black bosses. The ACLU contended that the employee's use of phrases like "the beatings will continue until morale improves" was racially coded and that it "caused serious harm to Black members of the ACLU community." According to Jeremy W. Peters of The New York Times, critics of the ACLU saw the firing as "a sign of how far the group has strayed from its core mission – defending free speech – and has instead aligned itself with a progressive politics that is intensely focused on identity."[321]

LGBTQ issues

[edit]

In 2000, the ACLU lost the Boy Scouts of America v. Dale case, which had asked the Supreme Court to require the Boy Scouts of America to drop their policy of prohibiting homosexuals from becoming Boy Scout leaders.[330]

In March 2004, the ACLU, along with Lambda Legal and the National Center for Lesbian Rights, sued the state of California on behalf of six same-sex couples who were denied marriage licenses. That case, Woo v. Lockyer, was eventually consolidated into In re Marriage Cases, the California Supreme Court case which led to same-sex marriage being available in that state from June 16, 2008, until Proposition 8 was passed on November 4, 2008.[331] The ACLU, Lambda Legal and the National Center for Lesbian Rights then challenged Proposition 8[332] and won.[333] In 2011, the ACLU started its Don't Filter Me project, countering LGBT-related Internet censorship in public schools in the United States.[334]

On January 7, 2013, the ACLU settled with the federal government in Collins v. United States that provided for the payment of full separation pay to servicemembers discharged under "don't ask, don't tell" since November 10, 2004, who had previously been granted only half that.[335]

In 2021, the ACLU filed a brief siding with a school district that had a policy of using preferred pronouns for transgender students. Some analysts felt this was a retreat from the ACLU's historical defense of the First Amendment because the ACLU was opposing the teachers who were disciplined for refusing to use the preferred pronouns.[336][337]

Anti-terrorism issues

[edit]
The ACLU represented Internet service provider Nicholas Merrill in a 2004 lawsuit which challenged the government's right to gather information about Internet access secretly.

After the September 11 attacks, the federal government instituted a broad range of new measures to combat terrorism, including the passage of the Patriot Act. The ACLU challenged many of the measures, claiming that they violated rights regarding due process, privacy, illegal searches, and cruel and unusual punishment. An ACLU policy statement states:

Our way forward lies in decisively turning our backs on the policies and practices that violate our greatest strength: our Constitution and the commitment it embodies to the rule of law. Liberty and security do not compete in a zero-sum game; our freedoms are the very foundation of our strength and security. The ACLU's National Security Project advocates for national security policies that are consistent with the Constitution, the rule of law, and fundamental human rights. The Project litigates cases relating to detention, torture, discrimination, surveillance, censorship, and secrecy.[338]

During the ensuing debate regarding the proper balance of civil liberties and security, the membership of the ACLU increased by 20%, bringing the group's total enrollment to 330,000.[339] The growth continued, and by August 2008 ACLU membership was greater than 500,000. It remained at that level through 2011.[340]

The ACLU has been a vocal opponent of the Patriot Act of 2001, the PATRIOT 2 Act of 2003, and associated legislation made in response to the threat of domestic terrorism. In response to a requirement of the USA PATRIOT Act, the ACLU withdrew from the Combined Federal Campaign charity drive.[341] The campaign required ACLU employees to be checked against a federal anti-terrorism watch list. The ACLU has stated that it would "reject $500,000 in contributions from private individuals rather than submit to a government 'blacklist' policy".[341]

In 2004, the ACLU sued the federal government in American Civil Liberties Union v. Ashcroft on behalf of Nicholas Merrill, owner of an Internet service provider. Under the provisions of the Patriot Act, the government had issued national security letters to Merrill to compel him to provide private Internet access information from some of his customers. In addition, the government placed a gag order on Merrill, forbidding him from discussing the matter with anyone.[342][343][344]

In January 2006, the ACLU filed a lawsuit, ACLU v. NSA, in a federal district court in Michigan, challenging government spying in the NSA warrantless surveillance (2001–2007) controversy.[345] On August 17, 2006, that court ruled that the warrantless wiretapping program was unconstitutional and ordered it ended immediately.[346] However, the order was stayed pending an appeal. The Bush administration did suspend the program while the appeal was being heard.[347] In February 2008, the US Supreme Court turned down an appeal from the ACLU to let it pursue a lawsuit against the program that began shortly after the September 11 terror attacks.[348]

The ACLU and other organizations also filed separate lawsuits against telecommunications companies. The ACLU filed a lawsuit in Illinois (Terkel v. AT&T), which was dismissed because of the state secrets privilege[349] and two others in California requesting injunctions against AT&T and Verizon.[350] On August 10, 2006, the lawsuits against the telecommunications companies were transferred to a federal judge in San Francisco.[351]

The ACLU represents a Muslim-American who was detained but never accused of a crime in Ashcroft v. al-Kidd, a civil suit against former Attorney General John Ashcroft.[352] In January 2010, the American military released the names of 645 detainees held at the Bagram Theater Internment Facility in Afghanistan, modifying its long-held position against publicizing such information. This list was prompted by a Freedom of Information Act lawsuit filed in September 2009 by the ACLU, whose lawyers had also requested detailed information about conditions, rules, and regulations.[353][354]

On August 10, 2020, in an opinion article for USA Today by Anthony D. Romero, the ACLU called for the dismantling of the United States Department of Homeland Security over the deployment of federal forces in July 2020 during the George Floyd protests.[355] On August 26, 2020, the ACLU filed a lawsuit on behalf of seven protesters and three veterans following the protests in Portland, Oregon, which accused the Trump Administration of using excessive force and unlawful arrests with federal officers.[356]

Trump administration

[edit]
Abdi Soltani, executive director of Northern California ACLU, speaks at a San Francisco protest of the U.S. immigration ban.

Following Donald Trump's election as president on November 8, 2016, the ACLU responded on Twitter by saying: "Should President-elect Donald Trump attempt to implement his unconstitutional campaign promises, we'll see him in court."[357] On January 27, 2017, President Trump signed an executive order indefinitely barring "Syrian refugees from entering the United States, suspended all refugee admissions for 120 days and blocked citizens of seven Muslim-majority countries, refugees or otherwise, from entering the United States for 90 days: Iran, Iraq, Libya, Somalia, Sudan, Syria and Yemen".[358] The ACLU responded by filing a lawsuit against the ban on behalf of Hameed Khalid Darweesh and Haider Sameer Abdulkhaleq Alshawi, who had been detained at JFK International Airport. On January 28, 2017, District Court Judge Ann Donnelly granted a temporary injunction against the immigration order,[359] saying it was difficult to see any harm from allowing the newly arrived immigrants to remain in the country.[360] In response to Trump's order, the ACLU raised more than $24 million from more than 350,000 individual online donations in two days. This amounted to six times what the ACLU normally receives in online donations in a year. Celebrities donating included Chris Sacca (who offered to match other people's donations and ultimately gave $150,000), Rosie O'Donnell, Judd Apatow, Sia, John Legend, and Adele.[361][362] The number of members of the ACLU doubled in the time from the election to end of January to 1 million.[362]

Grants and contributions increased from US$106 million reported by the 2016 year-end income statement to $274 million by the 2017 year-end statement. The segment's primary revenue source came from individual contributions in response to the Trump presidency's infringements on civil liberties.[363][364][365] Besides filing more lawsuits than during previous presidential administrations, the ACLU has spent more money on advertisements and messaging as well, weighing in on elections and pressing political concerns. This increased public profile has drawn some accusations that the organization has become more politically partisan than in previous decades.[366][367][368] In 2018, Harvard Law School professor Alan Dershowitz accused the ACLU of morphing from a "neutral defender of everyone’s civil liberties" into a "hyper-partisan, hard-left political advocacy group."[369]

Israel–Palestine

[edit]

In 2022, the ACLU petitioned the US Supreme Court to overturn an Arkansas anti-BDS law mandating that companies pledge not to boycott Israel in order to do business with the state.[370]

During the Gaza war, the New York chapter of the ACLU sued Columbia University for banning its campus chapters of Jewish Voice for Peace and Students for Justice in Palestine on the grounds of First Amendment violations.[371] In February 2024, the ACLU signed a letter to US Secretary of Education Miguel Cardona calling on him to reject defining antisemitism to include some political criticism of the government of the state of Israel, claiming it would lead to First Amendment violations.[372][373] The ACLU also rejected a staff petition urging the organization to oppose U.S. military aid to Israel and divest from potential financial ties to the country.[374] In a 50–4 vote, with one abstention, the board stated that their mission focuses on U.S. civil rights, as an ACLU spokesperson stated "it is not the ACLU's practice to take positions on overseas conflicts."[375] Nearly 700 staff members stated that the ACLU had previously taken stances on global issues like the Vietnam War and South African apartheid.[375]

Social media

[edit]

In 2024, the ACLU spoke out against governments banning the social media platform TikTok.[376] The organization specifically condemned a U.S. House bill banning the platform in March 2024, calling the legislation "unconstitutional."[377] In December 2024, the ACLU criticized a federal appeals court ruling that upheld the law, claiming it "sets a flawed and dangerous precedent, one that gives the government far too much power to silence Americans' speech online."[376]

The ACLU has also lobbied against the Kids Online Safety Act, a bill meant to protect children online.[378] The organization claims it would censor important conversations online, particularly among marginalized groups.[378]

See also

[edit]

Citations

[edit]
  1. ^ a b c d Walker, p. 47.
  2. ^ David Weigel (July 5, 2018). "The ACLU's Membership Has Surged and It's Putting Its New Resources to Use". Fortune.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h "ACLU Annual Report 2024".
  4. ^ "ACLU History," first section, paragraph 3. American Civil Liberties Union. Retrieved March 3, 2017.
  5. ^ "ACLU History," section: "And how we do it," paragraph 3. American Civil Liberties Union. Retrieved March 3, 2017.
  6. ^ "ACLU, for first time, elects Black person as its president", Associated Press, February 1, 2021, Retrieved February 2, 2021.
  7. ^ "Anthony D. Romero". American Civil Liberties Union. Retrieved March 23, 2024.
  8. ^ "Officers & Board of Directors". American Civil Liberties Union. Retrieved March 23, 2024.
  9. ^ Bylaws of ACLU, Inc., Organizational Policy No. 501 (undated). Article V. Officers, Section 5 (President) and Section 15 (Executive Director). American Civil Liberties Union website (www.aclu.org/financials, "Related Information"). Retrieved May 9, 2015.
  10. ^ Croghan, Lore (February 28, 2005). "ACLU is high on Lower Manhattan". New York Daily News. Retrieved March 10, 2015.
  11. ^ a b c d e Walker, pp. 102–03.
  12. ^ a b Walker, pp. 132–33.
  13. ^ a b Walker, pp. 176, 210.
  14. ^ a b c Walker, pp. 284–85.
  15. ^ Walker, pp. 292–94
  16. ^ Sherman, Scott, "ACLU v. ACLU" Archived December 4, 2018, at the Wayback Machine, The Nation, January 18, 2007.
  17. ^ IRS Forms 990, part VIII, Line 1 – "Contributions, Gifts, Grants and Other Similar Amounts"
        — for ACLU for periods ending March 31 of 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016 2017, 2018, 2019, 2020, 2021, 2022, 2023, 2024
        — for ACLU Foundation for periods ending March 31 of 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019, 2020, 2021, 2022, 2023, 2024
       —(text labels in graph rounded to nearest million).
  18. ^ Stack, Liam (January 30, 2017). "Donations to A.C.L.U. and Other Organizations Surge After Trump's Order". The New York Times. Archived from the original on January 31, 2017. Retrieved September 18, 2018.
  19. ^ Nickerson, Gregory (April 1, 2015). National office closes Wyoming ACLU chapter. Wyofile: People, Places & Policy [Wyoming news service]. See paragraph 5. Nickerson mentions the Puerto Rico office, and a single office for North and South Dakota, as other examples of smaller offices receiving subsidies. Retrieved May 10, 2015.
  20. ^ American Civil Liberties Union ... Consolidated Financial Report, March 31, 2014, p. 10, Note 1. Organization: "Although the ACLU plays no direct role in the governance of ... the affiliates, the organizations jointly fund-raise and work together on certain programs and the ACLU, through either the Union or Foundation, as appropriate, at its sole discretion provides targeted financial and other support to the affiliates."
  21. ^ Stephanie Strom (October 19, 2004). "A.C.L.U. Rejects Foundation Grants Over Terror Language". The New York Times.
  22. ^ See Kaminer, pp. 68–70, for a discussion of an internal scandal in which Romero was accused of attempting to accept the funds without disclosing the terms to the ACLU board.
  23. ^ "Title 42, Chapter 21, Subchapter I, § 1988. Proceedings in vindication of civil rights".
  24. ^ Report No. 109-657, H.R. 2679, available at GPO.
  25. ^ ACLU Georgia Press Release, "Barrow County to Remove 10 Commandments Display" Archived December 22, 2005, at the Wayback Machine, July 19, 2007 (last visited January 6, 2008).
  26. ^ ACLU Georgia, "2007 Litigation & Advocacy Docket" Archived December 26, 2005, at the Wayback Machine (last visited January 6, 2008).
  27. ^ "State pays ACLU $121,500 in Ten Commandments fight".[permanent dead link]
  28. ^ Ontario Consultants on Religious Tolerance, The Ten Commandments: Developments: Year 2002, ReligiousTolerance.org
  29. ^ Neuborne, Burt (March 21, 2012). "Why the ACLU Is Wrong About 'Citizens United'". ISSN 0027-8378. Retrieved January 8, 2025.
  30. ^ "Campaign Finance Reform". American Civil Liberties Union. Retrieved January 8, 2025.
  31. ^ Liptak, Adam (March 23, 2015). "A Test of Free Speech and Bias, Served on a Plate From Texas". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved January 8, 2025.
  32. ^ Palmer, Kathryn. "The Litigation After the Protest Storm". Inside Higher Ed. Retrieved January 8, 2025.
  33. ^ Chasan, Aliza (August 15, 2023). "New Jersey Supreme Court rules in favor of Catholic school that fired unwed pregnant teacher - CBS News". www.cbsnews.com. Retrieved January 8, 2025.
  34. ^ "ACLU of Alaska Requests Court Rules to Protect the First Amendment Rights of State Employees". American Civil Liberties Union. Retrieved January 8, 2025.
  35. ^ "Court won't stop protests outside Michigan synagogue". AP News. September 16, 2021. Retrieved January 8, 2025.
  36. ^ Lennon, Lauren (September 4, 2024). "ACLU challenges South Carolina's transgender healthcare ban in new lawsuit". WCIV. Retrieved January 8, 2025.
  37. ^ "Indiana ACLU challenging ruling on gender-affirming care for transgender kids". ABC57. Retrieved January 8, 2025.
  38. ^ Levin, Sam (August 29, 2024). "Trans adults stripped of healthcare access sue South Carolina over GOP bill: 'I'm desperate'". The Guardian. Retrieved September 4, 2024.
  39. ^ Clifford, Ted (August 30, 2024). "Lawsuit filed by ACLU aims to block law limiting transgender care in South Carolina". Retrieved September 4, 2024.
  40. ^ Pavlo, Walter. "ACLU Files Class Action Against Bureau Of Prisons Over First Step Act". Forbes. Retrieved January 8, 2025.
  41. ^ "ACLU Sues Bureau of Prisons for Keeping People in Prison Longer Than the Law Allows". American Civil Liberties Union. Retrieved January 8, 2025.
  42. ^ Giaritelli, Anna (December 28, 2024). "ACLU 'ready to return to the courts' to thwart Trump immigration plans". Retrieved January 8, 2025.
  43. ^ Montoya-Galvez, Camilo (June 13, 2024). "ACLU and migrant rights groups sue over Biden's asylum crackdown - CBS News". www.cbsnews.com. Retrieved January 8, 2025.
  44. ^ Beitsch, Rebecca (May 12, 2023). "ACLU sues to block new asylum restrictions". The Hill. Retrieved January 8, 2025.
  45. ^ Aleaziz, Hamed (June 12, 2024). "A.C.L.U. Sues to Stop Biden's Asylum Ban on the U.S.-Mexico Border". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved January 8, 2025.
  46. ^ Holpuch, Amanda (March 4, 2022). "A suit filed by the A.C.L.U. accuses ICE jailers of denying detainees vaccines". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved January 8, 2025.
  47. ^ Blumenthal, Ralph (April 5, 2007). "Unusual Allies in a Legal Battle Over Texas Drivers' Gun Rights". The New York Times. Archived from the original on April 8, 2007.
  48. ^ "The Plum Line". The Washington Post. Archived from the original on April 21, 2013.
  49. ^ Melling, Louise (March 26, 2018). "ACLThe ACLU's Position on Gun Control". Retrieved June 26, 2025.
  50. ^ Powell, Michael (June 8, 2022). "A Vanishing Word in Abortion Debate: 'Women'". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved January 8, 2025.
  51. ^ "ACLU Applauds Effort to Repeal Comstock Act". American Civil Liberties Union. Retrieved January 8, 2025.
  52. ^ "Planned Parenthood Files Lawsuit to Restore Abortion Access, on Heels of Voters Approving Right to Reproductive Freedom Initiative". American Civil Liberties Union. Retrieved January 8, 2025.
  53. ^ "Lawsuit filed by Missouri Planned Parenthood to challenge state abortion restrictions". KSNF/KODE | FourStatesHomepage.com. November 7, 2024. Archived from the original on January 7, 2025. Retrieved January 8, 2025.
  54. ^ a b Walker, p. 60.
  55. ^ a b c d Walker, p. 219
  56. ^ "In an usual and controversial move, the ACLU will defend the NRA in SCOTUS this week". The Independent. Archived from the original on November 20, 2024. Retrieved January 8, 2025.
  57. ^ "Planned Parenthood Files Lawsuit to Restore Abortion Access, on Heels of Voters Approving Right to Reproductive Freedom Initiative" November 6, 2024 ACLU of Missouri https://www.aclu.org/press-releases/aclu-planned-parenthood-files-lawsuit-to-restore-abortion-access-on-heels-of-voters-approving-right-to-reproductive-freedom-initiative
  58. ^ "Lawsuit filed by Missouri Planned Parenthood to challenge state abortion restrictions" Jessica Schaer November 6, 2024 KSNF News https://www.fourstateshomepage.com/news/your-local-election-headquarters/lawsuit-filed-by-missouri-planned-parenthood-to-challenge-state-abortion-restrictions/ Archived January 7, 2025, at the Wayback Machine
  59. ^ "Homeland Security hit with lawsuit over phone, laptop searches". CNET. Retrieved January 8, 2025.
  60. ^ "Civil liberties groups file lawsuit against Louisiana Ten Commandments law" Lexi Lonas Cochran 06/24/24 The Hill https://thehill.com/homenews/education/4737430-louisiana-ten-commandment-law-aclu-religious-freedom-jeff-landry/
  61. ^ Finan, Christopher M. (2007), From the Palmer Raids to the Patriot Act: a history of the fight for free speech in America, Beacon Press, pp. 158–59. (Robeson)
  62. ^ a b Walker, pp. 323–31.
  63. ^ "The Heckler's Veto". December 26, 2014.
  64. ^ Mark Joseph Stern (August 27, 2018). "Who Does the ACLU Fight For?". Slate. The Slate Group. Archived from the original on August 28, 2018. Retrieved May 23, 2023.
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  66. ^ Walker, pp. 219–20 (prayer in school).
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  73. ^ Walker, p. 200 (Kent)
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  78. ^ "Free Speech". Archived from the original on August 3, 2022.
  79. ^ In 2000, the ACLU responded to such criticism by stating "[i]t is easy to defend freedom of speech when the message is something many people find at least reasonable. But the defense of freedom of speech is most critical when the message is one most people find repulsive." from ACLU Statement on Defending Free Speech of Unpopular Organizations, August 31, 2000. Retrieved January 19, 2012.
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  110. ^ Walker, p. 75. The newspaper was the St. Louis Post Dispatch.
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  114. ^ Walker, p. 80.
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  116. ^ Kauffman 1982, p. 283.
  117. ^ Alley 1999, pp. 41–44.
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  119. ^ Walker, p. 82. The cases included Gitlow (1925), Whitney (1927), Powell (1932), and Patterson (1935).
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  121. ^ a b c d Walker, p. 85.
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  125. ^ a b c d Walker, p. 87.
  126. ^ Walker, p. 88.
  127. ^ a b Walker, p. 89.
  128. ^ The Margold Report was named after its principal author, Nathan Ross Margold, a white attorney.
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  137. ^ Court decision quoted by Walker, p. 106.
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  141. ^ a b Walker, p. 104.
  142. ^ The ACLU was not the primary legal representative; the Witnesses had their own legal team, led by Hayden C. Covington during this era.
  143. ^ a b Walker, p. 108.
  144. ^ a b Walker, p. 109.
  145. ^ Justice Robert Jackson quoted by Walker, p. 109.
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  155. ^ The Smith Act was ruled unconstitutional in 1957.
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  193. ^ Walker, pp. 208–11.
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  196. ^ Graham's proposal quoted in Walker
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  198. ^ a b Walker, p. 211.
  199. ^ Corliss Lamont, in particular, portrayed that era as a major lapse of principle.
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  202. ^ Walker, pp. 240–42.
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  204. ^ a b c d Walker, p. 217
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  206. ^ a b Walker, p. 236.
  207. ^ Black quoted by Walker.
  208. ^ Black was paraphrasing Thomas Jefferson, who first employed the metaphor of a wall. Urofsky, Melvin, "Church and State", in Bodenhamer, p. 67.
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  217. ^ Walker, p. 234.
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  219. ^ a b Walker, p. 238.
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  235. ^ The count of affiliates is of affiliates with permanent staff.
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General and cited references

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Further reading

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from Grokipedia
The American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) is a founded in whose mission is to defend and preserve the individual rights and liberties guaranteed by the U.S. Constitution and laws through litigation, , public education, and advocacy. It originated from the National Civil Liberties Bureau, established during to oppose and protect anti-war speech, led by Roger Baldwin—a labor activist and —and Crystal Eastman—a pacifist and socialist reformer—along with figures like Albert DeSilver. The ACLU has been central to numerous landmark Supreme Court cases advancing free speech protections, including the Scopes trial challenging anti-evolution laws in 1925, Yates v. United States (1957) limiting prosecutions for political advocacy, and Brandenburg v. Ohio (1969) establishing standards for incitement. It also litigated against government secrecy in the Pentagon Papers case and defended privacy rights in challenges to surveillance practices. Early on, the organization exhibited broad commitments to unpopular causes, such as representing socialists, anarchists, and even Nazis seeking to march in Skokie, Illinois, in 1977, prioritizing First Amendment absolutism. In recent decades, however, the ACLU has drawn criticism for inconsistent application of principles, often prioritizing progressive priorities like access, LGBTQ+ advocacy—including support for policies restricting speech or association deemed discriminatory—and opposition to certain Second Amendment , while downplaying defenses of conservative or dissenting viewpoints. This selective focus aligns with its funding from private foundations and donors favoring left-leaning causes, such as the and , amid no government support and reliance on member dues and grants totaling hundreds of millions annually. Critics, including legal scholars and conservative analysts, argue this reflects a departure from neutral first-principles defense of toward partisan litigation, exacerbated by systemic biases in academia and media that portray the organization as ideologically balanced despite empirical patterns in case selection.

Founding and Core Principles

Origins and Establishment

The origins of the American Civil Liberties Union trace to I-era efforts to protect conscientious objectors and oppose . In 1917, amid U.S. entry into the war, and Roger Baldwin established the National Civil Liberties Bureau (NCLB) as a non-sectarian arm focused on civil liberties advocacy, separate from pacifist religious groups like the Fellowship of Reconciliation. The NCLB lobbied against the Selective Service Act and defended individuals prosecuted under the for anti-war speech, handling over 17,000 cases of draft resisters by war's end. Following the war, the NCLB expanded its scope amid the First Red Scare, marked by the and widespread suppression of labor radicals and socialists. In January 1920, Baldwin, Eastman, Albert DeSilver, and other activists formally organized the ACLU during its first National Committee meeting on , incorporating in to champion constitutional protections including free speech, press, and assembly. The group's charter emphasized non-partisan defense of for all, regardless of viewpoint, though early leadership included prominent socialists like , reflecting the era's progressive and labor influences. Baldwin served as the inaugural director, steering the organization from its modest beginnings with limited resources toward systematic legal challenges against government overreach. The ACLU's establishment responded to empirical threats to individual rights, such as the conviction of over 1,500 under the Espionage and Sedition Acts, prioritizing defense of unpopular dissenters to test and uphold principles.

Initial Focus on Free Speech

The American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU), established in January 1920, initially prioritized the defense of free speech amid widespread government suppression following , including prosecutions under the and the Sedition Act of 1918. This focus stemmed from predecessor efforts by the National Civil Liberties Bureau, which had advocated for conscientious objectors and critics of the war effort, leading to the ACLU's formation as a dedicated organization to challenge censorship, arrests for dissent, and restrictions on political expression. , a key founder and executive director from 1920 to 1950, emphasized protecting speech rights for radicals, labor organizers, and pacifists, even when their views were deemed seditious by authorities. In its inaugural year, the ACLU targeted the of November 1919–January 1920, during which authorized mass arrests of thousands of suspected anarchists, communists, and immigrants without warrants, often resulting in deportations. The organization provided legal aid to those detained, protesting the raids as violations of and free expression, and publicized cases of political prisoners to rally public opposition. The ACLU's first annual report, titled The Fight for Free Speech (published September 1921), documented over 400 instances of infringements, primarily speech-related, including bans on public meetings by socialists and interference with union organizing. This early advocacy extended to defending unpopular ideologies, such as those of , the Socialist Party leader imprisoned in 1918 for antiwar speeches, whose case the ACLU supported through amicus briefs and campaigns for pardon—efforts that continued into the 1920s despite Debs's conviction being upheld by the in Debs v. United States (1919). Similarly, the ACLU challenged state-level sedition laws stifling labor strikes and radical publications, establishing a pattern of litigating on behalf of groups like the (IWW), whose members faced charges for inflammatory rhetoric during strikes. By the mid-1920s, this focus manifested in high-profile interventions, such as the 1925 , where the ACLU funded defense of teacher against Tennessee's ban on teaching evolution, framing it as a First Amendment issue of . The ACLU's initial stance reflected a principled commitment to absolute free speech protections, articulated by Baldwin as defending "the right to advocate" any idea, however repugnant, to prevent government overreach—a position that contrasted with prevailing public sentiment favoring curbs on "subversive" expression amid Red Scare fears. This approach yielded mixed legal results but built the organization's reputation; for instance, in Gitlow v. New York (1925), ACLU lawyers argued unsuccessfully against Benjamin Gitlow's conviction for publishing a communist manifesto, yet the case incorporated the First Amendment against states via the Fourteenth, advancing long-term speech jurisprudence. Critics at the time, including conservative politicians, accused the ACLU of abetting anarchy by prioritizing radicals' rights over national security, highlighting the tension between its neutral advocacy claims and the predominantly leftist beneficiaries of its early docket.

Stated Commitments to Neutral Advocacy

The American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) officially describes itself as a nonprofit and nonpartisan dedicated to defending constitutional for all individuals, regardless of political affiliation or personal agreement with their views. Its mission centers on realizing the promise of liberty in the United States Constitution by protecting beyond any single person, party, or side. This commitment is framed as impartial advocacy against government infringement on , with the stating it does not advance ideological causes but rather safeguards universal protections under the Bill of Rights. Founding executive director Roger Nash Baldwin codified this neutral stance in 1938, proclaiming that the ACLU had "no 'isms' to defend except the Bill of Rights." Baldwin's declaration marked a shift from the organization's early ties to progressive labor movements toward a broader, principle-based approach emphasizing free speech and assembly for unpopular causes, without endorsing underlying ideologies. This principle is invoked in ACLU literature to justify defending the rights of groups like the Ku Klux Klan, where the focus remains on preventing viewpoint-based suppression rather than promoting the content of the speech. In practice-oriented policies, the ACLU reinforces nonpartisanship by prohibiting endorsements or opposition to electoral candidates and maintaining rules to preserve its reputation as an impartial advocate. Board explicitly cautions against actions that could compromise this neutrality, such as partisan-appearing contributions, to ensure remains tied to legal principles over political outcomes. The asserts that true nonpartisanship involves challenging executive overreach irrespective of the administration in power, as exemplified in its historical and ongoing .

Organizational Framework

Leadership and Internal Governance

The American Civil Liberties Union operates under a national that sets overarching policy, approves major litigation and advocacy strategies, and oversees the , while delegating day-to-day management to staff. The board consists of approximately 80 volunteer members drawn from legal, academic, and activist backgrounds across the , including affiliate representatives; members are selected through a combination of elections by the board itself and nominations aligned with organizational bylaws emphasizing diversity in expertise and geography. Deborah Archer, a civil rights attorney and , has served as board president since 2021, guiding governance amid internal policy deliberations. Anthony D. Romero assumed the role of executive director on May 14, 2001, as the organization's sixth leader and the first Latino and openly gay man in the position, following Ira Glasser (1978–2001), who expanded the ACLU's national influence during the civil rights and post-Watergate eras. The executive director manages a senior staff including deputy directors for operations, policy, and integrated advocacy, handling budgeting, fundraising, and coordination with over 50 state affiliates that conduct localized litigation and outreach under semi-autonomous governance structures. Affiliates elect their own boards via membership votes, fostering decentralized operations while adhering to national policy guidelines ratified by the board, such as conflict-of-interest protocols that apply to key employees and directors to mitigate undue influence in decision-making. Internal governance emphasizes committee-based review for policy positions, with the board retaining authority over high-level approvals, though this has sparked debates among former leaders about deviations from principle-neutral advocacy toward outcome-oriented priorities. Ira Glasser, for example, has publicly contended that post-2001 shifts under Romero's leadership reflect a cultural pivot in board and staff deliberations, prioritizing equity considerations over unqualified defense of speech rights for ideologically opposed groups, as evidenced by 2018 internal guidance weighing "harm" from client representation against traditional free speech commitments. This evolution, Glasser argues, stems from broader ideological homogeneity in ACLU governance bodies, contrasting with earlier eras when the organization defended figures like Nazis in Skokie without regard to their views. Such tensions highlight causal dynamics where board composition—often drawn from progressive legal networks—may constrain rigorous, viewpoint-neutral application of civil liberties principles, though official policies maintain formal commitments to nonpartisan defense of rights.

Funding Sources and Transparency Issues

The American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) and its affiliated ACLU Foundation derive funding primarily from private sources, including membership dues, individual contributions, bequests, and grants from foundations, with no direct government funding. For the fiscal year ended March 31, , consolidated operating support and revenue totaled $357,089,647, comprising current member contributions of $93,276,789, new member contributions of $5,775,714, grants, bequests, and other contributions of $212,054,160, donated legal services valued at $39,504,757, in-kind donated property of $4,400,000, and miscellaneous income such as list rentals and merchandise sales of $2,078,227. Total operating expenses for the same period reached $383,532,084, reflecting a net operating deficit. Among major funders, progressive-leaning foundations have provided substantial support, including multi-year grants from the —funded by —which awarded $50 million in 2014 to support efforts against mass incarceration and $12 million in 2008 as part of a broader campaign. Other notable contributors include the and Carnegie Corporation, which together have historically accounted for a significant portion of foundation grants. The ACLU's dual structure as a 501(c)(4) organization for advocacy and a 501(c)(3) foundation for litigation allows flexibility in funding, with the latter emphasizing deductible contributions for legal work. The ACLU maintains financial transparency through annual IRS filings for both entities, which detail revenues, expenses, , and program activities, alongside independently audited available upon request. However, federal tax rules protect the of donors to 501(c)(3) organizations by keeping Schedule B forms—listing contributors giving $5,000 or more—confidential from public release, except in instances involving political expenditures under election laws. This limitation has prompted criticisms that incomplete donor disclosure obscures potential influences on case selection and priorities, particularly given reliance on large grants from ideologically aligned foundations, though the ACLU defends such protections as essential to safeguarding supporter against harassment or retaliation. Conservative commentators have highlighted Soros-linked funding as evidence of partisan tilt, arguing it correlates with shifts toward progressive causes over traditional defenses, but empirical links to specific litigation decisions remain unproven and contested by the organization. No major regulatory findings of financial impropriety have been reported, and rated the ACLU highly for program spending at 84% of expenses in recent evaluations.

State Affiliates and Decentralized Operations

The American Civil Liberties Union maintains a decentralized structure comprising 54 staffed affiliate offices across all 50 states, the District of Columbia, and . These affiliates operate semi-independently, each with its own board of directors, executive leadership, legal staff, and fundraising mechanisms, enabling them to address issues tailored to regional priorities such as state-specific voting rights disputes or local law enforcement practices. Each affiliate mirrors the national organization's dual-entity model, consisting of a membership-based arm under Section 501(c)(4) of the for and political activities, and a separate 501(c)(3) foundation focused on litigation, public education, and nonpartisan research. This setup allows affiliates to litigate cases in state and federal courts, lobby state legislatures, and mobilize grassroots activists without direct oversight from national headquarters, though they align on core principles like defending First Amendment rights and . Affiliates retain in case selection and , often serving as early detectors of emerging threats, which informs national strategies. Coordination with the national ACLU occurs through shared resources, such as amicus briefs, training programs, and joint campaigns on federal issues like surveillance reform, while affiliates handle the majority of state-level docket—filing thousands of lawsuits annually and influencing over 100 state bills per year collectively. This decentralized approach, established since the , enhances responsiveness to local variations in challenges but has occasionally led to divergences, such as affiliates pursuing narrower priorities amid national shifts in focus. Funding for affiliates derives primarily from individual donations and grants, with budgets varying widely—ranging from under $1 million in smaller states to tens of millions in populous ones like , which operates three regional affiliates.

Historical Evolution

Early Decades: Free Speech Foundations (1910s-1930s)

The National Civil Liberties Bureau (NCLB), precursor to the ACLU, emerged in 1917 amid as a division of the American Union Against Militarism, led by and Roger Baldwin to protect and oppose the , which criminalized anti-war speech and led to over 2,000 prosecutions by 1918. The NCLB documented 450 imprisonments and advocated against , drawing from pacifist and socialist networks, though its efforts faced government raids and Baldwin's own 1918 for , resulting in a nine-month sentence. In January 1920, the ACLU formally incorporated in New York, with Baldwin as director, Eastman as co-founder, and initial board members including Albert DeSilver, , and , explicitly committing to defend free speech for radicals, labor unions, and political dissidents regardless of viewpoint, building on NCLB's wartime resistance to sedition laws. The organization's charter emphasized "uncensored expression of opinion" as foundational, prioritizing cases where speech suppression targeted unpopular groups like the (IWW), whose members endured over 1,500 free speech arrests in the 1910s-1920s for organizing strikes. Early funding came modestly from private donors, enabling litigation against post-war excesses, including the January 1920 that detained 10,000 suspected radicals without warrants. Throughout the 1920s, the ACLU centered on high-profile free speech defenses, supporting the 1921-1927 case, where Italian anarchists Nicola Sacco and Bartolomeo Vanzetti faced execution for a robbery-murder amid anti-immigrant hysteria; ACLU lawyers aided appeals, highlighting coerced confessions and biased jury selection, though executions proceeded on August 23, 1927, galvanizing global protests. In 1925, the ACLU orchestrated the in , recruiting teacher to violate the Butler Act banning instruction, framing it as a First Amendment test; though Scopes was convicted on July 21, 1925, the case publicized free inquiry limits and foreshadowed 1968's reversal. These efforts established precedents against and symbolic speech bans, as in the 1931 ruling in Stromberg v. California invalidating a "red flag" law used against communists. By the 1930s, amid economic depression and rising labor unrest, the ACLU expanded advocacy to laws stifling information—defending Sanger's 1920s arrests—and press freedoms, culminating in (1931), which struck down gag orders on scandal-mongering newspapers, affirming no except in extreme wartime cases. Internal debates persisted, with Baldwin prioritizing "principled" radicals over mainstream causes, reflecting founders' socialist leanings, yet the organization's case selection yielded enduring doctrinal wins, growing membership from dozens to thousands by 1939. This era cemented free speech as the ACLU's bedrock, often defending causes later benefiting conservatives, though early litigation disproportionately aided left-leaning agitators facing private and public .

World War II and Anti-Communist Era (1940s-1950s)

During , the ACLU actively opposed the U.S. government's internment of over 120,000 , including approximately two-thirds who were U.S. citizens, following issued by President on February 19, 1942. The organization's affiliate spearheaded legal challenges, filing petitions and arguing cases such as Korematsu v. United States (1944) before the , contending that the policy violated Fifth Amendment due process rights. Although the Court upheld the internment in a 6-3 decision, the ACLU's efforts highlighted discriminatory racial animus absent security rationale, as later repudiated by Congress via the , which provided $20,000 reparations to survivors. The ACLU also defended conscientious objectors and free speech amid wartime restrictions, representing individuals prosecuted for anti-war expressions and challenging military censorship. Internal divisions emerged, with some board members initially hesitating on internment challenges due to concerns, reflecting tensions between advocacy and wartime patriotism; however, affiliates like Northern California's persisted, establishing precedents for post-war scrutiny of government overreach. In the anti-communist era, the ACLU expelled board member on May 7, 1940, by a 10-9 vote, citing her Communist Party affiliation as incompatible with the organization's non-partisan stance, particularly after the 1939 Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact. This decision, criticized as pragmatic red-baiting to preserve credibility amid rising anti-communist sentiment, contrasted with the ACLU's defense of communists' civil liberties during McCarthyism. Throughout the 1950s, the group challenged (HUAC) probes, loyalty oaths, and blacklisting, arguing they infringed First Amendment rights to belief and association, even as it barred Communist Party members from leadership roles. These efforts underscored the ACLU's commitment to procedural protections over ideological endorsement, navigating accusations of being a "Communist front" by litigating against substantive threats like the prosecutions, though outcomes varied and internal debates persisted on balancing free speech with organizational integrity.

Civil Rights and Vietnam Period (1960s-1970s)

During the 1960s, the ACLU actively supported the by providing legal defense to activists facing arrest and prosecution for nonviolent protests, including and participants in Southern desegregation efforts. Affiliates challenged in public accommodations, voting, and education, filing suits to enforce compliance with emerging federal laws like the Civil Rights Act of 1964. The organization advocated for the and its extensions, emphasizing protection against voter suppression tactics prevalent in the South. In parallel, the ACLU intensified its defense of free speech amid escalating protests against the . A landmark victory came in Tinker v. Des Moines Independent Community School District (1969), where the ACLU represented students suspended for wearing black armbands to symbolize opposition to the war; the ruled 7-2 that students retain First Amendment rights unless speech substantially disrupts school activities. The organization also defended conscientious objectors and draft resisters, handling numerous cases against selective service policies. By 1970, under Executive Director , who assumed the role that year after joining the staff in 1963, the ACLU's board formally declared the unconstitutional, arguing it lacked a congressional declaration as required by Article I, Section 8 of the ; this stance marked a shift toward direct policy opposition while maintaining litigation focus. In the Pentagon Papers case (New York Times Co. v. United States, 1971), the ACLU filed an amicus brief supporting publication of classified documents revealing government deceptions about the war, reinforcing press freedoms against . The ACLU challenged mass arrests of anti-war demonstrators, notably securing acquittals for over 12,000 protesters detained during the 1971 actions in , by demonstrating unconstitutional police tactics. These efforts extended to litigating against of activists and military policies infringing on , solidifying the organization's role in protecting during a period of national division. Throughout the decade, ACLU affiliates managed hundreds of school-related cases involving protest symbols and policies, often intersecting civil rights with expression rights.

Conservative Backlash and Policy Shifts (1980s-1990s)

During the Reagan administration in the 1980s, the American Civil Liberties Union encountered intensified conservative opposition for its staunch defense of First Amendment rights in cases perceived as antithetical to traditional American values. Attorney General Edwin Meese III, a key Reagan advisor, publicly lambasted the ACLU, characterizing its advocacy for defendants' rights as excessively permissive toward criminals and disruptive to societal order. This criticism echoed broader conservative sentiments that the organization prioritized the liberties of unpopular groups—such as those challenging obscenity laws or advocating drug decriminalization—over public morality and national symbols. Conservative commentators and groups, including the Washington Legal Foundation, accused the ACLU of partisan bias, pointing to its involvement in litigation opposing voluntary school prayer and defending media outlets like Hustler magazine against libel claims. A flashpoint for backlash occurred in 1989 with , where the ruled 5-4 that Gregory Lee Johnson's act of burning an American during a 1984 protest outside the in constituted protected symbolic speech under the First Amendment, overturning his conviction under a Texas desecration statute. The ACLU supported this position through amicus briefs and public advocacy, arguing that prohibiting such expression would erode broader free speech protections, but the decision provoked widespread conservative outrage, with critics decrying it as an assault on patriotism and prompting congressional efforts to pass a federal protection amendment, which failed ratification. Public opinion polls at the time reflected this divide, with a majority favoring criminalization of burning despite the ruling. In response to mounting pressures, the ACLU under Ira Glasser (1978–2002) reaffirmed its commitment to defending "speech we hate," resisting calls to temper advocacy for controversial expressions, though state affiliates occasionally navigated local conservative pushback by prioritizing cases on and reforms. By the , amid a conservative , the organization expanded litigation against perceived encroachments on , including challenges to sodomy laws and efforts to preserve programs against ballot initiatives like California's Proposition 209 in 1996, marking a tactical emphasis on equality-oriented issues alongside traditional free speech battles. However, these positions drew further accusations of ideological drift from neutral principles, with conservatives alleging that favored progressive causes. Despite the scrutiny, ACLU membership and funding grew, buoyed by heightened visibility from high-profile clashes.

Post-9/11 Surveillance and Security (2000s)

Following the , 2001, terrorist attacks, the U.S. Congress enacted the USA PATRIOT Act on October 26, 2001, expanding federal surveillance authorities including National Security Letters (NSLs) and access to business records under Section 215. The ACLU immediately condemned the legislation for eroding Fourth Amendment protections through provisions allowing the FBI to demand personal records without judicial oversight or , characterizing it as a hasty overreach that prioritized security over . In response, the ACLU initiated legal challenges targeting these expanded powers. On April 6, 2004, the ACLU filed Doe v. Ashcroft in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York, contesting the constitutionality of NSLs and their accompanying perpetual gag orders, which prevented recipients from disclosing the demands. The case, involving an anonymous (later identified as Merrill of Calyx ), argued that the provisions violated First and Fifth Amendment rights by enabling unchecked executive surveillance. On September 29, 2004, the district court struck down the NSL statute as unconstitutional, though the ruling was stayed pending appeal, and later amended the law in 2005 to include limited . The ACLU also contested the National Security Agency's (NSA) warrantless wiretapping program, disclosed by in December 2005. On January 17, 2006, the organization filed ACLU v. NSA in the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of , alleging violations of the First and Fourth Amendments through bulk interception of international communications involving U.S. persons without FISA court warrants. A district judge ruled the program unconstitutional on August 17, 2006, but the Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals reversed the decision on July 6, 2007, dismissing the case for lack of standing after the government invoked the . These efforts highlighted the ACLU's focus on curbing post-9/11 executive overreach, though many challenges faced procedural barriers and yielded temporary or partial victories amid ongoing expansions of surveillance infrastructure.

Obama Era and Internal Tensions (2010s)

During the Obama administration, the ACLU pursued litigation challenging executive actions on and , while acknowledging progress in areas such as the repeal of "" and advancements toward recognition. In January 2010, the organization released a report assessing the first year of Obama's record, praising the end to practices and closure of but criticizing the continuation of overbroad domestic surveillance and programs. The ACLU warned that normalizing Bush-era policies risked establishing a "new normal" of unchecked executive power, including without trial at Guantanamo Bay, which Obama failed to close despite campaign promises. The ACLU filed multiple lawsuits against the administration over its drone strike program, which expanded significantly under Obama, resulting in hundreds of strikes in , , and . In August 2010, alongside the Center for Constitutional Rights, it sued on behalf of Anwar al-Aulaqi, a U.S. citizen targeted for killing without judicial process, arguing the policy violated and ; the suit was dismissed on procedural grounds but highlighted the administration's claim of unreviewable authority to kill Americans abroad. Further suits in 2012 and 2015 sought records on the "kill list" process and deaths of U.S. citizens like and Abdulrahman al-Aulaqi, pressuring the release of a drone "playbook" in 2016 via Act demands. On surveillance, the ACLU challenged NSA bulk data collection post-2013 Snowden revelations, building on earlier critiques of FISA Amendments Act extensions. In immigration, a 2014 class-action suit targeted the detention of asylum seekers as an intimidation tactic, noting over 400,000 removals annually under Obama, the highest deportation rate in U.S. history. The administration's aggressive prosecution of leakers—eight cases by , exceeding all prior presidencies combined—drew ACLU scrutiny, with the group documenting 526 months of prison time imposed, far surpassing historical totals. Despite these confrontations, some observers noted the ACLU's selective intensity, as it mounted fewer challenges to domestic progressive policies like the compared to overreaches. Internally, the 2010s saw growing tensions between the ACLU's traditional commitment to viewpoint-neutral defense and an expanding focus on racial justice and equity, amplified by events like the 2014 and the rise of . This shift, involving increased resources for and critiques of , prompted debates among staff and affiliates over whether prioritizing "harm" mitigation diluted free speech absolutism, particularly on campuses where speech codes proliferated. Critics within and outside the organization argued this evolution risked politicization, as the ACLU's litigation increasingly aligned with progressive outcomes, foreshadowing sharper conflicts post-2016. These frictions reflected broader ideological realignments in advocacy, with some longtime members questioning the balance between defending unpopular speech and combating perceived inequities.

Trump Administration Challenges (2017-2021)

Following Donald Trump's inauguration on January 20, 2017, the ACLU mounted an extensive legal campaign against the administration's policies, filing 434 lawsuits by the end of his term, primarily targeting executive actions on , , and individual rights. These efforts were fueled by a surge in public support, with the organization receiving over $24 million in donations in the immediate aftermath of the , 2017, imposing travel restrictions on several Muslim-majority countries, and membership expanding from 400,000 to 1.84 million within 15 months of the election. A central focus was the administration's immigration restrictions, beginning with challenges to , which suspended entry from seven countries. On January 28, 2017, the ACLU secured a nationwide temporary blocking deportations under the order, arguing it violated and religious freedom protections. Subsequent iterations faced similar suits, but the upheld the third version, Presidential Proclamation 9645, in a 5-4 decision in on June 26, 2018, finding it within presidential authority under immigration statutes despite evidence of animus in campaign rhetoric. The ACLU continued advocacy, highlighting ongoing family separations and expedited removals, filing class-action suits against policies like the Migrant Protection Protocols ("") and Title 42 expulsions implemented in March 2020 amid the . The ACLU also contested the February 2019 national emergency declaration redirecting $8 billion in funds for southern border wall construction, filing suit to argue it exceeded congressional appropriations authority; lower courts issued injunctions, but the allowed reallocations to proceed pending appeal in 2019. On military policy, the organization obtained preliminary injunctions against a 2017 ban on individuals serving openly, citing lack of evidence for claimed disruptions to , though the policy was partially reinstated by the in 2019 while litigation continued. Litigation outcomes were mixed: the ACLU achieved temporary blocks in district and appellate courts for over 100 actions, delaying implementations, but the Supreme Court reversed or permitted several policies, including asylum restrictions and the travel ban, underscoring judicial deference to executive discretion. These challenges, while amplifying opposition to administration priorities, often prioritized short-term halts over permanent reversals, reflecting the era's polarized legal battles over executive power.

Recent Engagements (2020s)

In the early 2020s, the ACLU intensified litigation against state-level restrictions on following the Supreme Court's June 24, 2022, decision in Dobbs v. Jackson Women's Health Organization, which overturned . The organization filed or supported challenges to abortion bans in multiple states, including efforts to expand access through advocacy and storytelling campaigns on , where over 100 individuals shared personal experiences to urge federal protections on June 24, 2025. By 2023, the ACLU reported ongoing state-level fights, emphasizing the reversal's impact on thousands of patients amid varying gestational limits and exceptions. The ACLU pursued extensive transgender rights litigation, challenging bans on gender-affirming medical care for minors enacted by over a dozen states between 2021 and 2025. Key cases included L.W. v. Skrmetti (, ongoing as of 2025), contesting prohibitions on puberty blockers and hormone therapy, and parallel suits in against executive actions by state leaders. In response to President Trump's January 20, 2025, executive order restricting such care for individuals under 19, the ACLU co-filed v. Trump in federal court on behalf of families and medical groups, arguing violations of equal protection and . By September 2025, the ACLU tracked 616 anti-LGBTQ bills across state legislatures, prioritizing opposition to those affecting , , and identity documents. Voting rights remained a core focus, with the ACLU defending against perceived suppression tactics in several high-profile cases. In Merrill v. Milligan (Alabama, decided 2023), the organization supported redistricting challenges under Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act, securing a ruling against dilution of Black voters' influence. Oral arguments in Louisiana v. Callais before the Supreme Court in 2025 addressed equal representation for Black communities, with the ACLU advocating for stricter scrutiny of district maps. Additional efforts included amicus briefs in Second Circuit cases on probationer voting restoration (May 16, 2025) and opposition to felony disenfranchisement. Amid campus protests following the October 7, 2023, Hamas attack on Israel, the ACLU defended free speech rights, issuing an open letter on November 1, 2023, to university presidents urging rejection of speech codes targeting pro-Palestinian activism. In February 2025, the ACLU sued the University of Michigan over two-year suspensions and funding cuts to pro-Palestinian groups, alleging viewpoint discrimination. Following Trump administration threats to withhold federal funding from universities in March 2025, the ACLU sent letters supporting institutions' obligations to protect inquiry and protest, while criticizing government coercion. Under the Biden administration (2021-2024), the ACLU challenged immigration policies, including family separations at the border documented in 2024 reports, and urged ending federal funding for school resource officers on February 25, 2021. Post-2024, with Trump's return, the ACLU escalated suits against executive actions, such as J.G.G. v. Trump alleging misuse of wartime powers for mass deportations and Smith v. Trump (filed April 11, 2025) over restrictions on human rights advocates' travel. A federal appeals court upheld blocks on birthright citizenship executive orders by October 3, 2025. These actions reflected a pattern of rapid legal mobilization, with over 100 challenges tracked by mid-2025.

Policy Positions

Free Speech and Expression

The American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) has long advocated for broad protections under the First Amendment, emphasizing the defense of speech even when it is unpopular or offensive. Since its establishment in 1920, the organization has prioritized free expression as a core mission, arguing that safeguarding contentious viewpoints is essential to preventing government overreach that could erode liberties for all. This stance led to involvement in nearly every landmark U.S. free speech case from the 1920s onward, including (1925), which extended First Amendment protections to state actions via the Fourteenth Amendment, and New York Times Co. v. Sullivan (1964), which raised the bar for public officials to win suits against critics. Key examples underscore the ACLU's historical commitment to defending abhorrent speech. In 1977-1978, it represented the in its bid to march in —a suburb with many —resulting in a Supreme Court ruling that struck down local ordinances restricting the demonstration and affirmed that does not fall outside First Amendment safeguards absent direct incitement to violence. The ACLU also backed Gregory Lee Johnson's flag-burning protest during the , securing a 5-4 Supreme Court decision in (1989) that symbolic expression of dissent merits protection, regardless of offense to national symbols. These cases, among others like Tinker v. Des Moines Independent Community School District (), which upheld students' rights to wear anti-war armbands, illustrate the organization's principled, often costly, defense of expression rights. In the 21st century, however, the ACLU's approach has drawn scrutiny for potential deviations from this absolutism. A leaked 2018 internal memo outlined criteria for case selection that included assessing the "harmful impact" of defended speech on the organization's equality and justice priorities, such as weighing whether representation might undermine efforts against discrimination—a shift critics attribute to internal pressures from progressive factions prioritizing identity-based harms over pure speech defenses. This policy adjustment, defended by ACLU leadership as contextual rather than a retreat, has manifested in selective engagements, such as limited challenges to campus speech codes restricting "microaggressions" or deplatforming when targeting marginalized groups, contrasting with robust defenses of conservative or controversial speakers like the NRA against New York state retaliation in National Rifle Association of America v. Vullo (2024). Observers from libertarian and civil liberties perspectives, including former ACLU affiliates, contend this reflects ideological bias, eroding the organization's nonpartisan credibility amid broader cultural tensions over speech regulation. The ACLU maintains its core dedication to free speech principles, as evidenced by ongoing litigation against government censorship in schools and online platforms.

Privacy and Government Surveillance

The American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) maintains that government surveillance must adhere strictly to constitutional protections, particularly the Fourth Amendment's safeguards against unreasonable searches and seizures, and opposes mass collection of without individualized suspicion or judicial warrants. The organization argues that expansive programs erode rights and chill free speech and association, prioritizing of overreach such as incidental collection of Americans' communications in foreign intelligence operations. Following the enactment of the USA PATRIOT Act on October 26, 2001, the ACLU challenged provisions like Section 215, which authorized the FBI to demand "tangible things" relevant to investigations, leading to bulk telephone metadata collection by the (NSA). In June 2013, shortly after Edward Snowden's disclosures, the ACLU filed ACLU v. Clapper, contending that the NSA's program violated statutory limits and constitutional rights by capturing millions of Americans' call records indiscriminately. The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit ruled on May 7, 2015, that the bulk collection exceeded Section 215's authority, deeming it unlawful absent evidence of relevance to specific targets. The ACLU has targeted National Security Letters (NSLs), extrajudicial demands for records accompanied by perpetual s, as tools enabling without oversight. In 2004, the ACLU represented Nicholas Merrill, owner of Calyx Internet, in the first public challenge to an NSL, filed as Doe v. Holder, which sought without a warrant. After prolonged litigation, a federal court lifted Merrill's gag order on September 15, 2015, allowing disclosure of the NSL's contents and highlighting its broad, suspicionless demands for and records. Under Section 702 of the (FISA), reauthorized periodically despite ACLU objections, the organization has litigated against "upstream" collection and warrantless "backdoor" searches of U.S. persons' data acquired during foreign targeting. In v. NSA, filed March 10, 2015, the ACLU challenged the NSA's interception of traffic, arguing it captured domestic communications en masse in violation of the Fourth Amendment. Separately, through Act suits like ACLU v. NSA initiated April 17, 2024, the ACLU compelled release of FISA opinions revealing FBI abuses, including over 3.4 million improper queries of U.S. data in 2021 alone. On January 22, 2025, a federal held that warrantless Section 702 searches by the FBI violated the Fourth Amendment, though it did not suppress evidence in the specific case. The ACLU continues advocacy for reforms, including mandatory warrants for accessing stored communications and ending bulk , while critiquing by other agencies like DHS border searches and fusion centers for lacking . These efforts underscore the organization's position that technological advances in necessitate updated legal constraints to prevent a pervasive monitoring state, supported by documented instances of misuse outweighing justifications in non-emergency contexts.

Criminal Justice Reform

The American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) has prioritized through its Criminal Law Reform Project, which targets policies contributing to mass incarceration, over-criminalization, and racial disparities, including advocacy for reduced , shorter sentences, and . Launched in 2016, the Campaign for Smart Justice represents a multiyear national effort to halve the U.S. jail and —estimated at over 2.3 million in 2016—via state-specific blueprints outlining reforms like limiting low-level offenses and enhancing community supervision. The initiative has influenced bipartisan measures in states such as Georgia and , where legislation expanded parole eligibility and reduced mandatory minimums for nonviolent crimes by 2018. The ACLU has opposed since the 1960s, partnering with the to litigate its constitutionality, efforts that aided the U.S. Supreme Court's 1972 ruling imposing a moratorium due to arbitrary application. Resuming post-1976 with , executions totaled 1,582 from 1976 to 2023, yet the ACLU maintains the penalty is racially skewed—Black defendants are 7.5 times more likely to receive death sentences for killing white victims than vice versa—and fiscally inefficient, costing states millions more per case than due to appeals. From 1973 to 2023, 192 death-row exonerations occurred, primarily via DNA evidence or official misconduct, underscoring error risks in a system where only 2% of U.S. counties account for all executions since 1976. Drug policy reform forms a core focus, with the ACLU decrying the —escalated under President Nixon in 1971 and intensified by 1980s mandatory minimums—as a failure that has incarcerated over 1.5 million annually at peak, disproportionately affecting Black Americans arrested at five times the rate of whites for marijuana despite similar usage. Despite trillions in federal spending since 1971, drug use rates have remained stable, prompting ACLU calls to decriminalize possession, redirect funds to treatment, and repeal laws like the 1986 Anti-Drug Abuse Act's crack-powder sentencing disparity, which was partially narrowed in 2010. A 2021 ACLU poll found 83% of voters across parties view the war as unsuccessful. On policing and pretrial issues, the ACLU has litigated against excessive force, as in ongoing cases challenging tasings of disabled individuals, and advocated post-2020 for reallocating police budgets toward and to address root causes of . It supports ending , citing studies linking to 6-9% higher via disrupted employment and family ties, though implementations like New York's 2019 reforms—backed by ACLU —correlated with a 20% rise in pretrial releases and debates over subsequent increases, with critics attributing localized spikes to reduced detention incentives despite aggregate data showing no statewide surge. Sentencing reforms pushed by the ACLU, including opposition to three-strikes laws, have contributed to state-level reductions, such as California's Proposition 36 revisions in 2012 allowing resentencing for nonviolent offenders. These efforts reflect a broader emphasis on empirical critiques of punitive measures, though on long-term public safety impacts remains contested, with some analyses indicating sustained incarceration deters certain offenses more effectively than alternatives.

Reproductive and Gender Issues

The ACLU has long advocated for unrestricted access to , positioning it as a fundamental right under protections established in cases like (1965). The organization argued (1973), the companion case to , successfully challenging Georgia's restrictive abortion law that required hospital approvals and residency verification, thereby broadening access nationwide. In (1992), ACLU attorneys defended the core of Roe against Pennsylvania's waiting periods and parental consent rules, with the Supreme Court ultimately reaffirming a woman's right to abortion before while allowing targeted regulations. Following the Supreme Court's Dobbs v. Jackson Women's Health Organization decision on June 24, 2022, which overturned Roe and returned abortion regulation to states, the ACLU initiated over a dozen lawsuits to block or overturn bans, including challenges in Georgia, Kentucky, and Texas that temporarily preserved clinic access in select areas. The group opposes gestational limits, parental notification mandates, and funding restrictions on providers like Planned Parenthood, framing such measures as undue burdens despite empirical data showing majority public support for limits after 15 weeks of pregnancy in polls from organizations like Gallup (2023). On gender issues, the ACLU champions transgender individuals' rights to medical interventions aligning with , including blockers and therapies for minors, asserting these constitute essential, evidence-based care for . The organization litigated against Tennessee's 2023 ban on such treatments for youth under 18 in U.S. v. Skrmetti, arguing before the in 2024 that prohibitions violate equal protection by denying minors care available to peers for analogous conditions like . Similar suits targeted investigations of parents seeking care for children (filed March 2022) and Oklahoma's restrictions, with the ACLU claiming bans cause irreparable harm based on studies linking access to reduced suicidality, though long-term randomized controlled trials remain scarce. Critics, including reviews from the UK's (Cass Review, 2024), highlight insufficient high-quality evidence supporting puberty blockers' benefits for in minors, citing risks like loss and potential , prompting restrictions in countries such as and since 2021-2022. The ACLU's advocacy persists, often prioritizing observational data from advocacy-aligned sources over cautions from bodies like the World Professional Association for Health, which in 2022 expanded guidelines amid internal debates on evidence rigor. This stance aligns with broader pushes for inclusion in sports, prisons, and identification documents, where the ACLU has challenged biological sex-based distinctions as discriminatory. For example, in January 2026, the ACLU launched the "More Than A Game" campaign featuring celebrities such as Megan Rapinoe, Sue Bird, Elliot Page, and Naomi Watts, advocating for transgender youth participation in women's sports ahead of Supreme Court cases on state bans, with the message "Supporting trans youth isn’t just about sports. It’s about freedom."

Immigration and National Security


The American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) has prioritized immigrants' rights since establishing its Immigrants' Rights Project in 1985, focusing on challenging unconstitutional laws, detention practices, and enforcement actions through litigation and advocacy. The organization contends that the U.S. immigration system detains hundreds of thousands of individuals annually under inhumane conditions, with 83% of deportations in 2013 occurring without a hearing before an immigration judge. It has documented abuses by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and Customs and Border Protection (CBP), including racial profiling, excessive force at interior checkpoints, and the confiscation of migrants' property such as medications and legal documents.
In contexts, the ACLU has opposed post-9/11 measures expanding government surveillance and detention powers, arguing they erode without commensurate security gains. The group challenged aspects of the USA PATRIOT Act and related programs, including those impacting immigrants through heightened scrutiny and no-fly list inclusions, which it described as lacking and enabling without trial. During the Trump administration, the ACLU filed multiple lawsuits against travel restrictions targeting nationals from several Muslim-majority countries, securing temporary injunctions; for instance, on January 28, 2017, it sued on behalf of two Iraqi refugees detained at U.S. airports, claiming the violated constitutional protections against and . The ACLU's involvement extended to family separation policies, where it litigated cases revealing that at least 2,654 children were separated from parents at the in under a "" approach, advocating for reunifications and policy reversals. Critics from conservative perspectives, however, contend that the ACLU's resistance to enhanced vetting and enforcement prioritizes individual claims over , potentially facilitating entry by criminals and terrorists, as evidenced by government reports of over 100 suspected terrorists apprehended at the southwest in fiscal year 2023 alone. Such positions reflect the organization's broader emphasis on and anti-discrimination, even amid debates over empirical links between lax enforcement and public safety risks.

Other Areas: Religion, Education, and Technology

The ACLU has consistently advocated for strict under the First Amendment's , challenging government actions perceived as endorsing religion, particularly in public spaces and institutions. In County of Allegheny v. ACLU (1989), the organization successfully argued before the that displaying a in a county courthouse violated the clause by promoting , while a menorah display alongside secular symbols was permissible due to its contextual balance. The ACLU has litigated against religious monuments on , such as the displays, and in 2010 highlighted historical patterns of unconstitutional religious instruction laws dating back to a 1924 study identifying peak enforcement risks. While defending individual religious practices, such as challenging a 2023 law mandating a Protestant-specific poster in public schools, the ACLU's efforts have drawn criticism for disproportionately targeting Christian symbols amid minority religious protections. In education, the ACLU opposes school voucher programs on grounds that they divert public funds to religious institutions, breaching church-state separation. It filed a 2011 lawsuit in alongside United for Separation of Church and State to block a proposed plan, arguing it violated state constitutional bans on appropriations for sectarian schools. The organization has challenged coercive religious activities in schools, including a suit against Webster Parish School District in for permitting teacher-led prayers and proselytizing, which it deemed unconstitutional of students. On affirmative action, the ACLU supported race-conscious admissions in higher education, filing amicus briefs in defense of programs at Harvard and UNC, and criticized the Supreme Court's June 29, 2023, rulings in Students for Fair Admissions v. Harvard and v. UNC for restricting tools to address historical inequities without evidence of mismatch harms. It has also pursued cases ensuring schools comply with the Americans with Disabilities Act, as in a victory affirming applicability to such programs. Regarding technology, the ACLU prioritizes safeguarding against expansive enabled by digital tools, advocating limits on and government access. Through its Speech, Privacy, and Technology Project, established to counter threats from , it has opposed recognition deployment, urging Amazon in 2019 to halt sales of Rekognition to due to risks of and bias amplification. On , the ACLU supported its preservation in 2011 congressional efforts, viewing it as essential to equal internet access without carrier discrimination. In , it warned in July 2025 that large AI models supercharge machine , potentially exacerbating inequalities, and critiqued October 2024 Biden-Harris administration guidelines for lacking enforceable safeguards against AI-driven abuses like automated targeting. The organization pushes for policies ensuring technology enhances rather than erodes , including FOIA requests to expose agencies' AI tool usage.

Controversies and Criticisms

Allegations of Ideological Bias and Partisanship

Critics, including former ACLU affiliates and conservative commentators, have alleged that the organization has increasingly prioritized progressive policy goals over its historical non-partisan commitment to , particularly evident in selective litigation and internal policy shifts since the mid-2010s. For instance, the ACLU filed over 400 legal actions challenging Trump administration policies from 2017 to 2021, focusing heavily on , , and , while pursuing far fewer suits against Democratic administrations on analogous issues like due process in cases or restrictions on religious expression. A pivotal point of contention arose in June 2018, when the ACLU revised its free speech case selection guidelines to weigh factors such as the "intended and likely impact" of protected speech on "marginalized groups" and broader equality interests, a departure from its prior absolute stance on defending even abhorrent expression, as in the 1977 Skokie Nazi march case. Critics, including legal scholars and ex-ACLU lawyers like David Goldberger, argued this introduced ideological litmus tests, enabling the group to sidestep defenses of conservative or religious speech—such as pro-life centers compelled to advertise abortion services or small businesses facing mandates conflicting with faith-based objections—while aggressively litigating progressive priorities like reproductive rights and anti-discrimination laws. Partisanship allegations intensified with the ACLU's foray into electoral advocacy; in 2018, it pledged over $25 million for ballot initiatives and candidate support, marking its first direct partisan spending, largely targeting Republican-led policies on voting rights and . Federal election data further underscores skews, with ACLU-affiliated contributions in the 2024 cycle totaling $936,336, directed exclusively to Democratic recipients and none to Republicans. Though the national ACLU maintains it receives no government funding and operates non-partisanly via member dues and grants, detractors from outlets like contend that donor influences from left-leaning sources have eroded its impartiality, transforming it into a de facto arm of Democratic opposition. The ACLU has rebutted these claims, asserting that its guidelines reaffirm core policies without altering commitments to defend unpopular speech and citing instances like its 2021 support for a conservative Christian group's flag display in as evidence of continued breadth. Nonetheless, internal debates revealed in 2021 reporting highlighted staff divisions, with some advocating deprioritizing far-right cases amid rising progressive , fueling perceptions of an between civil libertarian and modern equity-focused advocacy.

Inconsistencies in Free Speech Defense

The American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) historically positioned itself as a defender of free speech for all viewpoints, including those deemed abhorrent, exemplified by its representation of neo-Nazis seeking to march in , in 1977–1978, a case that affirmed the principle of viewpoint-neutral protection under the First Amendment. This absolutist approach, articulated by former ACLU leaders like , prioritized constitutional rights over the content of speech, even when it targeted marginalized groups. Post-2016, amid the rise of Donald Trump and events like the 2017 Unite the Right rally in , the ACLU's commitment faced internal strain; while it litigated for the rally organizers' permit on First Amendment grounds, the subsequent violence prompted staff resignations and a policy reevaluation, with critics arguing this marked a retreat from unconditional defense. In June 2018, the ACLU issued updated case selection guidelines directing affiliates to weigh free speech claims against "competing values," such as equality and non-discrimination, particularly when speech was seen to inflict "serious harms" on historically marginalized groups or advance white supremacist aims—criteria absent from prior neutral standards. This framework, as described by observers, enables declining cases based on the speaker's ideology, contrasting sharply with the organization's earlier refusal to parse content. Illustrative inconsistencies include the ACLU's relative silence or non-intervention in certain conservative-leaning speech disputes, such as student expression cases involving traditional viewpoints (e.g., Harper v. in 2007, where it did not actively contest restrictions on anti-gay messaging), while aggressively challenging perceived progressive harms. During a 2017 event honoring Skokie litigator David Goldberger, ACLU figures openly debated deprioritizing "far-right" speech in favor of advancing racial justice, signaling a cultural shift toward selective that former insiders like Goldberger attributed to broader liberal abandonment of First Amendment universality. Although the ACLU maintains it defends unpopular speech consistently, these evolutions have drawn accusations of partisanship, with conservative analysts contending the group now subordinates free expression to progressive equity goals, eroding its nonpartisan legacy.

Selective Advocacy in High-Profile Cases

The American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) has historically defended in high-profile cases involving unpopular or conservative figures, such as filing a brief in 1988 to quash the indictment of in the Iran-Contra affair, arguing that his immunized congressional testimony had tainted subsequent criminal proceedings. Similarly, the organization represented the National Socialist Party in the 1977 Skokie case, challenging a village ordinance to permit a Nazi march, and supported Ku Klux Klan cross-burning permit applications in the , establishing precedents for viewpoint-neutral free speech protections. These efforts underscored the ACLU's early commitment to defending even abhorrent ideologies under the First Amendment, regardless of political alignment. Critics have argued that this nonpartisan approach eroded in recent decades, with the ACLU exhibiting selectivity in high-profile litigation that aligns more closely with progressive priorities. During the Trump administration (2017–2021), the ACLU initiated over 400 legal actions, including challenges to the travel ban affecting Muslim-majority countries and family separations at the border, often framing them as existential threats to core liberties. In contrast, actions against the Biden administration have been fewer and narrower, such as lawsuits over 2024 asylum restrictions, despite similarities to prior border enforcement policies; no comparable volume of suits addressed perceived civil liberties issues like expanded executive actions on censorship or regulatory overreach. This disparity has fueled accusations of partisan bias, with conservative analysts noting the ACLU's relative silence on Democratic-led initiatives, such as campus speech codes or COVID-19 mandates disproportionately affecting conservative gatherings. A pivotal example of this shift occurred following the 2017 Charlottesville , where the ACLU of defended the event's permit against city revocation, citing equal protection violations; the ensuing violence prompted internal backlash and a 2018 policy advisory urging affiliates to weigh whether a speaker's viewpoint posed "a of harassment, violence, or terrorism" before litigating permit denials. This adjustment marked a departure from strict viewpoint neutrality, leading to criticisms that the organization now prioritizes "equity" over absolute liberties in high-profile free speech disputes, selectively engaging cases that advance anti-discrimination goals while deprioritizing those involving conservative or right-leaning advocates. The ACLU maintains that resource constraints necessitate prioritization via established guidelines, rejecting claims of ideological favoritism. Such selectivity extends to other domains, including privacy and surveillance; while the ACLU aggressively litigated against NSA programs under both Bush and Trump, high-profile defenses of whistleblowers like have been tempered by affiliations with progressive causes, contrasting with unqualified support for earlier conservative-linked exposures. Detractors, including libertarian scholars, contend this pattern reflects institutional capture by left-leaning staff and donors, eroding the ACLU's foundational impartiality in favor of advocacy that causal analysis links to broader cultural shifts prioritizing group harms over individual . Empirical tracking of case outcomes shows sustained wins in progressive-aligned litigation but diminished intervention in symmetric conservative claims, substantiating perceptions of uneven application.

Funding and Influence Concerns

The American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) derives its funding primarily from member dues, contributions, and grants from private foundations, with no direct government support. For the ended March 31, 2024, bequest contributions totaled $34,152,506, representing approximately 12% of total support. indicate significant concentration among major donors; for the year ended March 31, 2023, $184,198,000 in contributions came from a single donor, while the prior year saw $213,682,000 from four donors. In the 2023-2024 election cycle, the ACLU disclosed partial donor information, with sources including both organizational and contributions totaling over $1.1 million in outside spending. Critics have raised concerns that this reliance on large-scale grants from ideologically progressive foundations compromises the ACLU's historical commitment to nonpartisan civil liberties defense. Notable examples include a $50 million grant from George Soros's Open Society Foundations in November 2014 to support the ACLU's campaign against mass incarceration, and a $12 million contribution from the same source in 2008 as part of a broader fundraising drive. Such funding, according to analyses from conservative think tanks, correlates with the organization's shift toward prioritizing left-leaning policy advocacy—such as expansive interpretations of voting rights and opposition to certain criminal justice measures—over balanced protection of rights across the political spectrum. A 2018 opinion in The Hill described this as evidence of the ACLU morphing into a "hyper-partisan, hard-left political advocacy group," influenced by donor-driven agendas that favor progressive causes. The partial disclosure of donors has fueled additional scrutiny regarding transparency and potential undue influence, as tracked by organizations like , which classify the ACLU's viewpoint as liberal. Detractors argue that concentrated funding from entities like —known for supporting global progressive initiatives—may incentivize selective litigation, such as aggressive challenges to conservative policies while deprioritizing defenses of Second Amendment or traditional free speech claims aligned with right-leaning perspectives. This dynamic, per a evaluation, contributes to perceptions of left-center bias, with the ACLU's factual reporting rated as mixed due to occasional advocacy over strict neutrality. Proponents of these concerns contend that such financial dependencies erode public trust in the ACLU's role as an impartial guardian of constitutional protections, potentially aligning its influence with donor priorities rather than universal principles.

Reception and Impact

Achievements and Landmark Victories

The American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) has secured landmark victories primarily in free speech protections, establishing precedents that limit government restrictions on expression. In Tinker v. Des Moines Independent Community School District (1969), ACLU attorneys represented students suspended for wearing black armbands to protest the , resulting in a 7-2 ruling that students retain First Amendment rights in schools absent substantial disruption to educational activities. In Brandenburg v. Ohio (1969), the ACLU defended a leader convicted under a criminal , achieving a unanimous decision that refined the test for unprotected advocacy to speech directed at inciting imminent lawless action with intent and likelihood of success. The ACLU's defense of unpopular speech underscored its commitment to absolutist principles in cases like v. Village of Skokie (1977-1978), where it represented a neo-Nazi group challenging local ordinances barring their march; federal courts invalidated the restrictions, affirming that even offensive political expression merits protection unless it falls into narrow unprotected categories. Similarly, in (1989), the Court struck down a Texas law in a 5-4 decision, holding that burning the American flag during a political constitutes symbolic speech safeguarded by the First Amendment; the ACLU hailed this as a critical expansion of expressive freedoms against content-based prohibitions. In Reno v. ACLU (1997), as named plaintiff, the organization prevailed 9-0 against provisions of the criminalizing "indecent" online transmissions accessible to minors, preserving broad internet speech rights by rejecting overly vague and burdensome regulations. Beyond speech, ACLU efforts contributed to and equality precedents. In (1973), the organization filed an amicus brief supporting recognition of a to under the Fourteenth Amendment's protections, influencing the 7-2 decision that struck down restrictive laws until its 2022 overruling. The ACLU's Women's Rights Project, co-founded by , secured wins like (1973), where a 8-1 ruling invalidated gender-based distinctions in military spousal benefits, applying to classifications. In (2003), amicus advocacy helped overturn sodomy laws in a 6-3 decision extending rights to consensual same-sex conduct. More recently, in (2020), the ACLU supported a 6-3 interpretation of Title VII prohibiting based on and as forms of discrimination. Early achievements include the 1925 Scopes Trial, where ACLU counsel defended biology teacher against Tennessee's anti-evolution law; though convicted and fined $100, the verdict was overturned on appeal due to a procedural error in the fine's imposition, spotlighting issues despite the underlying statute's affirmation. These cases demonstrate the ACLU's role in litigating against government overreach, though outcomes often hinged on narrow majorities and faced subsequent challenges or reversals.

Opposition from Conservative and Libertarian Perspectives

Conservatives and libertarians have criticized the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) for abandoning its historical commitment to viewpoint-neutral in favor of advancing progressive ideological priorities, resulting in selective advocacy that undermines core constitutional protections. Organizations like argue that the ACLU has retreated from robust First Amendment defenses when they conflict with left-leaning goals, such as equity and anti-discrimination mandates, exemplified by its reluctance to represent pro-life pregnancy centers or faith-based businesses facing regulatory burdens on expressive conduct. This shift, they contend, prioritizes partisan outcomes over principled , eroding the organization's credibility as an impartial defender of individual rights. A key point of contention is the ACLU's evolving approach to free speech, where internal guidelines have incorporated considerations of a speaker's potential "harm" to marginalized communities, diverging from past absolutist stances. In a 2018 leaked internal memo, ACLU staff were advised to weigh factors like whether speech denigrates identities based on race, sex, or other protected traits before accepting cases, prompting accusations of viewpoint discrimination. Libertarian critics, including former ACLU leaders like , have highlighted this as a prioritization of over neutral principles; for instance, the ACLU declined to intervene in the 2022 suspension of Georgetown Law fellow Ilya Shapiro over a tweet critiquing in judicial nominations, leaving the defense to the Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression (). Such selectivity, they argue, creates a on conservative or dissenting viewpoints, contrasting with the ACLU's historical defenses of unpopular speech like Nazi marches in , in 1977. On and , conservatives fault the ACLU for opposing measures enhancing , such as amendments in 2018, which the group claimed would erode defendants' procedural safeguards despite of low abuse rates in similar systems. The organization also challenged 2020 Department of Education regulations aimed at restoring accused students' rights to and evidence review, filing lawsuits alleging they favored perpetrators over survivors, even as data showed prior Obama-era rules led to over 700 due process complaints by 2017. Libertarians view this as subordinating individual procedural protections to collective equity goals, mirroring broader inconsistencies in defending economic liberties or property rights against regulatory overreach. Regarding the Second Amendment, the ACLU has faced longstanding conservative rebuke for treating rights as outside its purview, maintaining a policy since at least that it will not litigate challenges to firearms restrictions primarily on Second Amendment grounds, focusing instead on potential government misuse of registries or seizures. Critics, including outlets aligned with conservative viewpoints, argue this neutrality effectively cedes the field to advocates, ignoring empirical data on defensive gun uses estimated at 500,000 to 3 million annually by the CDC and other studies, and contrasts with the group's aggressive litigation on other enumerated rights. In religious liberty matters, both perspectives decry the ACLU's opposition to faith-based exemptions from anti-discrimination laws, such as its lawsuits against Catholic adoption agencies refusing placements with same-sex couples on doctrinal grounds, framing such positions as discriminatory rather than conscientious exercises of belief. Conservatives see this as part of a pattern eroding free exercise protections, evidenced by the ACLU's support for rulings like (2021), where it prioritized nondiscrimination over religious autonomy despite the Supreme Court's 9-0 rebuke of government contract conditions forcing policy abandonment. Libertarians echo concerns that this reflects an institutional bias toward secular progressive norms, compromising the and individual conscience in favor of enforced uniformity.

Broader Legacy and Societal Influence

The American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) has profoundly shaped American jurisprudence, participating in more Supreme Court cases than any other private organization over its century-long history, including pivotal decisions that expanded First Amendment protections. Through advocacy in cases like Gitlow v. New York (1925), which incorporated free speech rights against states, and defenses of unpopular expression such as neo-Nazi marches in Skokie, Illinois (1977), the ACLU contributed to a robust framework prioritizing even offensive speech, fostering a societal norm of tolerance for dissent despite public backlash. This legacy reinforced causal links between unrestricted expression and democratic vitality, evidenced by enduring precedents that courts cite in safeguarding protest and media freedoms. The organization's influence extends to cultural and institutional spheres, embedding challenges into public discourse and policy. By litigating against censorship, discriminatory laws, and government surveillance—such as in (1966) and challenges to the —the ACLU normalized judicial scrutiny of state power, impacting education, , and privacy norms. Empirical outcomes include reduced barriers to , with the ACLU's involvement in over 500 matters correlating to broadened protections for marginalized groups and ideological minorities alike. However, this has also spurred a litigious , where claims often preempt legislative consensus, altering societal dynamics toward greater but straining communal cohesion. Critics, particularly from conservative viewpoints, contend that the ACLU's legacy includes an of principled neutrality, as its increasingly aligns with progressive priorities like expansive for certain behaviors while selectively engaging free speech. For instance, internal shifts post-2010s debates prioritized combating "" over absolute defenses, diminishing defenses for conservative expressions and contributing to polarized trust in institutions. This perceived partisanship, documented in analyses of funding and case selection, has influenced broader societal toward groups, with conservative outlets arguing it facilitates cultural fragmentation by unevenly amplifying ideological narratives over universal rights. Nonetheless, the ACLU's foundational role in embedding constitutional endures, prompting alternative organizations to fill gaps in balanced .

References

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