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ACLU unveils big expansion plans for nation’s heartland
Gay rights, immigrants’ rights and police brutality to be vigorously pursued
Published Thursday, 19-Jun-2008 in issue 1069
NEW YORK (AP) – The American Civil Liberties Union announced by far the largest fund-raising campaign in its 88-year history June 9, eying a dramatic expansion of its work on social justice issues in relatively conservative states such as Texas and Florida.
Montana is among another half-dozen states also targeted for expansion.
The campaign’s goal is $335 million, with $258 million already raised through behind-the-scenes solicitations over the past year, ACLU executive director Anthony Romero said.
Major donors include billionaire financier George Soros, who gave $12 million through his Open Society Institute.
“The purpose is to build a civil liberties infrastructure in the middle of the country – where battleground states are often under-resourced and our efforts are most needed,” Romero said.
He cited issues such as immigrants’ rights, gay rights, police brutality and opposition to the death penalty as causes that would be vigorously pursued as the ACLU expanded in heartland states. At present, the ACLU’s biggest offices are in the Northeast, the Pacific states and Illinois; targets for expansion include Michigan, Missouri, Mississippi, Montana, New Mexico and Tennessee, with even the smallest ACLU affiliates in line to get extra funding to hire new attorneys and launch new advocacy programs.
Romero said the ACLU envisions more than doubling the staffs of its Texas and Florida operations, and its full-time work force nationwide – including its headquarters and state affiliates – would increase from roughly 800 to about 1,000. Numerous new satellite offices would be opened.
“We’re going to build these offices into vibrant, muscular civil liberties machines, in places where our issues matter most,” he said. “We’ve done great work in those states, but we’ve always been the David to the government’s Goliath.”
Romero said the fundraising campaign was designed to capitalize on a favorable climate for the ACLU. Since he became executive director in 2001, its annual budget has tripled to $107 million, and its membership has nearly doubled to more than 550,000, Romero said.
“The most dangerous organization in America is trying to become more dangerous,” said Mike Johnson, senior legal counsel for the Alliance Defense Fund.
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