ACLU Announces Acting Director Of Washington Legislative Office (7/24/2009)
Michael
Macleod-Ball Brings Diverse Skills From Public And Private
Sectors
FOR
IMMEDIATE RELEASE CONTACT:
(202) 675-2312 or media@dcaclu.org
WASHINGTON
– The American Civil Liberties Union today announced that Michael Macleod-Ball
will be serving as the Acting Director of the Washington Legislative Office as
the organization searches for a new Legislative Director. As Acting Director,
Macleod-Ball will be the organization’s top lobbyist and lead the ACLU’s
legislative team in influencing lawmakers and the executive branch to protect
civil liberties.
“Michael’s
wide range of legal, civil liberties and legislative experience in both the
public and private sectors makes him a well-suited candidate to lead our
outstanding legislative staff during this transition period,” said Anthony D.
Romero, Executive Director of the ACLU. “We are grateful to him for filling this
role during these vibrant and critical times for civil
liberties.”
In
September 2007, Macleod-Ball joined the ACLU Washington Legislative Office as
the Chief Legislative and Policy Counsel for the organization, where he managed
a team of policy counsels and lobbyists who worked with Congress and the White
House on a non-partisan basis to preserve and protect Americans’ civil liberties
and constitutional rights. Prior to his work at the ACLU Washington Legislative
Office, Macleod-Ball provided legal advice and advocacy leadership for 25 years
in New England and Alaska, including serving as Executive Director of the ACLU
of Alaska, where he helped form Alaska’s first statewide LGBT advocacy
organization, challenged unfair voting laws and conducted the first known
statewide survey of sex education.
“I am
privileged to be leading the Washington Legislative Office during these dynamic
and busy times,” said Macleod-Ball. “I look forward to leading the fight in
Washington and pushing Congress and the administration to protect Americans’
civil liberties, from immigration reform to demanding accountability for
torture.”
Prior to
joining the ACLU of Alaska, Macleod-Ball lived in Maine for over 15 years, where
he practiced law and held leading roles in the political community. He served on
two presidential campaigns, served as a delegate to the 2004 Democratic National
Convention and was a partner at one of Maine’s largest law firms, Verill Dana,
before founding Bergen & Parkinson in 1998. He has also argued important
court cases on privacy and federal regulatory authority, and has spoken to
groups across the country on ACLU legislative and regulatory
priorities.
Macleod-Ball graduated from the
University of Vermont with a degree in psychology, and graduated cum laude from Boston’s Suffolk
University Law School, where he served as a law review editor and wrote on
religious liberty issues.
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