https://www.nytimes.com/2018/07/02/m...e=sectionfront
Can the A.C.L.U. Become the N.R.A. for the Left?
 The  suit filed on behalf of families separated at the border was just the  latest action against the administration by the civil liberties group.
July 2, 2018
 
On  the morning of Friday, June 22, the American Civil Liberties Union won a  major Supreme Court decision in Carpenter v. United States, which was  possibly, at least in terms of pure jurisprudence, the most important  case argued before the court this past session. It was a landmark ruling  that changed the future of digital privacy in America, but news of the  win was only the second most important thing happening at the A.C.L.U.  offices that day. At 3 p.m., a conference call was scheduled to discuss  the more than 2,000 children whose fates were tied to another A.C.L.U.  suit against the government.
That  case — Ms. L. v. ICE — was filed in late February, long before most of  the rest of the world was aware that thousands of children were being  separated from their families at the border. (As a point of comparison, a  coalition of 18 state attorneys general filed a suit to stop family  separation on June 26, four months to the day after the A.C.L.U. filed  its suit.) It began with a single client, a 39-year-old Congolese woman,  Ms. L., whose daughter was taken from her in November 2017, but it  quickly grew into a national class action on behalf of every family  whose children had been taken from them.
On  June 6, Judge Dana M. Sabraw, a George W. Bush nominee in the Southern  District of California, rejected the government’s motion to dismiss the  case and ruled that in detaining the immigrants, it was violating the  due-process clause of the Fifth Amendment. The A.C.L.U. asked that  Sabraw issue a nationwide injunction, which the judge was still  considering when the White House, with no legal room to maneuver and  public outcry intensifying by the day, issued an executive order on June  20 saying the practice would be stopped. Now, on that Friday afternoon,  Sabraw asked the lawyers to call in to discuss how the executive order  affected their cases. Did the White House’s decision — in theory, anyway  — negate the need for a nationwide injunction to stop family  separation? And how did it affect the children who had already been  separated?
Lee Gelernt, deputy  director of the A.C.L.U.’s Immigrants’ Rights Project and the lead  lawyer on the case, dialed in from the A.C.L.U.’s national offices in  Lower Manhattan; Sarah Fabian, an attorney at the Department of Justice,  called from Washington. I was listening on speaker in an office next to  Gelernt’s. After informing the attorneys that he was in the courtroom  and that the call was on the record, Sabraw asked immediately: “How does  the executive order affect this case?” An injunction was more necessary  than ever, Gelernt argued, given how much worse things had gotten since  they argued the case in Sabraw’s court in early May. “As your honor has  probably been following in the media,” he said, “there are about 2,000  kids now who have been separated. They range from little babies less  than a year old to toddlers to young children. And they are suffering  immeasurably.”
The  executive order still had too many exceptions that would allow family  separations to continue, Gelernt said, and vitally, it didn’t address  the issue of how the families would be reunited. “Your honor,” he said  at one point, “I realize that I am almost pleading, but we believe it is  necessary for you to issue an injunction as early as tonight or this  weekend.”
Sabraw asked if there was  any interdepartment communication that would allow the government to  even begin putting together a plan for reunification. “I can’t say today  that there is a formalized process,” Fabian responded.
You  could hear Gelernt trying to control the emotion in his response. “At  this point,” he said, “I think the government has had plenty of time to  realize that they are literally terrorizing these little children and  creating irreparable harm to them.”
Near  the end of the call, Sabraw asked for additional briefs to be filed  before he issued a decision. Could the A.C.L.U. file theirs by Monday  morning, clarifying what relief they were now seeking for their clients,  and could the government reply by Wednesday afternoon? Gelernt tried  one more time to push for an expedited process. “We could get something  to you by midnight tomorrow night, if the government could respond by 9  a.m. Monday,” he said. “To allow you to issue something, you know, by  Tuesday, if the government is willing to do that.”
Fabian  declared that it was already too late on a Friday for that; the  government needed time to prepare its response during normal work hours.  So, it was decided, Wednesday.
I  took a brief walk with Gelernt after the call. He looked totally spent.  I’d thought about this a lot over the past few months, of course, but  the profundity of the burden that he was under, fighting against the  government for these families, seemed suddenly unimaginable. “I feel  terrible that I couldn’t get him to budge on the timeline,” he said. “I  did everything I could think of. Wednesday. That’s another five days.  How can we wait another five days?” (The judge later amended the  deadline to 9 a.m. Tuesday morning.)
A  little while later, I sat with Anthony Romero, the A.C.L.U.’s executive  director, in his office looking out on the Statue of Liberty. “Rome  burns,” he said. “Rome is burning. And the government’s lawyers can’t  work a weekend.”
I recalled a  conversation we had there 16 months earlier, a few days after President  Trump issued his first travel ban. The A.C.L.U.’s response to the ban  had been immediate and wide-ranging. It filed its own case challenging  the constitutionality of the order. But it also pushed out a template  for habeas petitions to all the attorneys who had rushed to airports  around the country offering assistance. And at the federal district  courthouse in Brooklyn, in an emergency Saturday night hearing, Gelernt  argued for a nationwide temporary injunction to block the government  from deporting travelers from seven Muslim-majority nations who were now  stranded at airports as a result of Trump’s ban. (The White House was  forced to modify its ban twice, before the Supreme Court finally ruled  in the president’s favor in late June.)
I  was in the crowd in Downtown Brooklyn when Gelernt stepped out onto the  courthouse steps after the hearing. The atmosphere was electric. The  new president had taken decisive action, and the courts and citizens  rising up in protest had beaten him back. There had been, as with the  crowd at the Women’s March a week earlier, a feeling of power and  possibility.
“That’s the model,”  Romero said when I met him that next week. “That’s the way we’re going  to survive this. Pressure in the courts, pressure from the public. We  have to keep him in the pincers. It’s the only way.” But he also warned  that they were only a week in. They were going to have to file suit  after suit after suit. And he worried about how to keep morale up among  his lawyers and the A.C.L.U.’s members as time went on.
Family  separation was a perfect example. Even if Sabraw issued an injunction,  that meant either more legal challenges as the government appealed, or  intensive monitoring to make sure they were complying with the order,  and more lawsuits if they weren’t. This fight, like every fight on every  front against the Trump administration, was going to grind on. For now,  it was important to focus on what had already been accomplished. Trump  could spin it any way he wanted, Romero said, but there was no denying  that the executive order was a win for the opposition. “Think about it,”  he said. “Donald Trump backed down. We made the president back down.  The litigation worked. The public outcry worked. Now we have to keep up  the pressure. That’s what we do now.”
On Nov. 9, 2016, millions  of voters woke desperate for something that might quell their anxiety  that this was the beginning of the end of democracy in America.  Overwhelmingly, the place they turned to was the A.C.L.U. Before the  election, the A.C.L.U. was largely associated with either free-speech  purism (the defense of Nazis to march in Skokie, Ill., in 1977) or  leftist subversion of the American government (George Bush famously  calling Michael Dukakis a “card-carrying member,” not so subtly equating  support of the A.C.L.U. with communist sympathy, during the 1988  presidential campaign). Slightly less cartoonishly, the group has long  been seen by those who are vaguely aware of its work as a collective of  well-intentioned defenders of the Constitution, running their cases year  after year and sending out newsletters to a membership made up largely  of aging former hippies.
In the 15  months that followed the election, the A.C.L.U.’s membership went from  400,000 to 1.84 million. Online donations in the years before averaged  between $3 and $5 million annually. Since then, it has raised just shy  of $120 million. “Until Trump,” Romero told me, “most of our support  came from people who have been with us since we challenged Nixon. Now  we’re kind of cool. Cool’s not a word generally associated with us.”
In  the latest string of celebrity fund-raisers, for instance, Radiohead  announced that anyone who makes a $10 donation to the A.C.L.U. will be  entered into a lottery to hang out with the band and get V.I.P. tickets  to a show. Back in March 2017, Tom Hanks, Tina Fey and Alec Baldwin were  among the hosts for a Facebook Live telethon that raised more than half  a million dollars and was nominated for an Emmy. That same spring,  Zedd, a German house DJ, organized a benefit at the Staples Center in  Los Angeles. Gelernt was one of a handful of A.C.L.U. representatives  who addressed thousands of fans between acts. “I went on after Imagine  Dragons,” he told me. “It was insane. I put on sunglasses and went out  there and started talking, and I couldn’t see anything. Then I go  backstage, and these musicians who are practically my kids’ age are  partying and asking what we’re doing to resist Trump. I was like, ‘Well,  there’s an en banc hearing in the Fourth Circuit coming up.’ ”
A  big chunk of the money that the A.C.L.U. has raised has gone toward  hiring more lawyers, both in the national office and throughout its  network of 54 affiliates. (There’s an affiliate in each state, with  three in California, plus Washington, D.C., and Puerto Rico.) “I’d like  to have 500 lawyers nationwide by 2019,” Romero told me back in the  spring of 2017, when the organization was still in the early stages of  figuring out exactly how to use the resources pouring in. “That’s bigger  than we’ve ever been. But let’s not lose sight of reality: There are  11,000 lawyers in the Department of Justice. Eleven. Thousand.” When you  add in the lawyers at the Departments of Homeland Security and Labor,  who handle immigration law, and Health and Human Services, who field  L.G.B.T. issues, there are at least 18,000 lawyers on the government’s  payroll. “We’re the biggest of the advocacy groups, but even if we go  from 300 to 500 lawyers, we are still tiny,” Romero said. “The power of  the federal government can’t be overestimated.”
The  A.C.L.U. had been preparing for the new administration since the summer  of 2016, when Romero asked the lawyers on staff to develop reports on  each of the candidate’s records regarding civil liberties. They were  familiar with Hillary Clinton’s and generally knew where the challenges  would lie. For Trump, the group hired an opposition-research firm to go  through all his campaign statements, which they then organized into five  subject areas. The lawyers came up with legal strategies for opposing  Trump in each of those areas. “There were no screeds,” Romero said. “No  character assassination. Just cleareyed, lawyerly analysis.”
Romero  at first got some internal pushback on the Trump memo. “The lawyers  were busy and felt Trump was a waste of time and they should be focusing  on the Hillary report,” he said. “But I forced us to do Trump, and  that’s what allowed us to come out of the gate right away.” Romero  arrived at his office the day after the election and pulled the memo,  read through it again and began writing a statement that would be  released that day, as well as the copy for a full-page ad that ran in  The New York Times, detailing the ways in which Trump was a threat to  the Constitution and declaring, “You will have to contend with the full  firepower of the A.C.L.U. at your every step.”
Since  Trump took office, the A.C.L.U. has taken 170 “Trump-related legal  actions.” There have been formal calls for investigation, administrative  and ethics complaints and requests for documents under the Freedom of  Information Act. There have also been 83 lawsuits, more than at any  other equivalent time in its history — in defense of immigrants and  transgender people and abortion rights and free speech and voting rights  and access to birth control.
After  that Friday afternoon family-separation call, I walked around the  hallways for a little while and looked in on various rooms. The place  had visibly changed from when I first started showing up there 18 months  earlier. They were doubling lawyers up in offices now, and there was a  communications and social-media team piled into what used to be a  communal space. 
There were lawyers preparing for a hearing in North  Carolina, challenging a state law barring transgender people from using  the restrooms that match their gender identity. Another attorney, Louise  Melling, one of the A.C.L.U.’s deputy legal directors, stepped out of  her office to commiserate briefly about the Supreme Court’s decision in  favor of a Christian baker (and against the A.C.L.U., which argued the  case) who refused to make a wedding cake for a gay couple in Colorado.  “That one hurt,” she said. “I can’t stop thinking about it.” There were  plenty of other cases wending through the system, Melling said, and the  issue would most likely rise up to the Supreme Court again. She sighed  and then smiled broadly. She had come up fighting abortion rights cases  for years, she said, so she was prepared for the long haul.
Early on, Romero  knew that the public’s investment of faith and money required something  bigger from them than what they could achieve in a courtroom. Right  after the election, he hired a new national political director, Faiz  Shakir, whose job would be to figure out how to mobilize all of those  people looking to the A.C.L.U. for help. “The day after the election,  American people started voting again,” Shakir told me. “With their  pocket books and their email addresses, telling the A.C.L.U.: ‘Tag,  you’re it.’ My take on that was, keep doing what you’re doing,  litigation is great, but you have to rethink what your mission is.”
It’s  not the first time the A.C.L.U.’s mission has shifted. At its founding  in 1920, the A.C.L.U. was less an institution that believed in the power  of litigation than an activist group fighting on behalf of workers  trying to unionize and “radicals” being arrested without warrants and  deported by a government in the grip of anti-communist fever. “The  A.C.L.U.’s lawyers at that time didn’t really believe in the courts at  all,” David Cole, its national legal director, told me. 
This is more or  less smack in the middle of the Lochner era, a time when the courts were  politically conservative and judicially aggressive. “The only  constitutional rights the courts were concerned with were the rights of  businesses to strike down any law designed to protect workers or  consumers against unfettered capitalism,” Cole said. (You don’t have to  stretch your imagination to see the parallels with the current Supreme  Court.)
The A.C.L.U. filed lawsuits  at the time, fully expecting to lose, Cole said, figuring that the  losses would at least be of propaganda value in demonstrating to  Americans the uselessness of the courts when it came to protecting the  rights of the people. “And then, to their surprise, they start winning a  few cases,” Cole said. “And they realize as lawyers that if you make  more patient, incrementalist arguments, you can win in court, and that  each incremental gain sets the stage for more progress. This really is  the birth of civil liberties litigation, which is pretty much the only  thing we did for the next 90-something years. Until now.”
After  years at the Center for Constitutional Rights and a professorship at  Georgetown Law, Cole took over as the A.C.L.U.’s national legal director  a week and a half before Trump took office. He accepted the job in the  late summer of 2016, when the future was all Hillary Clinton and Merrick  Garland and the first liberal Supreme Court in nearly 50 years.  “Anthony wooed me with visions of presiding over the new golden age of  civil rights and civil liberties litigation,” he said when I first met  him. (Romero walked me through the plans they had formulated in the  event of a Clinton victory: “Knocking out the death penalty as  unconstitutional. Establishing solitary confinement as cruel and unusual  punishment. 
Challenging the Hyde Amendment,” which prohibits Medicaid  funding for a vast majority of abortion services. “Blanket protection  against L.G.B.T. discrimination. The application of the Fourth Amendment  and privacy protections in a digital world. Indigent defense and racial  profiling and mass incarceration. ...”)
In  the fall of 2016, as if in anticipation of the moment in which we’re  now living, Cole published his seventh book, “Engines of Liberty: How  Citizen Movements Succeed.” In it, he lays out three radically different  examples of citizen groups banding together to change public perception  and reshape political and judicial will: in 2015, when gay rights  groups won the fight for same-sex marriage; the National Rifle  Association’s inexorable gathering of local and state-level influence  that leads, in 2008, to the federal constitutional right of individuals  to bear arms; and the international pressure brought to bear by human  rights groups during the Bush administration’s “war on terror,” which  led to a 2004 Supreme Court ruling that effectively ended the blanket  legal deference historically afforded an American president during a  time of war.
Each  of those outcomes was previously inconceivable, Cole says. What  ultimately brought them about was less a sea change in the Supreme Court  justices’ worldview, or some masterstroke of lawyering, than a steady  exertion of influence by civil society organizations whose members were  deeply committed to change. No advocacy group is better at doing that,  Cole points out, than the N.R.A. And despite what most Americans think,  the N.R.A.’s extraordinary influence comes less from campaign  contributions or lobbying efforts than from “its remarkable ability to  mobilize its members and supporters at the ballot box.”
In  his book, Cole quotes a former N.R.A. president, David Keene, on this  point: “The power of the National Rifle Association doesn’t come from  money,” Keene said. “Which doesn’t mean we don’t have to spend money,  because we do. But it comes from votes. It comes from the people.”  Politicians can raise money from a range of sources, Keene asserted,  “but if you tell a politician you’ve got 8,000 members in his district,  he’s willing to think about things other than money.”
Dennis  Burke, who served as an aide to former Senator Dennis DeConcini, a  Democrat from Arizona — a state where the N.R.A. has been deeply  effective — is even more blunt on the money-versus-activism question. “I  don’t think [politicians] care about the contributions they get from  the N.R.A.,” Burke told Cole. “They care about the piles of mail, these  nasty calls and people picketing their state offices. Politicians are  risk-averse.”
Cole expounded on this  point to me. “The thing they have, which the rest of us should  understand and try to emulate,” he told me, “is that when they put out  the bat signal, their members respond.” And the reason the N.R.A.’s  membership is so engaged is simple, Cole said. “They have something  tangible they are afraid they’ll lose: their guns.” That fear, realistic  or not, is the fuel that drives the entire engine of the organization.  Kayne Robinson, another former president and executive director of the  N.R.A., was frank with Cole on the necessity of what he calls 
the threat.  “The threat is thing,” Robinson told him. “The most important thing in  motivating the members is the threat. Understanding the gravity of the  threat is what produces action.”
It  wasn’t just losing their guns, though. In an analysis of the N.R.A.’s  success commissioned by Romero in 2013, one of the primary takeaways is  that the N.R.A. invests significant resources in nurturing the N.R.A.  “lifestyle” among its members. It sponsors a huge range of events,  teaches gun education and has a large marketing arm to “get people into  the ‘club’ and keep them there,” which is vital when the bat signal goes  on. Gun ownership is 
the issue in  most N.R.A. members’ lives; it’s central to their perception of who they  are. They see gun control as a threat to their very way of life. To  gun-control advocates, that’s a terrible thing, but Cole believes that  it is possible to similarly galvanize people who care about civil  rights. 
Citizens who might not have cared all that intensely about  immigration or voting rights might, post-Trump, start getting invested  in fights over them, and that in turn might lead to their caring more  deeply about the underlying issues. That was his hope, that out of this  trying moment for civil liberties might come a more profound awareness  of and willingness to devote energy to protecting them.
The  N.R.A. analogy wasn’t perfect, but it was useful, Cole said. “We’re  obviously different. They’re a single-issue group, and we cover the  whole waterfront. Their yearly budget is around $300 million. Ours is  bigger this year, but generally it’s been around $130 million.”  Structurally, they’re similar, however. Each group has national offices,  a lobbying arm and affiliates in every state. And now, as Cole put it,  “we have the threat.”
The person at the  A.C.L.U. most responsible for getting its members to respond to the  threat is Shakir, who joined as national political director on the day  of Trump’s inauguration. Before that, he worked as a senior adviser to  former Senator Harry Reid, and before that as senior adviser to  Representative Nancy Pelosi, the House Democratic leader. (When I spoke  briefly on the phone with Reid, he told me: “I’ve been at it a long  time, and Faiz is one of the two or three most talented people I ever  worked with. He’s special. He’s tireless. He’s very savvy about  politics. Did you know he was a star baseball player in college?”)
When  I first met Shakir, a month or so after he started the job, I asked if  he could imagine anything that would cause Republicans to start peeling  away from the president. He smiled and slowly shook his head. “My  prediction is that we will see levels of cowardice and cynicism that  will be awe-inspiring. As long as Trump doesn’t start offending the  evangelical base or step on a land mine when it comes to Israel, they’re  going to let him do whatever he wants.”
The  one thing he felt certain of was that “it will be easier for Trump to  hurt the people he promised to hurt than to help the people he promised  to help.” For Shakir, that meant there was a chance to reach people and  activate them. After taking the job, he set about creating a system,  with proper infrastructure and resources and personnel, from which you  could call people to action and which other groups could tap into. “I  hired people who know how to do this,” Shakir said, referring to several  digital organizers who worked for Bernie Sanders’s presidential  campaign. Whatever you think of Sanders as a candidate, he said, “out of  the chaos that was the Bernie campaign was born a structure and a  movement of people” — volunteers who then became supervolunteers, who  weren’t on the campaign’s payroll but were passionate and trusted and  could be depended upon to turn out thousands of people for an event.
In  March 2017, the A.C.L.U. launched the new platform, called  PeoplePower.org. The first call to action was around the creation of  what Shakir called “freedom cities.” “We sat down and thought about what  are the power levers that will most hinder Trump’s ability to get  things done,” he said. “And we came to the conclusion that cities and  towns across America are our greatest political strength. Effectuating  power through city officials is the way we can push back.” They created a  list of “asks” to present to local sheriffs, police commissioners or  precinct commanders, and then prepared members with a script of  questions to ask: “Do they participate in transporting people on behalf  of Immigration and Customs Enforcement? Do they give home addresses to  ICE? Do they detain people without judicial warrant?” The idea was to  take the town-hall concept and apply it not to a member of Congress but  to local law-enforcement officials, fostering a sense that constituents  were invested in these issues and wanted their views represented.
The  second major initiative, which the A.C.L.U. started last October in  Lawrence, Kan., was a voting rights campaign called Let People Vote.  Ronald Newman, the director of strategic initiatives and a former member  of the Obama administration on the National Security Council, worked  with Shakir to create geographically targeted campaigns. “Ronnie and I  went to our affiliates and said: ‘You know your state’s issues better  than we do. What’s the one thing you desperately want to accomplish when  it comes to voting rights?’ ” Shakir said. The responses fell into four  categories: election reform (things like automatic voter registration,  same-day voter registration, expanded early voting); rights restoration  for citizens who have committed felonies; gerrymandering; and pushing  back on voter-suppression efforts like identification cards.
The  voting rights campaign was straight out of the N.R.A.’s playbook:  long-term advocacy that starts local, focuses on realistic wins that  energize the membership and keeps the big picture in mind at all times.  “The path to success varies by each state,” Newman said. “For 70 percent  of them, it’s legislation. In a handful of states, there are ballot  measures” — the biggest being the state constitutional amendment on the  ballot in Florida this November that would restore voting rights to an  estimated 1.4 million felons who have served their time. “And in some  places, the work happens not at the state level but at the county level,  so that’s where we have to be involved.”
This focus on  voting rights eventually led the A.C.L.U. to what has been its most  controversial transformation: getting directly involved in electoral  races. For the group’s entire existence, it has maintained strict rules  against endorsing or opposing candidates. To be involved in races at  all, even just through issue messaging, smacks of overt political  involvement — which could be construed as a drift away from the  institution’s role as a strictly nonpartisan defender of the  Constitution. In the report on the N.R.A. that Romero commissioned, the  authors write: “It would be a major change for the A.C.L.U. to move into  electoral mode, and this would have to be carefully weighed in light of  the organization’s culture.” (While I was reporting this story, three  separate people said to me, “The only thing we’re partisan about is the  Bill of Rights.”)
And yet the group  has long had a lobbying effort in Washington and has always been  involved in ballot referendums and deployed volunteers to get out the  word on their core issues. Now, the leaders felt, those core issues were  at the center of the storm in the United States, and the A.C.L.U. could  operate on a scale that had never been possible. “None of that stuff is  new,” Romero told me. “We’ve just never had this much money. In the old  days, if we cobbled together $50,000 for a ballot referendum in  California, and that was being in the game. Now we’re dropping $5  million in Florida, $3 million in Michigan. We’ll spend close to $10  million on ballot referenda this year.
“What 
is  different,” he went on, “is we’re now looking at down-ballot races and  thinking in terms of how we frame civil rights and civil liberties in  each election. If you asked the Democratic National Committee to look at  our 2018 plan, they would scratch their heads in confusion. They would  say, Why are you wasting money on states or races that are not in play?  But for us the question is: What are the races that allow us to put a  spotlight on civil rights and civil liberties? We want to surgically  target the down-ticket races and show that getting information to the  public and activating a base can have a real impact.”
Last  fall, Shakir and Newman began putting together a list of races with  that question in mind. “There had to be an obvious civil rights and  civil liberties story at play in a race,” Shakir said. “If I can’t  explain in the first two sentences what of our core issues are at stake  in an individual race, then we shouldn’t be involved.”
The  earliest test case took place in May 2017 during a Democratic primary  for district attorney in Philadelphia. The race represented a rare open  seat in one of America’s most heavily incarcerated cities. Udi Ofer, the  A.C.L.U.’s deputy national political director, analyzed voting patterns  and estimated that A.C.L.U. members in the Philadelphia area — 11,438  voters — made up roughly a quarter of all the people who vote in  primaries there. They then hired formerly incarcerated individuals to go  door to door, talking about their experience in prison and mass  incarceration. It was a simple message, Romero said: “If you were to  cast a meaningful vote in this D.A. race, here are the issues we think  you should consider.” The winner of that primary and ultimately the  election was Larry Krasner, whose reform-focused approach to racial  discrimination in policing is more or less unheard-of among big-city  district attorneys in the United States.
“What’s  great about this approach is that you have the data,” Romero said. “You  can see very clearly whether or not you’re being effective, beyond just  the outcome of the race. We looked at the number of people we made  contact with and cross-tabulated that with the voter file. Then we  compared it to voter turnout generally. What impact did we see?  Astronomical growth in turnout from the folks whose doors we knocked  on.”
Next up was a State Supreme  Court race in Wisconsin, in which they sent out hundreds of thousands of  scorecards outlining the candidates’ positions on a host of threats to  civil liberties — immigration policy, the restriction of access to  abortion services, L.G.B.T discrimination. Rebecca Dallet, the best  candidate on civil liberties issues, won by 11½ points.
“We  stepped up our involvement in Mecklenburg County after that,” Shakir  told me, referring to the Democratic primary for county sheriff in  Mecklenburg County, N.C., in which the incumbent, Irwin Carmichael, had  signed an agreement to help ICE locate undocumented immigrants. The  A.C.L.U. paid for a radio ad that aired in the weeks leading up to the  primary. “Sheriff Carmichael works for Trump’s deportation force,” it  said, “detaining people for deportation, tearing families apart.”  Carmichael’s challengers, it went on to say, “pledge to stop working  with Trump’s deportation force.” Carmichael, a strong favorite who had  raised significantly more money than his opponents, finished third in  the primary.
In August, the A.C.L.U.  will focus on the county prosecutor’s race in St. Louis County, where  there is a long history of racial discrimination in policing. (The  incumbent is Robert P. McCullouch, who faced criticism for not pushing  to bring charges in the fatal police shooting of Michael Brown, an  unarmed black teenager, in Ferguson.) The group is also looking for ways  to affect the Arizona Republican Senate primary this fall, where Joe  Arpaio, the former sheriff of Maricopa County, is running against Kelli  Ward, a doctor, and Martha McSally, a state representative and former  Air Force squadron commander. Arpaio was found guilty of violating a  judge’s order preventing him from detaining immigrants based solely on  his suspicion that they lacked legal status. He was pardoned by Trump  last August and announced that he would run to succeed Senator Jeff  Flake, one of the few Republicans to speak out against Trump. “I mean,  that guy,” Shakir said. “How can we not be involved in that race?”
And  in Kansas, where Kris Kobach, the secretary of state, is running for  governor, the group has been polling Republican primary and general  election voters. It found that 44 percent of them “have serious doubts”  about Kobach as a result of the disregard for people’s privacy inherent  in his voter-identification efforts. “Our own modeling shows there is a  slice of conservatives who are happy to hear from the A.C.L.U,” Shakir  said. “We want to be talking to them, not just to true-blue,  dyed-in-the-wool resisters.”
This  level of political involvement, no matter the affiliation, hasn’t  settled well with all A.C.L.U. backers. In a recent article for The New  Yorker by Benjamin Wallace-Wells, Ira Glasser, who preceded Romero as  the A.C.L.U.’s executive director for two decades, said of the  involvement in candidates’ races: “I regard this as a departure which  has the capacity to destroy the organization as it has always existed.”  What the A.C.L.U. does, Glasser and others have pointed out, is unique  among advocacy groups in America. It is the only one purely committed to  defending the Constitution. Once you wade into politics, the sanctity  of that commitment risks getting stained.
I  brought this critique up with Romero. “These claims of catastrophic  damage to the organization’s future,” Romero said, but then trailed off  with a shrug, as if to imply he found it hard to take them too  seriously. “What can I say? Some people don’t like change. Are we  endorsing candidates? No. Are we creating a PAC? No. Will we sue the  asses off of any candidate who might benefit from our involvement now if  they do the wrong thing on civil liberties? Yes. Does anyone get a pass  from us in the future? Hell, no. What we’re doing is operationalizing.  Just like the N.R.A. It’s time. If anything, the A.C.L.U. has been too  reluctant to involve ourselves in the political process.”
In  the 2016 fiscal year, he told me, the budget for its political arm was  $37.7 million. For the 2018 fiscal year, which ended in March, the  budget was $103.6 million. The budget for litigation (which also  includes education and operations) in 2018 was $122.7 million. “The  political work is of a commensurate size with the legal work,” Romero  said. “That’s how it should be. The pincers movement is the only way to  deliver. People did not give to the A.C.L.U. for us to put that money  into a bank account. If at the end of this year what I have to show to  all of these people rushing to become members of the organization is a  better balance sheet, I’d get properly skewered. Shame on us if we don’t  find a way to put that money to use.”
I got a text  from Lee Gelernt just after midnight on June 27, four days after his  call with Judge Sabraw: “We won just now. Reunification ordered for all  kids within 30 days. Kids under 5 within 14 days!!” It seemed  impossible. Impossible because hours earlier the Supreme Court affirmed  Trump’s travel ban, a piece of news that had hung over everything like a  haze. And impossible because the unfolding nightmare of these families  seemed to exist beyond the reach of rules, a kind of chaos unleashed  that couldn’t be contained. But this ruling meant that there was now a  pathway to these parents and their children finding one another, and  that path led back to a single case, one mother and her child.
It  seemed impossible, too, that it was only four months ago when Gelernt  first told me about Ms. L. Her story is still shocking in its  particulars, and it’s worth knowing, I think, because her fate, like the  fate of thousands of others seeking asylum here, is still undecided.
Nearly  a year ago, fearing for their lives, Ms. L. and her daughter, S., who  was 6 at the time, fled their small village in the Democratic Republic  of Congo. A group of nuns gave them money and food and helped them flee  the country. For the next several months, they slept outside most nights  or sometimes on the floors of empty buildings they had been pointed to  along their route north toward the United States. They cleaned  themselves as much as possible in public restrooms. They scavenged for  discarded food from restaurants. When they finally presented themselves  at the crossing in San Diego, Ms. L. saw the American flag and told her  daughter they were going to be O.K.: “We have arrived.”
This  was on Nov. 1, 2017 — months before the government denied it was  separating children from their families, then said it was only families  who were caught crossing the border illegally, then announced it was all  part of a zero-tolerance policy. Ms. L. entered legally at the port of  entry at San Diego. In broken Spanish she had picked up along the way,  she told the border agents she was seeking asylum in the United States.  The Border Patrol referred her to ICE, and after four days in temporary  housing, ICE agents met with her and S. and asked the girl to go with a  guard into another room. Once she was gone, they handcuffed Ms. L., who  hadn’t committed a crime. She listened to her daughter beyond the door,  screaming and pleading with the guards not to take her away. S. was  transported immediately to a facility for unaccompanied minors in  Chicago. Ms. L. was detained in California with roughly 1,500 other  detainees.
Two weeks later, on Nov.  17, an asylum officer conducted what ICE calls a “credible-fear  screening” and determined that Ms. L.’s story met the “credibility  threshold,” which would normally mean she could enter the country  legally and live with her daughter in a shelter while she awaited a full  asylum hearing. Instead, months went by, mother and daughter 2,000  miles apart, each in a place where no one else spoke their native  Lingala. Ms. L. and S. spoke five or six times by phone, but the  conversations were torturous for Ms. L., with S. sobbing on the phone  and telling her mother how scared she was and her mother having no idea  if she would ever see her again. “
Chicago meant nothing to her,” Gelernt told me. “It might as well have been on the moon.”
In  late January, Ms. L. appeared before an immigration judge without an  attorney present. She hadn’t seen S. for nearly three months and was  consumed with worry and despair. After questioning her, the judge  ordered Ms. L. to be removed from the United States. Confused by what  was being asked of her, she waived her right to contest her removal.  When she returned to the detention center and recounted what happened,  another detainee asked, “What have you done?” and explained that she was  going to be sent to Congo. Ms. L. begged her fellow detainee to write a  letter to the judge on her behalf. “Please don’t send me back,” she  said. “I will be killed there.”
The  night Gelernt told me her story, he was taking a break from writing a  brief to be filed in two days, on March 9, amending her case into a  nationwide class-action suit. “We just got a bunch of declarations in  the last 15 minutes from people who work in detention centers down in  Texas. They’re saying they’re seeing hundreds of cases.”
Ms.  L. was paroled from detention the following week, a few days before the  government’s response was due in her lawsuit. When I asked Gelernt why  she had been released, he guessed it was an attempt to act as if her  case had nothing to do with a policy of family separation. At the time,  the government’s justification for separating Ms. L. and S. was that it  needed to verify that Ms. L. was neither a child trafficker nor an  abusive parent, though both of those things could have been ascertained  quickly and without separating them.
A  few days after she was released, Ms. L. traveled with an A.C.L.U. staff  member from San Diego to Chicago. She was terrified to make the trip,  certain that she would be arrested in the airport and sent back to Congo  without ever seeing S. again. I met her briefly the next day, in a  shelter on the outskirts of the city. Gelernt had gotten assurances from  the government that Ms. L. and S. would be reunited, but he didn’t know  when. She sat on a worn sofa in the shelter’s common room, wearing  sweatpants and a thin sweater and plastic flip-flops, her face gaunt  beneath tight braids. She kneaded her hands and looked into her lap as  Gelernt asked her what S.’s favorite foods were, what color clothes she  would like, what toys she might want to play with when they were finally  together again. “Frozen,” Ms. L. whispered.
There  were some creased, printed-out photos of her and S., taken before they  fled Congo, spread out on a pool table at the end of the room. In one,  Ms. L. smiles at the camera while S. sits behind her braiding her hair.  You can recognize her in the pictures, the same softness in her eyes,  the long, strong hands. But the woman in the room was, I would guess, 50  or 60 pounds thinner than the woman in the photographs. Before we said  goodbye, we stood next to the pool table looking at the pictures. I  remarked on how beautiful S. was, and she slowly ran a finger over her  daughter in the photo, then gathered the papers up and slid them into a  manila folder that she held against her chest.
The  next night, after I left, they were reunited in the shelter. I’ve  spoken with Gelernt several times about the moment of their reunion,  what he called the most emotional thing he’d experienced in 25 years of  doing immigration work. Ms. L. stood near him waiting for her daughter  on a worn marble staircase just inside the shelter’s front door. When  the door swung open, she crouched and stretched her arms wide. S.  stepped through the doorway and saw her, and the most beautiful smile  spread over the girls face, Gelernt said. She toppled forward, and Ms.  L. gathered her in her arms and fell back onto the marble stairs. 
The  look on her face as she held her daughter was almost too emotional to  witness. For the next minute they lay there, clinging to each other and  rocking from side to side. The only sound in the hall was a low,  rhythmic moan, punctuated by S.’s higher-pitched cry.
Eventually  they sat up and walked up the steps and settled on a bench in the  shelter’s hallway. After a few minutes, Ms. L leaned toward S. and spoke  to her in Lingala, then pointed to Gelernt, and S. stood up and walked  over to him and wrapped her arms around his waist. “There are times when  this work is so tiring,” Gelernt said. “But something like this, if  people could only see this, I think it could change the way some of them  think about these issues. This isn’t abstract policy, this is a mother  and a daughter who have been through more than we can imagine. It was  the rawest possible emotion,” Gelernt said.
Three  days later, the immigration judge who ruled that Ms. L. would be  deported denied the motion to reopen her case. “It’s horrific,” Gelernt  told me. “It’s obviously going to be appealed.” As of now, they’re  awaiting a decision on that appeal. Gelernt told me that S. is doing a  little better, going to school in the day with some other kids in the  shelter. Ms. L. remains terrified that ICE agents will show up there to  take her away, or take S. away, and that she’ll be sent back to Congo  and what she says and the government has agreed is certain death.
It’s unclear at  this point whether the government will comply with Judge Sabraw’s  ruling and begin the process in earnest of reuniting the families that  have been separated. It’s possible that the Trump administration will  appeal the decision, possible even that it could go to the Supreme Court  in a special summer hearing. When I spoke with Gelernt the morning  after the ruling, he described the process by which the A.C.L.U. and  others would monitor and verify, and then, if the government wasn’t  abiding by the decision, go back to the judge and sue it for  noncompliance. “This is the fight now,” he said. “We can’t give up on  these kids.”
As Anthony Romero  predicted in the first weeks of Trump’s presidency, the A.C.L.U. has  never been able to savor a victory for long. On June 27, Justice Anthony  Kennedy announced he would be retiring from the Supreme Court, giving  Trump an opening to nominate someone who could steer the court hard to  the right for decades to come. It was catastrophic news for the group’s  members and donors, and it threatened many of the civil liberties that  Romero and his lawyers have fought so hard to protect: abortion rights,  voting rights, labor rights and many more. I got an email from David  Cole the next morning. “So now Kennedy’s gone. Very disturbing.”
I’d  begun thinking about this story a year and a half ago, when I met Cole  just before the inauguration. He exuded empathy and fierce intelligence  in equal parts. During our first conversation, I asked him about what he  expected out of the next four years, and I thought he would say that  even a court this conservative would provide a bulwark against assaults  on the Constitution and civil rights, that it would fully exert the  power of its branch. Instead, he said, “The courts won’t save us.” It’s  not that they wouldn’t do their jobs. He had faith for the most part  that they would. And groups like the A.C.L.U. and others would do their  jobs, too. “The question is, will the rest of us do ours?”
I’ve  checked in with him several times over these 18 months to take his  emotional temperature. Always it’s a soft-sold optimism, and always it’s  tempered by the question of whether Americans can summon the anger and  the energy and the empathy, the love, even, odd as it is to use that  word in this context, to care enough about the suffering of other human  beings to be willing to work on their behalf, whatever that work might  require. “I remain confident we’ll find our way,” Cole always says. Or,  “I believe we’ll look back on this moment, and it will be the moment in  which we saved the country from its worst self.” Or, “If I’m betting,  I’m still betting that justice wins out.”
When  I asked him where his equanimity and optimism came from, he laughed and  said it wasn’t that he was born hopeful, it’s that he’s been in the  fight for a long time. You learn to absorb defeats, and you recognize  that change comes incrementally, that the dam only ever breaks after  sustained, constant pressure. “I fundamentally believe that hope is more  the consequence of action than its cause,” he said. “It seems to me you  have two choices in this life, you can be a fatalistic spectator, or  you can engage and produce hope. If those are the two choices, there is  really only one choice.”
Joel Lovell is the executive editor of Pineapple Street Media. His last cover story for the magazine was 
on the writer George Saunders.
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