Roosevelt's 1932 election and the beginning of the New Deal marked a major turning point for the ACLU. For early the first time, state intervention aimed to protect rather than repress organized labor. The organization transformed into an organization devoted to the defense of free speech full stop.
Featuring Laura Weinrib on The Taming of Free Speech: America’s Civil Liberties Compromise. Did you know that the ACLU was founded as a radical labor organization allied with the IWW? Weinrib traces the rise of the modern civil liberties movement, and modern constitutional liberalism more broadly, from World War I through the New Deal. She explains how the ACLU went from defending free speech as a means to revolutionary ends to a liberal position exalting free speech as an end unto itself—including the anti-union speech of bosses and the political speech of corporations.
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