Bio
In his role as National Legal Director, David Cole managed more than 200 ACLU staff attorneys and supported staff in the National office, oversaw the ACLU’s U.S. Supreme Court docket, and provided leadership to 400 more legal staff who work in ACLU affiliate offices in all 50 states, Puerto Rico, and Washington, D.C.
Cole has litigated many constitutional cases in the Supreme Court, including Texas v. Johnson and United States v. Eichman, which extended First Amendment protection to flag burning; Masterpiece Cakeshop v. Colorado Civil Rights Commission, in which the ACLU represented a gay couple refused service by a bakery because they sought a cake to celebrate their wedding; Bostock v. Clayton County, which established that employment discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation and gender identity is prohibited by Title VII; and Mahanoy Area School District v. B.L. which protected a high school student’s profane off-campus, online social media post from school discipline. As the ACLU National Legal Director, he has overseen a wide range of Supreme Court litigation, including cases extending privacy protection to cell phone location data, striking down President Trump’s effort to add a citizenship question to the census, protecting Black Lives Matters protesters from liability for the acts of others, enforcing Black citizens’ voting rights in Alabama and South Carolina, and challenging the Muslim ban, the border wall, and a range of anti-asylum policies.
Cole’s victories include: successfully defending for over 21 years a group of Palestinian immigrants whom the government sought to deport for their political affiliations; striking down the anti-communist provisions of the Immigration Act; challenging restrictions on federally funded AIDS education; barring Randall Terry and Operation Rescue from blocking access to abortion providers; and freeing several Arab and Muslim immigrants detained on secret evidence. Cole, who began his career at the Center for Constitutional Rights, litigated many of these cases in cooperation with ACLU attorneys across the country.
Cole is on leave from Georgetown University, where he has taught constitutional law and criminal justice since 1990, and is the Hon. George J. Mitchell Professor in Law and Public Policy. Cole writes regularly for The Nation, New York Review of Books, Washington Post, and many other periodicals. He is the author or editor of 10 books, several of which have won awards, including the Palmer Civil Liberties Prize, the American Book Award, and prizes from the American Political Science Association, the Boston Book Review, and the Jesuit Honor Society. His most recent book, "Engines of Liberty: How Citizen Movements Succeed," published in 2016, examines the strategies civil society organizations employ to change constitutional law.
The late New York Times columnist Anthony Lewis called Cole “one of the country’s great legal voices for civil liberties today,” and the late Nat Hentoff called him “a one-man Committee of Correspondence in the tradition of patriot Sam Adams.” Cole has received two honorary degrees and many awards for his civil liberties and human rights work, including the inaugural Norman Dorsen Presidential Prize from the ACLU, awarded to an academic for lifetime commitment to civil liberties.
Featured work
Feb 10, 2017
The Ninth Circuit Reminds President Trump That There Are Limits to His Executive Power
Jan 28, 2017
We’ll See You in Court: Why Trump’s Executive Order on Refugees Violates the Establishment Clause
Nov 22, 2016
Why Trump’s Proposed Targeting of Muslims Would Be Unconstitutional