Executive Director
The ACLU website credits Glasser with transforming the American Civil Liberties Union from a " 'mom and pop'-style operation concentrated mainly in a few large cities to a nationwide civil liberties powerhouse." Indeed, at the end of Glasser's presidency the ACLU maintained staffed offices in all fifty states, the District of Columbia, and Puerto Rico; when he became director in 1978, only about half of the states had staffed offices. Glasser raised the ACLU's annual income from $4 million in 1978 to $45 million in 1999.
Although the ACLU had protected civil liberties solely through litigation, Glasser expanded the scope of ACLU's activities through lobbying and public education programs.
Glasser retired in 2001; he was succeeded as executive director of the ACLU by Anthony D. Romero.
In his retired life, Glasser serves as the President of the Board of Directors of the Drug Policy Alliance.
Read more about this topic: Ira Glasser
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