The Other LGBT Victory This Week - This Time In Idaho

With the flurry of court decisions striking down marriage bans for same-sex couples around the country, you might've missed the story coming out of Pocatello, Idaho, but it's a biggie.

By By Leo Morales, Interim Executive Director, ACLU of Idaho

Placeholder image

And Pennsylvania Makes Nineteen!

Yesterday a federal judge in Pennsylvania ruled for the freedom to marry, and today the state's governor, Tom Corbett, announced that he won't appeal the judge's ruling.

By By James Esseks, Director, ACLU Lesbian Gay Bisexual Transgender & AIDS Project

Placeholder image

A Partial Victory For Judicial Transparency

In a partial victory for the public’s right to access and scrutinize court proceedings, a federal judge recently made public most of two previously sealed opinions authorizing gag orders on Twitter and Yahoo to prevent the companies from disclosing grand jury subpoenas demanding some of their subscribers’ records.

By By Bennett Stein, ACLU Speech, Privacy, and Technology Project

Placeholder image

Killing Russell Bucklew: Missouri's Planned Departure from Decency

Something is scheduled to happen in Missouri at 12:01am on Wednesday morning that the state desperately doesn't want you to see.

By By Cassandra Stubbs, ACLU Capital Punishment Project

Placeholder image

Anti-Backpage.com Bill Will Shut Down Free Speech

The House of Representatives is set to take up a bill this morning that would result in severe unintended consequences for free speech online. We are understandably concerned. The measure aims to target the deliberate commercial promotion of either coerced or underage prostitution – both of which are, rightly, serious federal crimes – but would unfortunately go much further.

By By Gabe Rottman, Legislative Counsel, ACLU Washington Legislative Office

Placeholder image

Putting the Brakes on Voter Suppression in North Carolina

Voters get to decide who represents them, but elected officials don't get to decide which eligible voters can and can't vote. Right?

By By Molly Rugg, Paralegal, ACLU

Placeholder image

Karma: Private Prison Company Throws Shade and Fails, Badly

How can you tell that a private prison company is getting desperate? When its lobbyists and PR reps start throwing shade at the ACLU for "politics and posturing."

By Carl Takei, ACLU National Prison Project

Placeholder image

Playing Politics with the World War II Memorial

Today, a subcommittee in the House of Representatives will hold a hearing on a bill to require that an inscription of a D-Day prayer given by President Franklin D. Roosevelt, reflecting a specific religious viewpoint, be added to the World War II Memorial. The bill plays politics with religion and detracts from the stated purpose of this important memorial: national unity.

By By Ian S. Thompson, ACLU Washington Legislative Office

Placeholder image

Segregation 2.0: America's School-to-Prison Pipeline

This piece originally appeared at MSNBC.com.

By By Dennis Parker, Director, ACLU Racial Justice Program

Placeholder image