ACLU of Maine’s Guide to Legislative Advocacy

January 28 · 6:00pm - 7:00pm

Virtual

 

 

ACLU of Maine graphic

Summary

Maine's 132nd legislature is in session!

Join the ACLU of Maine policy team to learn how you can take action to influence policy on the issues that matter most to you.

We'll lead a discussion with the ACLU of Maine's policy team on the different ways that Maine people can stay up-to-date on the bills being considered in Augusta this session, and what they can do to make their voices heard.

Policy Director Michael Kebede

Michael Kebede

Policy Director

Michael joined the ACLU of Maine as a policy counsel in 2019. He volunteered for the ACLU of Maine in 2018 on Portland’s non-citizen voter initiative. That effort introduced him to the staff at the ACLU of Maine and convinced him that his passion could be his profession. Michael was promoted to the role of policy director in January of 2025. In his role at the ACLU of Maine, Michael has worked on hundreds of bills in the Maine State Legislature. He works to pass many bills that would improve the civil rights and liberties of Maine’s people, improves others, and kills even more. In 2021, Michael authored and helped negotiate the strongest ban on law enforcement uses of facial surveillance in the nation. He has also led the ACLU of Maine's work on criminal records sealing; youth justice; indigenous sovereignty; removing police from schools; and curbing the police state by, among other things, eliminating Maine's Fusion Center or limiting its scope and increasing accountability. Michael has also contributed to the ACLU of Maine’s long-term effort to shrink the criminal code, reduce criminal legal responses to homelessness and behavioral and mental health disorders, expand abortion access, decriminalize drugs, abolish no-knock warrants, protect immigrants' rights, strengthen and protect the right to vote, and strengthen our mental and behavioral health continuum of care. Before joining the ACLU of Maine, Michael was a consumer rights advocate at Maine Equal Justice, a non-profit civil legal services organization in Augusta. There, he lobbied to advance the rights of low-income people in lending, utilities, and housing law. Earlier, Michael was an Associate at Verrill Dana, a full-service law firm in Portland. At Verrill Dana, Michael represented clients in patent disputes, complex commercial matters, and personal injury cases. Michael earned his law degree cum laude from Boston College Law School and was awarded the Alumni Association Award at graduation. Following law school, Michael served as law clerk to Chief Justice Saufley of the Maine Supreme Judicial Court from 2013 to 2014. Michael earned his master’s degree from the University of Oxford in Socio-Legal Research, and his Bachelor of Arts summa cum laude from the University of Massachusetts at Amherst in Anthropology and Social Thought and Political Economy. In his free time, Michael enjoys playing banjo, running, rock climbing, polar-dipping, hiking, and camping. Publications:Michael Kebede (2022) Beyond Exception and Supremacy: Adwa in the Black Radical Imaginary, Ethiopian Journal of the Social Sciences and Humanities, Vol. 17 No. 1 (2021): Special Issue, DOI: https://dx.doi.org/10.1314/ejossah.v17i1.3 Book Review, Michael Kebede (2021) Ethiopia in theory: revolution and knowledge production, 1964–2016, Review of African Political Economy, 48:169, 485-487, DOI: 10.1080/03056244.2021.1905363 Book Review, Michael Kebede (2016) The sociology of shari'a: case studies from around the world, edited by Adam Possamai, James T. Richardson and Bryan S. Turner, The Journal of Legal Pluralism and Unofficial Law, 48:1, 156-158, DOI: 10.1080/07329113.2015.1092062 Michael Kebede, A ‘yes’ on Portland’s Questions 2 and 3 is ‘yes’ to democracy, PORTLAND PRESS HERALD, October 2022, available here. Michael Kebede, Black Lives Matter is the Latest Flower of the Black Radical Tradition, PORTLAND PRESS HERALD, June 2020, available here. Commentary: Ethiopia’s 1999 Federal Courts of Sharia Consolidation Proclamation: The Function of the Sharīʿa Courts, Islamic Law Blog, PROGRAM IN ISLAMIC LAW AT HARVARD LAW SCHOOL, Aug 29, 2019, available here. Perils of Abiymania, GOBENA STR., June 2018, available here.

Policy Fellow Alicia Rea

Alicia Rea

Policy Fellow

Alicia joined the ACLU of Maine in September 2024 as a policy fellow. In this role, she works with state officials, municipal and school leaders, and constituent groups to coordinate effective strategies for passing legislation to protect the civil rights and liberties of Mainers. Her work focuses on racial equity, voting, LGBTQ+, and reproductive rights. Before joining the ACLU, Alicia worked in higher education fundraising at Bates College and Husson University. Additionally, Alicia served her community as a member of the Lewiston City Council, Lewiston School Committee, Androscoggin County Budget Committee, and Lake Auburn Watershed Protection Commission. Alicia earned a Bachelor of Arts in Religious Studies from Connecticut College, a Master of Public Administration and Policy from American University, and a Juris Doctor from the University of Maine School of Law in 2024. While in law school, Alicia had the honor of serving as the editor-in-chief of the Ocean and Coastal Law Journal, a student attorney in the Youth Justice Clinic, and as a judicial extern for the Portland District Court. In her free time, Alicia can be found volunteering in Lewiston, whipping up baked goods in her home kitchen, and playing wildly complicated board games with friends.  

Aaron Rosenblum Engagement and Education Coordinator

Aaron Rosenblum

Engagement & Education Coordinator

Aaron joined the ACLU of Maine in 2025. He collaborates within the organization and with external partners to engage our members and the public with the ACLU of Maine’s mission and critical work. Before joining ACLU of Maine, Aaron was an adult services librarian at the Portland Public Library, where he designed inclusive public health and sustainability programs and offered multi-lingual reference services. Prior to that, Aaron worked as a regional programs coordinator for the Louisville Free Public Library, producing adult programming on a wide range of topics across a busy and diverse urban library system. In these and other roles, he has consistently sought opportunities for innovative public engagement and outreach, with a focus on inclusion and accessibility. As an artist, he has performed across North America, produced radio programs and podcasts broadcast or distributed in the US, Europe, and the UK, and has exhibited and led workshops in libraries, schools, and museums in the eastern US. Aaron earned a Master of Library and Information Science degree from McGill University (2010), and a Bachelor of Arts in music and cultural studies from Hampshire College (2003). In his free time, Aaron can be found in the woods on a bicycle, at home creating sound and audiovisual art, or at the end of a leash wherever his dog leads him.