Holding The Line: Mark Trammell’s Battle To Defend Civil Liberties The Left Won’t Touch

In an era where the First Amendment often feels like an afterthought, Mark Trammell is treating it like a lifeline. Trammell, the CEO of the Center for American Liberty (CAL) is leading a legal charge on behalf of Americans he says have been abandoned by legacy civil rights organizations — groups he believes have been co-opted by the political left and now pick their fights based on ideology rather than principle.

Trammell’s path to the front lines of free speech battles began modestly enough: a young lawyer on Capitol Hill, then an illuminating tenure at Young Americans for Freedom, where he saw firsthand how “very little viewpoint diversity” in education was chilling open debate and altering malleable minds. His job back then was to defend the rights of conservative students whose events were routinely sabotaged by administrators or shut down altogether.

At UC Berkeley, once lionized as a free-speech mecca, conservative speakers like Ann Coulter were restricted to speaking during “dead week” when few students were on campus. Ben Shapiro was blocked from using a campus auditorium over far-fetched “safety” concerns. And the ultimate insult: conservative students were forced to pay tens of thousands of dollars in “security fees” to guard against left-wing agitators — even though they weren’t the ones causing trouble.

Those experiences solidified Trammell’s belief that the playing field wasn’t just uneven — it was rigged. When he reached out to prominent conservative litigator Harmeet Dhillon, the two quickly forced Berkeley to rewrite its biased policies. That partnership would evolve into the creation of CAL in 2019, designed to fill what Trammell calls “the gap in the broader civil rights edifice” — representing those who are left behind by traditional advocacy groups.

Gage Skidmore from Surprise, AZ, United States of America, CC BY-SA 2.0 , via Wikimedia Commons

From the start, the CAL’s cases have been high-profile and politically charged. The group defended journalist Andy Ngo after he was assaulted by antifa in Portland — a city where the mayor literally marched with the extremist group and prosecutors refused to act. It challenged Gov. Gavin Newsom’s sweeping COVID-19 shutdown orders, filing suits over everything from restrictions on places of worship to the closure of Orange County’s picturesque beaches.

They have also prevailed in three cases before the U.S. Supreme Court.

Now CAL is breaking ground on lawsuits against the “gender engineering industry,” representing three detransitioned young women — Chloe Cole, Luka Hein, and Kaya Clementine Breen — who were pushed into irreversible medical procedures before they were old enough to fully understand the consequences. The organization is the only one in the country suing gender clinics for their treatment of minors.

“This is not anti-trans,” Trammell emphasized, adding that adults can make these choices for themselves. But children, who are more susceptible to social pressures, deserve protection.

Trammell’s philosophy on case selection is clear: CAL doesn’t chase moral victories or cases that simply raise money. “If we were interested in raising money, all of us would be in private practice,” he says with a dry laugh. Instead, they focus on winnable cases with the potential to change the law for everyone.

That mission has taken them into new territory, such as defending the rights of protesters in the Karen Read trial. CAL is fighting against broad “buffer zones” that ban demonstrations — and even clothing — expressing a viewpoint, calling such restrictions an overreach that stifles peaceful public expression.

And the fight isn’t slowing down. CAL is preparing more lawsuits against California school districts for violating parents’ rights and ignoring federal directives, and Trammell hints at major free speech cases in the months ahead.

Even with Dhillon now serving as Assistant Attorney General for Civil Rights, Trammell says her influence still guides CAL’s work. “Harmeet got this organization started. Even while she’s at the DOJ, her vision continues.”

Office of Public Affairs, United States Department of Justice, Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons

For Trammell, the mission is as urgent as ever: “We have an opportunity to achieve a lot for our liberty movement.”

In a political climate where the First Amendment is often treated as optional — and defending it can get you ostracized — Trammell and CAL are standing their ground. And in doing so, they’re reminding the left that civil liberties belong to everyone.

The opinions expressed in this article are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the positions of American Liberty News.

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Patrick Houck

Patrick Houck is an avid political enthusiast based out of the Washington, D.C., metro area. His expertise is in campaigns and the use of targeted messaging to persuade voters. When not combing through the latest news, you can find him enjoying the company of family and friends or pursuing his love of photography.

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