About me
Long-time civil rights leader Evan Wolfson lives in New York City, where he
founded Freedom to Marry, the campaign to win marriage nationwide, and
served as president through its epic victory in June 2015 until its closing in early
2016. Having achieved the goal he had pursued for 32 years, Wolfson now
devotes his time to advising and assisting diverse movements and causes in the
US and around the world eager to adapt the model and apply the lessons
learned that made the Freedom to Marry campaign so successful. Wolfson has
been named a Distinguished Visitor from Practice at Georgetown Law Center,
teaching law and social change, and Senior Counsel at Dentons, the world’s
largest law firm, with 125+ offices in 50+ countries.
Widely acknowledged to be the architect of the movement that won the freedom
to marry in the United States, Wolfson has received many awards, from induction
into his high school hall of fame to being presented the Barnard Medal of
Distinction alongside President Barack Obama in 2012. Citing his national
leadership on marriage and his appearance before the U.S. Supreme Court in Boy
Scouts of America v. James Dale, the National Law Journal in 2000 named Wolfson
one of the “100 most influential attorneys in America,” and he has been honored by
the American Bar Association and the American Psychiatric Association, among
many others. Wolfson has been called “the godfather of gay marriage” by
Newsweek / The Daily Beast, and “the indispensable man in bringing marriage
equality to America” by Andrew Sullivan. In 2004, Time magazine named Wolfson
one of the “100 Most Influential People in the World.”
From 1989 until 2001, Wolfson worked full-time at Lambda Legal Defense &
Education Fund, the nation’s preeminent advocacy group working on behalf of
lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender people and people living with HIV/AIDS. As
director of Lambda Legal’s Marriage Project throughout the 1990s, Wolfson
created the National Freedom to Marry Coalition, the first full-fledged campaign to
win marriage for same-sex couples. He was co-counsel in Hawaii’s landmark Baehr case for the freedom to marry, which launched the ongoing global marriage
equality movement, and contributed to virtually every marriage win thereafter.
Wolfson has also played a part in work to win the freedom to marry in other
nations, including Canada, Argentina, the United Kingdom, France, New Zealand,
Ireland, and others still underway.
On April 26, 2000, Wolfson became the first Lambda attorney to argue before the
United States Supreme Court when he urged the justices to reject the Boy Scouts
of America’s appeal of a unanimous ruling from the New Jersey Supreme Court
striking down their ban on gay members and leaders. Wolfson had represented
Eagle Scout James Dale since he was expelled from the BSA in 1990. Following the
5-4 vote, Wolfson helped shape the extraordinary national response from non-gay
and gay people and institutions against the BSA’s discrimination, challenging their
harmful message to youth. In 2015, the Boy Scouts of America renounced their
discriminatory national policy.
In other cases, Wolfson championed gay and lesbian military personnel fighting for
the freedom to serve, gay parents wishing to adopt children and preserve their
visitation rights, a Florida deputy sheriff fired for being gay, a person with AIDS
seeking life-saving medical treatment refused to him by his insurer, a woman
denied work as a Dallas police officer because of the state’s anti-gay “sodomy”
laws, and NYC employees demanding equal health benefits and recognition for
their partners.
Before joining Lambda, Wolfson served in Washington, D.C. as Associate Counsel
to Lawrence Walsh in the Office of Independent Counsel (Iran/Contra), and in
1992, was appointed by Governor Mario Cuomo to the New York State Task Force
on Sexual Harassment. Wolfson has taught as an adjunct professor of law at
Columbia University and Rutgers University Law Schools, and as a teaching fellow
at Harvard College.
Born in Brooklyn and raised in Pittsburgh, Wolfson graduated from Yale College in
1978. For two years after graduation, he worked as a Peace Corps volunteer in a
village in Togo, West Africa. Upon returning, he attended Harvard Law School,
graduating in 1983 and moving on to teach political philosophy as a teaching fellow
at Harvard College. Wolfson then served as assistant district attorney for Kings
County in Brooklyn, NY. There, he wrote amicus briefs that helped win the U.S. Supreme Court’s ban on race discrimination in jury selection (Batson v. Kentucky)
and the New York State high court’s elimination of the marital rape exemption
(People v. Liberta).
Wolfson has published numerous articles on sexual orientation and civil rights,
beginning with his historic -- and prophetic -- 1983 law school thesis on the
freedom to marry for same-sex couples. As a pro bono cooperating attorney for
Lambda Legal from 1984 to 1989, Wolfson wrote Lambda’s amicus briefs to the
Supreme Court in Bowers v. Hardwick and NGTF v. Board of Education of
Oklahoma City.
Wolfson’s first book, Why Marriage Matters: America, Equality, and Gay People’s
Right to Marry was published by Simon & Schuster in July 2004, and re-released in
paperback with a new foreword in June 2005. Wolfson is a highly sought-after
speaker, makes frequent appearances in the media, and provides counsel to a
broad range of organizations and causes in the United States and globally, with a
particular focus on human rights and changing hearts, minds, and the law.