Arshad Hasan

Arshad Hasan was the executive director of ProgressNow. He was previously executive director for Democracy for America.

Arshad Hasan
Born (1980-11-18) November 18, 1980
Alma materUniversity of Pennsylvania (2003)
OccupationNonprofit executive

Education

Arshad grew up in Grand Forks, North Dakota, and attended Red River High School.

Arshad attended the University of Pennsylvania, graduating in 2003 with a bachelor's degree in political science. While at Penn, Arshad received the Senior Bowl Man Award,[1] and was part of the Sphinx Honor Society[2] and Oracle Senior Honor Society.[3] While in college, Arshad worked as a paid canvasser and managed teams of paid canvassers on issue campaigns in Minnesota and Pennsylvania.[4] While at Penn, Arshad also wrote for the school’s online newspaper, The Daily Pennsylvanian,[5][6][7] and was part of the LGBT community.[8]

Early political career

Arshad traces his involvement with Howard Dean to February 2003, when Arshad founded one of the nation’s first organized pro-Dean groups, Philly for Dean.[9]

From 2003 to 2004, Arshad worked as a statewide organizer for Green Corps on citizen engagement and democracy.[10] Arshad organized statewide environmental issue campaigns on behalf of Clear the Air in Arizona, Bluewater Network in Washington, and Oceana in Florida.

From April to August 2004, Arshad worked as an assistant canvass director for the Fund for Public Interest Research in Rochester, New York.

From August 2004 to November 2004, Arshad worked as an organizer for MoveOn PAC/Grassroots Campaigns, Inc.[11]

Democracy for America

Arshad joined Democracy for America in April 2005. Democracy for America (DFA), is a progressive PAC founded by Howard Dean in 2004. It is headquartered in Burlington, Vermont.[12] Upon joining DFA, Arshad said: "I decided that I wanted to do something that I felt passionate about and I felt passionate about making a difference. We actually deserve better than what we have, so that’s what I work on."[13] In the 2006 general election, Arshad worked as the GOTV Director for Jerry McNerney for Congress.[14][15]

Arshad started at DFA as a training coordinator and was later promoted to training director. At this position he built DFA’s political training program from scratch, training over 12,000 people online in 43 weekend "boot camps". He remained at this position until October 2007, when his boss unexpectedly left and he was promoted to executive director.[16]

Arshad sits on the board of directors for Outright Vermont.[17]

Arshad has been heavily involved with Netroots Nation, a nationwide non-profit that organizes the progressive online community, since 2007.[18][19] Arshad currently sits on the board of directors.[20]

Park51 Islamic Center

In late 2010, DFA and Arshad received a large amount of press when the controversy over the Park51 Islamic Community Center in downtown Manhattan started. DFA, usually agreeing with its founder Howard Dean, split with Dean when he stated his opposition to the building.[21] The disagreement between Dean and Arshad turned into a conversation about resolving religious and cultural differences.[22] Arshad and DFA used the disagreement as an opportunity to engage Americans in difficult discussions.[23]

ProgressNow

In November 2013, Arshad was named the executive director of ProgressNow, a national network of state-based progressive advocacy groups.

Personal

Arshad is gay. He married Abbott Stark in 2013. Vermont state representative Kesha Ram officiated at the ceremony.[24]

gollark: I think modern SSDs have "secure erase" where they just wipe the encryption key from the controller, but there's no way to test how well that actually works.
gollark: So SSDs do MANY tricks to optimize the locations of stuff in flash to minimize wear.
gollark: Flash has to be erased in large blocks to be rewritten, which it can only do 10000 times or so and which is quite slow.
gollark: The exposed blocks on SSDs don't directly map to actual flash.
gollark: Sorry, my network connection mysteriously ceased to exist.

References

  1. ""Men's Senior Award Winners, 1900-present"". Archived from the original on 2011-07-24. Retrieved 2011-08-09.
  2. "Sphinx Senior Society" Archived March 27, 2012, at the Wayback Machine
  3. "Oracle Senior Honor Society, Class of 2003
  4. "Generation Green" Sierra Magazine, November/December 2000.
  5. "Arshad Hasan: A call to discussion" "The Daily Pennsylvanian",
  6. "Arshad Hasan: Civil liberties in danger" "The Daily Pennsylvanian"
  7. "Arshad Hasan: An invitation" "The Daily Pennsylvanian"
  8. Dubilet, Alex "Rainbow tassel not shown on brochure", "The Daily Pennsylvanian", 27 May 2004
  9. "Arshad Hasan" "The Huffington Post" 7 February 2007
  10. "Green Corps: Partial List of Alumni" Archived September 4, 2011, at the Wayback Machine
  11. About MoveOn Political Action
  12. DFA Homepage.
  13. "Interview with Arshad: Pursuing Passions from Politics to Non-Profits" Archived March 27, 2012, at the Wayback Machine "Burlington Twentysomethings" 27 April 2011.
  14. "Democracy for America: About Us" "Democracy For America"
  15. "Arshad Hasan to Join McNerney Campaign"
  16. "Interview with Arshad: Pursuing Passions from Politics to Non-Profits" Archived March 27, 2012, at the Wayback Machine "Burlington Twentysomethings" 27 April 2011.
  17. Outright Vermont Board of Directors
  18. Netroots Nation Homepage
  19. Netroots Nation Video Panels
  20. "Netroots Nation Board of Directors
  21. Stein, Sam "Howard Dean's Democracy For America Breaks With Him On Mosque Debate" "The Huffington Post" 19 August 2010.
  22. "APAP 2010 Unsung Hero 2010- Arshad Hasan" Archived October 5, 2011, at the Wayback Machine "Asian Pacific Americans for Progress" 20 January 2011.
  23. "Ed Show w/ Cenk: DFA On Islamic Center Near Ground Zero" "The Young Turks Network" 20 August 2010.
  24. Skillern, Tim (6-12-2013). "Father's toast at son's gay marriage signals change in attitude". Yahoo. Archived from the original on 17 June 2013. Retrieved 27 June 2014. Check date values in: |date= (help)


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