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  1. David Keating became president of the Institute for Free Speech in 2012, and built a group of expert staff litigators. The Institute now has a team of the nation’s leading experts on First Amendment campaign finance litigation at a fraction of the cost of hiring outside counsel.

  2. David Keating, President. David Keating has a long and distinguished career in nonprofit advocacy. Prior to joining the Institute for Free Speech, he was the Executive Director of the Club for Growth. While there, he played... Alan Gura, Vice President for Litigation.

  3. May 13, 2015 · By Alex Altman. May 13, 2015 10:09 AM EDT. T he mastermind behind the super PAC has no regrets. “My only regret is the backlash,” David Keating says with a wry smile. Keating is one of the most...

  4. Sep 25, 2020 · Meet the reformer: David Keating, leader for the right on money in politics. David Keating is the president of the Institute for Free Speech. Closing in on nine years as president of the Institute for Free Speech, David Keating long ago cemented his status as one of the foremost conservative forces in the money-in-politics debate. The nonprofit ...

  5. President, Institute for Free Speech. David Keating is the president of the Institute for Free Speech, the only organization dedicated solely to protecting First Amendment political free speech rights through litigation, education and advocacy. In 2007, David founded SpeechNow.org due to his frustration with the incessant attacks on the First ...

  6. Alexandria, Va. David Keating is the president of the Institute for Free Speech, a 501 (c) (3) nonprofit organization that "opposes public financing of elections and limits on campaign contributions." [1] He is also a former executive director of the Club for Growth, a fiscally conservative 501 (c) (4) organization aims to influence taxation ...

  7. Jul 19, 2022 · Washington, DC – Institute for Free Speech President David Keating will testify before the Senate Rules Committee at 3 PM on July 19 concerning threats to free political speech in the DISCLOSE Act (S. 443).

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