Ben Wikler (February 3), is an American political campaigner.
Wikler grew up in Madison, Wisconsin where he cofounded an entirely student-run newspaper known as The Yellow Press.[1] While a student, he won election to the student senate[2] and launched Students United in Defense of Schools[3] with Peter Koechley[4] to demand increased school funding[5] and succeeded in allowing students to elect a representative to the Madison School Board.[6][7] He also organized protests against granting Coca-Cola exclusive access to Madison schools.[8] During high school he also worked for Wisconsin gubernatorial candidate Ed Garvey.[9]
In 1999, he begun attending Harvard University, where he studied economics.[10] While a student, he cofounded the Student Global AIDS Campaign (SGAC) and the Harvard AIDS Coalition. He represented the SGAC at the United Nations General Assembly Special Session on AIDS in New York, the UN World Youth Forum in Senegal, and the International AIDS Conference in Barcelona. He also worked for economist Jeffrey Sachs[11] and interned for Sen. Russ Feingold.[12] He also served as editor-in-chief of the Harvard Review of Philosophy and contributed to The Onion.[9]
While at Harvard, he joined TeamFranken, a group of students who assisted Al Franken in writing his #1 bestseller, Lies and the Lying Liars Who Tell Them: A Fair and Balanced Look at the Right. Wikler took a term off to help Franken "through every step of the process" of writing the book.[13] "When I was staying with the Frankens [to finish the book], we'd get up around 10 or 11 and then work for fourteen or fifteen hours," he told an interviewer. "We'd stop only for meals and a little break before dinner. It was exhausting, but it was also exhilarating, because he's so funny. We were constantly cracking up."[9]
After college, he became a founding producer for Al Franken's radio show, The Al Franken Show where he assisted with Franken's sequel, The Truth (With Jokes). "It would not have been possible without Ben Wikler," Franken writes. "Ben reminds me of myself when I was his age, except smarter, wiser, more worldly, better read, more passionate, much much taller, and just as funny. Ben was with me every step of the way on this book. I cannot thank him enough."[14]
In 2006, Wikler served as press secretary for Sherrod Brown's U.S. Senate campaign and was the first editor-in-chief of 23/6, a comedy news website created as a coproduction of the Huffington Post and Barry Diller's IAC.[15]
In March 2007, he became Campaign Director for Avaaz, where he has helped grow the organization to over ten million members. As Campaign Director, he has run campaigns on climate change, poverty, human rights, and other issues, as well as managed the technology and communication teams. He also hosted the Fossil of the Day Awards at UN climate negotiations from 2007-2009 for the Climate Action Network.[16]
He is married to Beth Wikler; they live in Brooklyn, NY.