Sean Eldridge (born July 31, 1986) is a Canadian-born American political activist from New York.
Eldridge is the founder and president of Stand Up America, a progressive advocacy community.
He previously served as political director of Freedom to Marry, an organization advocating for the legalization of same-sex marriage.
2006
Eldridge became a U.S. citizen in 2006.
2007
Eldridge studied at Deep Springs College in Deep Springs, California and graduated with a degree in philosophy from Brown University in Providence, Rhode Island, where he helped organize the national Students for Barack Obama campaign in 2007.
Eldridge enrolled at Columbia Law School in New York City but withdrew to join Freedom to Marry.
2009
After the New York Senate voted down same-sex marriage legislation in 2009, Eldridge joined Freedom to Marry, the campaign to win marriage equality nationwide.
Eldridge and Hughes attended President Barack Obama's first state dinner together in 2009.
2011
He served initially as communications director and then as political director, a role in which he helped lead the successful 2011 effort to legalize same-sex marriage in New York.
Following the legalization of same-sex marriage in New York State, Eldridge founded the investment fund Hudson River Ventures in 2011 to address the growing issue of access to capital for small businesses in the Hudson Valley.
Since 2011, Eldridge has served on the board of directors of Scenic Hudson, "the largest environmental group focused on the Hudson Valley", and is a significant supporter of their climate change and waterfront protection programs.
Eldridge has also served as a Planned Parenthood board member.
Eldridge and his husband, Chris Hughes, bought a home in Garrison, New York for $5 million in 2011 so that Eldridge could run for Congress in New York's 18th congressional district.
The couple was featured on the cover of The Advocate magazine's "Forty Under 40" issue in 2011.
2012
In 2012, Eldridge launched Protect Our Democracy PAC and New York Leadership for Accountable Government (NY LEAD), a bipartisan group of business and civic leaders advocating for campaign finance reform in New York State.
Eldridge married Facebook co-founder Chris Hughes on June 30, 2012.
They have one son.
Eldridge and Hughes were also profiled in The New York Times in May 2012.
2013
He also founded the Hudson Valley Advanced Manufacturing Center at SUNY New Paltz in 2013, which trains students and workers on the use of 3-D printing technology.
After another Democrat was elected to Congress in that district, Eldridge and Hughes purchased a $2 million home in New York's 19th congressional district in 2013.
In early 2013, Eldridge, then aged 26, filed paperwork to run for the U.S. House of Representatives in 2014.
2014
Eldridge ran for Congress in New York's 19th congressional district in 2014, but was defeated.
He is the spouse of Facebook co-founder Chris Hughes.
Eldridge was born in Montreal, Quebec.
He grew up in the suburbs of Toledo, Ohio, and attended public school in Ottawa Hills, a suburb of Toledo.
Both of his parents are medical doctors; his father, Steve Eldridge, is a radiologist, and his mother, Sarah Taub, is a family physician.
His mother was born in Petah Tikva, Israel, to Jewish refugee parents, and his father converted to Judaism.
In October 2014, The New York Times described Eldridge as "'a first-time Democratic candidate with a thin résumé and a thick wallet'", and Politico called his campaign a "catastrophe".
Vanity Fair opined that his campaign was "overfunded and stacked with expensive consultants".
On November 4, 2014, Eldridge lost the election, 62.6%-34.5%, "despite having outspent his opponent nearly 3-to-1 in a district President Obama won by 6 percentage points".
2016
In the weeks after the 2016 election, Eldridge started Stand Up America, an advocacy organization that began as a Facebook page and quickly grew to a community of over two million progressives.
The organization has fought to impeach Donald Trump, secure funding for election security, and pass voting rights laws and anti-corruption legislation.
2019
After moving into the 19th congressional district, “Eldridge set up a venture capital firm, Hudson River Ventures, that has provided millions in loans and equity lines to local companies.” Eldridge reportedly used Hughes's wealth “to build an elaborate campaign apparatus in a district where he remain[ed] a stranger to many.
In addition to his firm’s investments, Eldridge…promised to match each contribution he receive[d], dollar for dollar.”
A Democrat, Eldridge challenged Republican incumbent Chris Gibson in New York's 19th congressional district.
The district has been described as "the quintessential swing district".
RealClearPolitics.com reported that "Eldridge's formidable strengths as a well-financed, eloquent messenger with powerful friends in the Democratic Party [were] obvious" and praised Eldridge for making campaign finance reform "a key part of his platform".
Eldridge supported abortion rights and immigration reform, opposed hydrofracking, and supported a minimum wage hike.
Because Eldridge and Hughes had only moved into the district fairly recently, Eldridge developed a reputation as a carpetbagger.