He is also former President & CEO of CHANGE Illinois, whose mission is to bring fair, honest government to that state.
He oversees the organization's strategy, operations, and development efforts on democracy issues including redistricting, campaign finance, and voting rights.
[1] A graduate of Stanford University and the Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism, Blitstein has been a staff writer at Red Herring and SF Weekly and a contributing editor at the public policy magazine Pacific Standard.
His most well-known article was a controversial story about craigslist.org, Craig Newmark, and citizen journalism that was both praised and ridiculed by bloggers, longshoremen, journalists, and media critics.
During 2006 and 2007, he was a business reporter at the San Jose Mercury News, which published his three-part investigative series on cybercrime, "Ghosts in the Browser," in November 2007.