CEA had a policy of not allowing any events / talks on democracy at EAG SF. Their stated rationale was the 501c3 stuff, which as you note should in fact allow for such events. Instead, I think they’re afraid of drawing the ire of the administration.
Some colleagues and I organized a non-CEA-affiliated democracy side event to EAG SF, which was quite well attended. Sorry if we didn’t reach out to you! We were DMing people by hand based on who seemed relevant in the attendee spreadsheet. (We decided to do this 2 weeks in advance; we’ll be better-prepared if we do it again :)
My current stance is we should accept that CEA wants to be highly risk averse here, and have a parallel set of orgs that do more political risk-taking. We should also understand that there’s a lot of risk management going on behind the scenes, and not trust public EA comms to represent how worried people actually are about US democracy.
Yeah, I’m pretty upset with CEA for being both cowardly and nontransparent here. It’s tricky because of course part of what they’re hoping for is just to fly under the radar. But I’d respect them more for being honest about being afraid, and it would be more informative for the community if they did so.
FWIW, I spoke to someone at CEA who wasn’t directly involved in policy-setting but thought it was more likely that their policies came from scrambling rather than strategy. I’m confused by this, since I think their line has changed over time. My guess is there’s some blurry intermediate between “thinking through a policy carefully” and “doing reflexive risk avoidance” that’s where they’re sitting.