Board Chair
Daniel Stid is the Executive Director of Lyceum Labs, a nonprofit focused on improving the quality of political leadership at the local and state levels of government. For the 2023-24 academic year, he is a visiting fellow at the SNF Agora Institute at Johns Hopkins University. He also advises philanthropists seeking to strengthen democracy, pluralism, and civic life.
From 2013 to 2022, Daniel served as the inaugural director of the Hewlett Foundation’s U.S. Democracy Program. During his tenure, he led $180 million in grantmaking to 150+ grantees working across the ideological spectrum to shore up U.S. democracy in a time of worsening polarization. Earlier in his career, Daniel was a partner with The Bridgespan Group, a management consultant at BCG, a Congressional Fellow on the staff of the House Majority Leader, and an assistant professor of political science at Wabash College. Daniel is the author of The President as Statesman: Woodrow Wilson and the Constitution. He blogs at The Art of Association on the interplay between philanthropy, civil society, and democracy in America.
Daniel has a B.A. from Hope College, an M.Phil. in politics from Oxford University, and a Ph.D. in government from Harvard University. A Michigander at heart, Daniel grew up on a third-generation family farm in Ingham County. He is proud to have been commissioned an honorary Kentucky Colonel for his service to the Commonwealth.
Co-Founder
Tim is Co-founder of More in Common Global. Tim is a serial social entrepreneur and has led on all of More in Common’s research and initiatives across Europe and the United States. Tim began his career as a lawyer with Baker & McKenzie, started and sold an education publishing company, and served from 2004 to 2010 as a leading advisor for two Prime Ministers in Australia. Tim helped co-found social change agency Purpose Europe and supported the launch of social movements related to ending modern day slavery, the Syrian crisis, and the Colombian peace process among others.
Board Member
Nadia J. Firozvi is an attorney, advocate, strategist, advisor, and consultant based in Washington, DC. She currently serves as Senior Advisor with the Trusted Elections Fund and has other consulting contracts with nonprofits and private companies. Prior to her consulting work, she most recently served in the Biden-Harris administration as Chief of Staff of the Office for Civil Rights and Civil Liberties at the U.S. Department of Homeland Security. Prior to her appointment, she served as Senior Director of the Just and Inclusive Society Program at Democracy Fund where she directed the program to support targeted communities and combat growing authoritarianism. Nadia was also a member of the DHS Agency Review Team of the Biden-Harris Transition. Before joining Democracy Fund, Nadia was a Policy Advisor in the Office for Civil Rights and Civil Liberties, Domestic Policy Coordinator at the Arab American Institute, and Staff Attorney at the Asian Pacific American Legal Resource Center.
She was a founding board member of Many Languages Once Voice and was a board member of The Nexus Fund. She is currently a board member of More in Common US, an advisory committee member of 22nd Century Initiative, and a Political Partner with the Truman National Security Project.
She holds degrees from Loyola University in Maryland, University of Baltimore School of Law, and American University Washington College of Law.
Board Member
Marshall is the Managing Director of Immigration for the Emerson Collective. Marshall believes that America is a place where fairness, justice, and opportunity should be available to all—including those who were born on other shores. Those values drive his work in overseeing strategic advances in state, federal, and international policies related to human mobility. Marshall works with visionary leaders to support grassroots programs and promote common-sense solutions that empower people on the move and strengthen the communities hosting them. His deep commitment to the work comes from an unshakable belief that migration is a natural human response to changing life circumstances and that smart, humane innovations in how we manage the movement of people will benefit everyone. Marshall joined Emerson Collective after serving as Vice President for Immigration Policy at the Center for American Progress (CAP). At CAP, he directed research and analysis of the economic, political, legal, and social impact of immigration policy in America. Previously, Marshall practiced immigration law and served as director of advocacy for the American Immigration Lawyers Association. Marshall is a graduate of the University of Virginia School of Law and served on the Virginia Law Review. He clerked for the Honorable Bruce M. Selya on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the First Circuit.
Board Member
Stephen Friedman, a Peabody and Emmy award-winning creator of social-impact campaigns, is the Senior Advisor to the CEO of Showtime and Paramount Media Networks, where he also produces documentaries and advises their Social Impact department. He teaches “Storytelling and the Art of Creating Social Impact Campaigns” at Columbia’s School of International and Public Affairs.
Friedman serves on the Board of Directors for All Out, Genocide Survivors Foundation and More In Common. He advises SYPartners and Sidekicks, an AI social-impact business.
Previously, Stephen was President of MTV for seven years. He spearheaded MTV’s transformation into the cultural home of the millennial generation with shows that included “Catfish,” “Teen Mom,” “Jersey Shore” and “Teen Wolf.” During his 18 years at the network, he created MTV’s Social Impact Department, launched mtvU and led MTV2 and LOGO to record highs.
Friedman developed multiple “Choose or Lose” campaigns in partnership with Rock The Vote, and initiatives that addressed genocide in Darfur, as well as bias and stigma around mental health. He partnered with the Campaign to End Teen Pregnancy to ensure the shows “16 and Pregnant” and “Teen Mom” were cautionary tales. The National Bureau of Economic Research credited both series with driving one-third of the steep decline in the teen birth rate, which now stands at a record low. Before joining MTV, Friedman served as a Director for the PEN American Center (the writers’ human rights organization). He holds a B.A. with Honors from Wesleyan University.
Board Member
Theodore (Ted) R. Johnson is a senior advisor at New America, leading New America’s flagship Us@250 initiative. Johnson’s research explores the role that race plays in electoral politics and its influence on the national narrative and the American identity. He is a retired U.S. Navy Commander following a two-decade career that included service as a White House Fellow and speechwriter to the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. Prior to New America, Johnson was a senior fellow and senior director of the Fellows Program at the Brennan Center for Justice as well as a research manager at Deloitte.
Johnson is a writer for The Washington Post and author of the forthcoming book If We Are Brave: Essays from Black Americana (HarperCollins, 2024) and 2021’s When the Stars Begin to Fall: Overcoming Racism and Renewing the Promise of America (Grove Atlantic, 2021). He’s a proud HBCU graduate, holding a BS in mathematics from Hampton University as well as an ALM with a concentration in international relations from Harvard University and a doctorate of law and policy from Northeastern University.
Co-Founder, More in Common Global
Mathieu is Co-founder and CEO of More in Common Global. Prior to helping launch More in Common, Mathieu was a co-founder of Make.org, one of the largest new civic tech companies in Europe and for several years was the Executive Director of New Cities, a think tank he helped launch on the future of global cities. Mathieu served as a Political Officer in the UN Department of Peacekeeping Operations for five years based in Southern Afghanistan, Lebanon and at the UN Security Council in New York. He also worked in the area of governance at the World Bank and has advised a number of political campaigns in France and the US. Mathieu is a graduate of the Kennedy School at Harvard and of the LSE. He is a dual USFrench citizen and lives in Paris with his family.
Board Member
Maya is the president of the bipartisan Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget. Her areas of expertise include budget, tax, and economic policy. As a leading budget expert for the past twenty years and a political independent, she has worked closely with members of both parties and serves as a trusted resource on Capitol Hill. MacGuineas testifies regularly before Congress and has published broadly, including regularly in The Washington Post, The Wall Street Journal, The New York Times, The Financial Times, The Atlantic, and numerous other outlets. She also appears regularly as a commentator on television. MacGuineas oversees a number of the Committee’s projects including the grassroots coalition Fix the Debt; the Committee’s Fiscal Institute; and FixUS, a project seeking to better understand the root causes of our nation’s growing divisions and deteriorating political system, and to work with others to bring attention to these issues and the need to fix them. Her most recent area of focus is on the future of the economy, technology, and capitalism. Previously, MacGuineas worked at the Brookings Institution and on Wall Street, and in the spring of 2009 she did a stint on The Washington Post editorial board, covering economic and fiscal policy. MacGuineas serves on a number of boards and is a native Washingtonian.
Board Member
Ali is the Executive Director of the National Immigration Forum, a non-partisan advocacy organization working with faith, law enforcement and business leaders to promote the value of immigrants and immigration. Growing up in California as the son of Pakistani immigrants, Ali quickly learned how to forge alliances among people of wide-ranging backgrounds, a skill that has served him extraordinarily well as one of the nation’s most innovative coalition builders. Before joining the Forum in 2008, Ali was executive director of the Massachusetts Immigrant and Refugee Advocacy Coalition, and he has served in leadership roles within public health and environmental organizations. Ali is a member of the Council on Foreign Relations, holds a Master’s in Public Health from Boston University and is a graduate of the University of California, Berkeley. Ali lives in Washington, D.C. and is the author of “There Goes the Neighborhood: How Communities Overcome Prejudice and Meet the Challenge of American Immigration,” (Prometheus, April 2017) and host of “Only in America” podcast.
Board Member
Nikki Toyama-Szeto is the Executive Director of Evangelicals for Social Action (ESA). Nikki brings over 15 years of nonprofit leadership experience to ESA, having previously served both International Justice Mission and InterVarsity Christian Fellowship, where she worked for many years as the program director for Urbana Missions Conference. She is the author of several books, including Partnering with the Global Church (Urbana Onward) and More Than Serving Tea: Asian American Women on Expectations, Relationships, Leadership and Faith. A mechanical engineer and patent holder with a degree from Stanford, Nikki left the lucrative field of engineering to pursue ministry full-time. She embodies her commitment to living out God’s call to love and serve “the least of these,” through her life’s work serving people on the margins. Nikki is passionate about both faith-rooted social justice work, and holistic evangelism.