Today, Explained - Project 2025

Episode Date: April 3, 2024

Donald Trump arrived at the White House in 2017 without a lot of plans to actually govern. The conservative Heritage Foundation wants to make sure that doesn’t happen again. This episode was produce...d by Avishay Artsy, edited by Matt Collette, fact-checked by Laura Bullard, engineered by David Herman, and hosted by Noel King. Transcript at vox.com/todayexplained Support Today, Explained by making a financial contribution to Vox! bit.ly/givepodcasts Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

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Starting point is 00:00:00 Donald Trump has a long list of things he plans to get done if he's elected again. Agenda 47. He's declaring war on cartels. He's rebuilding the military. He's ending automatic citizenship for children of undocumented immigrants and developing flying cars. He'll end the scourge of addiction and celebrate 250 years of America with a patriotic spectacle at the Iowa State Fair. It's going to be great. The Conservative Heritage Foundation also has a plan for a Trump presidency,
Starting point is 00:00:28 887 pages, a little less state fair, a little more, and I quote, deleting the word abortion from every piece of legislation that exists. What we're doing is systematically preparing to march into office and bring a new army of aligned, trained, and essentially weaponized conservatives ready to do battle against the deep state. Paul Danz, the editor and public face of The Plan. You're going to hear his voice a bunch coming up on today explained Project 2025 edition. We'll be right back. your favorite player, or your style. There's something every NBA fan will love about BetMGM. Download the app today and discover why BetMGM is your basketball home for the season. Raise your game to the next level this year with BetMGM,
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Starting point is 00:02:13 Explained. 2024 Explained. I'm Noelle King with Shelby Talcott, who's covering the 2024 presidential election for Semaphore. These days, Shelby has been writing a lot about Project 2025. It's essentially this massive, organized, multi-million dollar effort to establish an administration in waiting for Donald Trump. It's headed up by the Heritage Foundation, which is a conservative think tank that has been really instrumental in conservative policies throughout the years. When I talked to the project's head last year for this, he said that what fundamentally unites our coalition is deconstructing the administrative state. Our common theme is to take down the administrative state, the bureaucracy.
Starting point is 00:03:02 And you're going to, yeah, it's not as easy done as it is said. The bottom line is that we need to have an army of conservatives ready to march in day one. The way that they're trying to do this is through this multi-pronged, years-long initiative that involves vetting a number of staffers that theoretically could be in the next Trump administration. It involves making sure that those staffers know how government works, so training them. It involves this massive 800-plus page policy book that essentially outlines the major conservative policies of today. And then the last prong is, of course, diving into this 180-day playbook that Project 2025 is currently developing to hand Donald Trump, should he win in 2024, that he could implement initiatives, executive orders, and policies in his first year in office.
Starting point is 00:04:07 We are going to be prepared day one, January 20, 2025, to hit the ground running as conservatives to really help the next president. Who's in the coalition that you mentioned? You talked about Heritage. Who else? Yeah, there's over 100 coalition partners, and actually they reached that number at the beginning of this year. So SBA Pro-Life America has signed on, the Conservative Partnership Institute, Claremont Institute, TPUSA, which is Turning Point USA, which is focused a lot on younger voters. So most of the major conservative organizations in the country really are a part of this effort. How unusual is it for the Heritage Foundation to have a thing like Project 2025? Is this unprecedented? It's not unusual for there to be some kind of organization. They usually have this
Starting point is 00:04:58 mandate for leadership that they will give an upcoming conservative president. Heritage got on the marker as an organization by delivering the first mandate for leadership in 1980 to President-elect Reagan. Heritage transformed itself from a struggling and valiant coterie of conservatives to, well, a struggling and valiant coterie of conservatives. Though today the influence and importance of heritage is widely recognized in Washington and indeed by policymakers around the world. But this scope and level of organization and the years that it has taken to plan and lay out this specific Project 2025 is really unique and really has never been done
Starting point is 00:05:47 before. So in that sense, just the scale of this operation is unprecedented. Okay, but the mandate for leadership has been a thing in the past. Now, when Donald Trump was elected the first time, how much of their mandate for leadership did he take? He used a significant amount. So in early 2018, the Heritage Foundation came out with a press release saying that Donald Trump had, as of that moment, used over 60 percent of their policy proposals. From right in the transition, we went to work availing ourselves of the resources available from the Heritage Foundation. We laid out plans for this administration. We drew on the scholarship and the resources of
Starting point is 00:06:30 this historic think tank. And so that just sort of gives you an idea of, A, how influential historically the Heritage Foundation is, but B, how much Donald Trump may or may not, you know, rely on this Project 2025 and the proposals that they put forth this time around. Can we talk about the proposals? Absolutely. So, of course, if we wanted to get into the entire 800-plus book, we would be here for weeks, probably. There are a number of significant proposals.
Starting point is 00:07:02 So one of them, they, of course, talk about abortion restrictions. They include in their policy book a reference to the Comstock Act, which is a long, inactive 19th century law that banned birth control and abortion pills by male. Conservative groups are arguing that the Comstock Act makes it a crime to mail any abortion-related item. Broadly, a number of their policies are aimed at expanding presidential powers while shrinking the executive branch. So getting rid of the White House Gender Policy Council, domestic climate policy, getting rid of the clean energy demonstrations in the energy department. He also would refuse to spend money Congress has appropriated for programs he does not like, and he would remove
Starting point is 00:07:48 officials he does not like from intelligence agencies. So all of these efforts at, as they said, deconstructing the administrative state, there's also a lot in there about immigration. They want much stricter immigration proposals. When Trump is president again as the 47th
Starting point is 00:08:04 president of the United States, how do we deport 30 million people? They'd like to bring back a failed effort from Trump to implement a citizenship question on the census. They want to mandate that the DOJ start legal action against local officials who choose not to prosecute in part because of immigration status. And so there's all these sort of policy agendas
Starting point is 00:08:26 that span across really every aspect of what conservatives are interested in. The radical plan calls for defunding the Department of Justice, dismantling the FBI and the Department of Homeland Security and Health and Human Services. It also aims to consolidate power by placing agencies like the Federal Communications Commission under direct presidential control. And the last part of this that I would pull out as notable is, of course, their social policies. They talk a lot about getting rid of DEI. They want to stamp it out. American people are waking up to this threat as DEI poses to our freedoms, to our way of life, to our peace of mind. They talk a lot about anti-wokeness, critical race theory, gender ideologies in schools.
Starting point is 00:09:11 On day one, I will sign a new executive order to cut federal funding for any school pushing critical race theory, transgender insanity, and other inappropriate racial, sexual, or political content onto our children. And so these are sort of just some of the overarching policies that this massive book is, and I do mean massive, is focused on. Okay, so 800 pages of policy ideas, one American president that they want to carry them out. Who's helping? Who are the people that would be involved in implementing Project 2025? That is their second pillar, and that was sort of what they really first started working on, was this LinkedIn for conservatives. But the goal is they'll have a number of 10,000 plus staffers
Starting point is 00:10:07 that have been vetted by the Heritage Foundation, by Project 2025, that they can then hand to the Trump administration and say, these staffers are good to go if you want to hire any of them. In addition to this LinkedIn for Conservatives, they're giving the approved staffers the option of either online training or if they're more advanced, in-person training on everything from the basics of governments to teaching them how to make sure that they can get into office and implement the plans that conservatives want. What we're doing is systematically preparing to march into office and bring a new army of aligned, trained, and essentially weaponized conservatives ready to do battle against the deep state. When I talked to the leaders who are heading up this project, and when I spoke to Heritage Foundation on a number of occasions, they've always been quick to say this is in part because we were unprepared after Trump's 2016 win. Conservatives did not expect him to win. The country really didn't expect him to win. And so Donald Trump came into office and there wasn't really any sort of platform to help him.
Starting point is 00:11:26 President Trump was an outsider. This is a very insular city, so it's not going to be welcoming to outsiders. Outsiders have to come into this place prepared and know what the game is. And so they've essentially said that they've taken a playbook out of Democrats' past plans. We take a lot of exception with Joe Biden, but the one thing I do credit his team with was being prepared. So they were signing things all week long the first week, and we are going to be doing the same. And so the idea is, day one, we've got our people, our people are trained.
Starting point is 00:12:00 Nothing in government ever works within the first 24 hours, though, right? So these are big policy proposals. How are they going to get done quickly? Of course, I think the plan is some of them are going to be right. Executive orders that presumably the president could sign on day one, on the first week, on the first month. I love this guy. He says, you're not going to be a dictator, are you? I said, no, no, no, other than day one. But others are going to be guidance and regulations that presumably could be implemented within the first 180 days of Donald Trump's presidency. And is there any other kind of worldview behind this, underpinning this?
Starting point is 00:12:38 You know, as I was reading through, one of the things that stood out to me was a sort of summary from the head of the Heritage Foundation, and he noted that the authors of this book have of American life and protect our children. The second is, as we've talked about, dismantle the administrative state and return self-governance to the American people. The third, defend our nation's sovereignty, borders, and bounty against global threats. And the fourth is to secure our God-given individual rights to live freely, what our Constitution calls the blessings of liberty. And so I think if you read those four, you get a sense of the sort of religious undertones that are also making up a lot of these policies in a lot of this book. I think of conservatives as focused on God, country, and family, not government. But progressives spend 24 hours a day redesigning government. Now we see that government is now directed against God, directed against family, directed against this country. So it's our charge now to get back and take over the government.
Starting point is 00:13:58 You know, you said it's a multimillion dollar effort. Whose money is it? Well, two of the big people that are involved indirectly are Leonard Leo, who of course has been described as a puppet master pushing this conservative agenda for years. He notoriously gave Donald Trump a list of judges during his first administration. And then the Koch brothers, and they're not directly donating to Project 2025, but they have donated to those coalition partners that we talked about millions and millions of dollars. And so, of course, that tangibly ends up helping Project 2025.
Starting point is 00:14:38 Okay, now it's worth noting that the Trump campaign could decide it doesn't want to do any of this, right? So there's nothing saying Donald Trump, if he were to be elected president, has got to carry out this plan. When you talk to people inside of the campaign, do they want to carry out this plan? I think it depends on who you talk to, honestly. And what's notable is there was a slew of reports that came out earlier this year and towards the end of last appreciative of everything that Project 2025 and these other groups are doing, but they don't speak for the campaign. Donald Trump and the campaign speak for us. And these initiatives, if they come from Project 2025, are not coming from Donald Trump. And so I think that's notable, but I also do think it's important to remember that there are a lot of former Trump officials involved in Heritage Foundation in
Starting point is 00:15:52 general and in Project 2025. And last time around, Donald Trump used so much of their policy proposals. And a lot of these policy proposals that they're putting forth are pretty common policies and pretty popular within the conservative movement. So I would expect at the end of the day that Donald Trump uses this project in some form or another. Semaphores, Shelby Talcott coming up. Shelby's back to talk about how the Biden campaign was busy ignoring Project 2025 until TikTok started talking about it. Stay tuned. Thank you. frame by Wirecutter. Aura frames make it easy to share unlimited photos and videos directly from your phone to the frame. When you give an aura frame as a gift, you can personalize it, you can preload it with a thoughtful message, maybe your favorite photos. Our colleague Andrew tried an aura frame for himself. So setup was super simple. In my case, we were celebrating my grandmother's birthday. And she's very fortunate. She's got 10 grandkids. And so we wanted to
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Starting point is 00:17:56 and available just in time for the holidays. Terms and conditions do apply. Support for Today Explained comes from Ramp. If you're a finance manager, you're probably used to having to toggle between multiple disjointed tools just to keep track of everything. And sometimes that means there's limited visibility on business spend. I don't know what any of that means, but Ramp might be able to help. Ramp is a corporate card and spend management software designed to help you save time and put money back in your back pocket. Ramp's accounting software automatically collects receipts, categorizes your expenses in real time. You can say goodbye to manual expense reports. You will never have
Starting point is 00:18:38 to chase down a receipt again. You can customize spending limits and restrictions so your employees are empowered to purchase what your business needs and you can have peace of mind. And now you can get $250 when you join RAMP. You go to RAMP.com slash explained, RAMP.com slash explained, R-A-M-P.com slash explained. Cards are issued by Sutton Bank, a member of the FDIC, and terms and conditions do apply. I'm Noelle King back with Shelby Talcott of Semaphore. All right. So, Shelby, how and when did the Biden campaign start responding to the news about Project 2025? They really took notice of it just a few months ago and really in the last few weeks, I would argue. Remember, Project 2025 is this massive in-depth effort, right? It's 800 plus pages. People who aren't involved in politics and,
Starting point is 00:19:41 quite frankly, even people who are, most of them are not reading this book in full. What the Biden campaign found, though, was online on TikTok and on these apps where younger voters are on, there was this organic interest in Project 2025. What's Project 2025? It's a nightmare. That's all I can say. It is an absolute nightmare. Anytime someone posts a video about Biden potentially losing in 2024, the top comment is always about Project 2025. Welcome to part two of our series, Project 2025. How democracy dies. They started seeing videos coming out about the project and denouncing the project. And so they saw that and thought, well, this is perfect.
Starting point is 00:20:26 And that's when they started putting out their own videos, going after the project, highlighting the project. It's all a part of their Project 2025 agenda, which is a set of extreme policy plans that they have for a second Trump term. Things like banning the distribution of abortion medication, declaring that marriage doesn't apply to same-sex couples, and undoing the historic progress that President Biden has done fighting climate change and forgiving student debt. And it's interesting, there's TikTok sort of doing explainers. They have a TikTok where AOC is speaking about Project 2025. This is exactly what Republicans have been going for. You have the Heritage Foundation.
Starting point is 00:21:06 You have lots of folks who are on record. Of course, that's notable because AOC is one of the younger lawmakers who often appeals to younger voters. And she has also been critical of Joe Biden in the past. Not only do they want to go after abortion, not only do they want to go after reproductive freedom, they're going after IVF, they're going after contraception. And so having her come out and talk about it and putting that video up on TikTok is notable. And I'm told that those TikToks are some of their best performing videos as well. So it is resonating with that sect of voters that, quite frankly,
Starting point is 00:21:43 they've been struggling with in the polls. Okay, so the Heritage Foundation, this is not unprecedented. They ordinarily do have some sort of guidelines, things the Heritage Foundation would like you to do if you're elected president. Are you surprised this election cycle that this is getting so much attention? I think I am a little bit surprised just because, again, it's such a dense DC type thing, 800 plus pages. But for whatever reason, I think in part because of the drastic changes that this project is hoping to implement, it has really resonated with a group of voters that in a way I'm not sure it would have in years past. Let me ask you about something that occurs to me as I skim these 800
Starting point is 00:22:34 plus pages. Donald Trump, during his first term, used to talk a lot about the deep state. Unelected deep state operatives who defy the voters to push their own secret agendas are truly a threat to democracy itself. And people say, well, the deep state is just experts who are already in D.C. and they know what they're doing. I gather that the Heritage Foundation probably doesn't call it the deep state, but does this 800-page book seem to speak at all to Donald Trump's idea that government itself is the problem?
Starting point is 00:23:10 Absolutely. And I think that goes back to that comment from Paul Danz when I interviewed him a year and a half ago or so, where he said, what fundamentally unites our coalition is deconstructing the administrative state. And I think that goes back to Donald Trump, sort of one of his ultimate goals that he never really could fully do during his first term. So let's say Donald Trump is elected and he decides that he wants to take Project 2025 on full bore, right? He's going to go in on it. How much of this could a Trump White House actually execute, given that we have a Congress that could be split, that could be fully democratic, given that we have a Supreme Court? What do you think? How seriously should we take this?
Starting point is 00:23:57 I think this should be taken really seriously, just in part because it is such a big effort that has been going on for so many years, and because we've seen Donald Trump use Heritage Foundation in the past, and because there's so many former Trump officials involved in this who still remain close to the former president. Now, the question of how much could actually be implemented, I think really depends on what they're trying to implement. I do think that they anticipate that some of this will receive pushback and they are also preparing for that. They're preparing for, you know, sort of potential legal issues and potential legal pushback. They're prepping for a long fight to get what they want done in government. And let me ask you lastly, so Democrats, at least some of them, are freaking out about this on TikTok and elsewhere, in opinion pages, etc. But of course, for Republican voters, this could be very appealing. Hey, we've got a plan. And when we get into office, if you vote us into office, we're going to execute that plan.
Starting point is 00:25:04 Absolutely. And that's really the office, if you vote us into office, we're going to execute that plan. Absolutely. And that's really the ultimate pitch when this whole thing started. We're ready. We have the money. Get on board. Help us figure all of these policy plans out so that we are never unprepared again as we were in 2016. And so that's been the pitch to Republicans. And these are conservative policies that a lot of conservatives agree on. And of course, on the flip side, Democrats are going to be wildly upset about this. You know, these are policies that they don't agree on. And so we can expect that should Donald Trump take office again and tap Project 2025, that Democrats are going to fight with whatever means that they can to try to make it more difficult for these sorts of policies to be implemented. Shelby Talcott, you can read her election coverage at semaphore.com. Today's episode was produced by Avishai Artsy and edited by Matthew Collette.
Starting point is 00:26:09 Laura Bullard is our fact checker and David Herman is our engineer. I'm Noelle King. It's Today Explained. you

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