FILE - Rep. Jason Crow, D-Colo., holds a copy of Project 2025 as he speaks during the Democratic National Convention, Aug. 22, 2024, in Chicago. There has long been a tug-of-war over White House plans to make government more liberal or more conservative.
FILE - Rep. Jason Crow, D-Colo., holds a copy of Project 2025 as he speaks during the Democratic National Convention, Aug. 22, 2024, in Chicago.
There has long been a tug-of-war over White House plans to make government more liberal or more conservative.
J. Scott Applewhite/AP

Trump’s Project 2025 Agenda Caps Decades-Long Resistance to 20th Century Progressive Reform

Share
FILE - Rep. Jason Crow, D-Colo., holds a copy of Project 2025 as he speaks during the Democratic National Convention, Aug. 22, 2024, in Chicago. There has long been a tug-of-war over White House plans to make government more liberal or more conservative.
FILE - Rep. Jason Crow, D-Colo., holds a copy of Project 2025 as he speaks during the Democratic National Convention, Aug. 22, 2024, in Chicago.
There has long been a tug-of-war over White House plans to make government more liberal or more conservative.
J. Scott Applewhite/AP
Trump’s Project 2025 Agenda Caps Decades-Long Resistance to 20th Century Progressive Reform
Copy

For much of the 20th century, efforts to remake government were driven by a progressive desire to make the government work for regular Americans, including the New Deal and the Great Society reforms.

But they also met a conservative backlash seeking to rein back government as a source of security for working Americans and realign it with the interests of private business. That backlash is the central thread of the Heritage Foundation’s “Project 2025” blueprint for a second Trump Administration.

Alternatively disavowed and embraced by President Donald Trump during his 2024 campaign, Project 2025 is a collection of conservative policy proposals – many written by veterans of his first administration. It echoes similar projects, both liberal and conservative, setting out a bold agenda for a new administration.

But Project 2025 does so with particular detail and urgency, hoping to galvanize dramatic change before the midterm elections in 2026. As its foreword warns: “Conservatives have just two years and one shot to get this right.”

The standard for a transformational “100 days” – a much-used reference point for evaluating an administration – belongs to the first administration of Franklin D. Roosevelt.

Read the full article on The Conversation.

Why is progress on the state’s top hurdles so elusive?
A new state report lays out the numbers behind a familiar problem: fewer doctors, longer waits and growing barriers to care
Wilbury’s ‘Girl from the North Country’ brings Bob Dylan’s music to a moving Great Depression-era story, while the Gamm’s ‘Cat on a Hot Tin Roof’ delivers big performances for a towering classic
The Rhode Island Foundation CEO says fixing the state’s school funding formula is urgent for students, the economy and Rhode Island’s future
The case could test whether Rhode Island’s revolving door law applies to appointments to the state’s highest court
From a workshop on vegetable gardening to a look at the role of women and their wardrobes in the American Revolution, here’s what’s going on this month at the Middletown Public Library