Abbreviation | APP |
---|---|
Formation | 2009 |
Founders | Francis P. Cannon, Jeff Bell |
Legal status | Non-profit |
Headquarters | 2800 Shirlington Road, Arlington, VA 22206 |
Coordinates | 38°50′33″N 77°05′05″W / 38.842541°N 77.084644°W |
Chairman of the Board | Sean Fieler |
Founding President | Francis P. Cannon |
President | Terry Schilling |
Budget | Revenue: $2,072,613 Expenses: $1,964,657 ( FYE December 2014) [1] |
Website |
americanprinciplesproject |
The American Principles Project (APP) is a socially conservative 501(c)(4) think tank founded in 2009 by Robert P. George, Jeff Bell, and Francis P. Cannon. [2] It is chaired by Sean Fieler. [3] [4] It is led by Terry Schilling, the son of the late former U.S. Representative Bobby Schilling. [5] [6] It has opposed Common Core standards and advocated for monetary reform by suggesting a return to the gold standard. [7] [8] [9] The organization has an affiliated super PAC, the American Principles Project PAC, which spent nearly $4 million during the 2020 election cycle. [10]
In 2009, the American legal scholar Robert P. George and political strategist Francis P. Cannon formed APP. In 2010, Jeff Bell became the policy director at APP, alongside Cannon. [11]
In 2011, APP sponsored a Republican presidential primary debate, called the Palmetto Freedom Forum, where panelists Jim DeMint, Steve King, and Robert P. George asked questions. [12]
Following the Republican Party's post-2012 election review, in which the GOP suggested de-emphasizing social issues, APP published a report detailing the importance of social issues to the Republican Party. The report pointed out that Republicans ran almost exclusively on economic issues during the 2012 election to lackluster effect. [13]
In 2018, the APP Foundation released a “Contract with American Families” describing its agenda for 2019. [14] In 2021, APP created a membership program that it called an " NRA for Families." [15]
The American Principles Project super PAC received $3.2 million from Richard and Elizabeth Uihlein between 2020 and 2022. [16] In 2022, the PAC spent $25,000 on commercials for a school board election in Polk County, Florida. [17]
APP is anti-abortion. [18]
The American Principles Project has been critical of the Common Core standards. [19]
In 2012, Jane Robbins, Senior Fellow at the American Principles Project, and Emmett McGroarty, Executive Director of APP Education, co-authored a report for the APP and the Pioneer Institute called Controlling Education From The Top: Why Common Core Is Bad For America. [20] APP staff members have testified before state legislatures, encouraging states to withdraw from the Common Core standards. [21] APP argued that the Republican Party would suffer in the 2016 presidential election if it fielded a pro-Common Core candidate. [22]
APP has also opposed the teaching of critical race theory and transgender topics in public schools. [23]
The American Principles Project has been critical of Federal Reserve System monetary policy and has advocated a return to the gold standard.
In November 2014, Steve Lonegan, Director of Monetary Policy at the American Principles Project, sent a public letter to Federal Reserve Chairman Janet Yellen requesting a meeting to discuss how current monetary policy is "reducing" the standard of living for "average working Americans." [24]
In 2015, American Principles Project funded a conference on economic policy held from August 27–29, 2015, in Jackson Hole, Wyoming, to advocate for hard money monetary policies and an end to government involvement in the money supply. [25] According to associates of hedge fund CEO Robert Mercer interviewed by Bloomberg, Mercer was the main financial backer of the Jackson Hole Summit. [26]
APP has funded political campaign ads that reflect the organization's opposition to civil rights protections for LGBTQ people. [27] APP has opposed same-sex marriage and supported restrictions on transgender youth. [28]
In the 2017 Virginia elections, the American Principles Project ran anti-transgender robocalls in the district of Democratic candidate Danica Roem, a former journalist who is a transgender woman. [29]
In February 2021 Terry Schilling co-authored an op-ed in USA TODAY criticizing the proposed Equality Act, arguing that transgender women should not compete in women's sports. [30]
The APP has said that its longterm goal is to eliminate transgender healthcare in its entirety. [31] In February 2023, the group's president, Terry Schilling, told CNN that they oppose gender-affirming care for all Americans, regardless of age and that they are working with states to introduce and pass bans on it for all ages, but are starting with bans for children since "that's where the vast majority of the American people are right now." [32]
APP has worked with Susan B. Anthony Pro-Life America against voting rights legislation. [33] In 2021, the APP PAC contributed $280,000 to Restoration PAC, which ran inaccurate commercials about the For the People Act. [34]