Republican's Leadership Plan for 2025 and Beyond (Project 2025)

What is Your Opinion of Project 25?

  • Great plan that if implemented properly, will save Democracy in the US.

    Votes: 5 50.0%
  • Good start, but care must be taken to avoid swinging too far the other way.

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • Election season is here, one can expect great promises to be made.

    Votes: 2 20.0%
  • What ever happened with Republican's contract for America?

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • Fascism, here we come!

    Votes: 3 30.0%

  • Total voters
    10
The Project 2025 Plan is the corroborative effort of 400 scholars and policy experts, former elected officials, world-renowned economists, and veterans from four presidential Administrations.


The plan is organized as follows:


Section 1 - Taking the Reins of Government

1. White House Office - Rick Dearborn
2. Executive Office of the President of the United States - Russ Vought
3. Central Personnel Agencies: Managing the Bureaucracy - Donald Devine, Dennis Dean Kirk, Paul Dans


Section 2 - The Common Defense

4. Department of Defense - Christopher Miller
5. Department of Homeland Security - Ken Cuccinelli
6. Department of State - Kiron K. Skinner
7. Intelligence Community - Dustin J. Carmack
8. Media Agencies
8-1 U.S. Agency for Global Media - Mora Namdar
8-2 Corporation for Public Broadcasting - Mike Gonzalez
9. Agency for International Development - Max Primorac


Section 3 - The General Welfare
10. Department of Agriculture - Daren Bakst
11. Department of Education - Linsey M. Burke
12. Department of Energy and Related Commissions - Bernard L. McNamee
13. Environmental Protection Agency - Mandy M. Gunasekara
14. Department of Health and Human Services - Roger Severino
15. Department of Housing and Urban Development - Benjamin S. Carson, Sr., MD
16. Department of the Interior - William Perry Pendley
17. Department of Justice - Gene Hamilton
18. Department of Labor and Related Agencies - Jonathan Berry
19. Department of Transportation - Diana Furchtgott-Roth
20. Department of Veterans Affairs - Brooks D. Tucker


Section 4 - The Economy

21. Department of Commerce - Thomas F. Gilman
22. Department of the Treasury - William L. Walton, Stephen Moore, David R. Burton
23. Export-Import Bank
23-1 The Export-Import Bank should be abolished - Veronique de Rugy
23-2 The Case of the Export-Import Bank - Jennifer Hazelton
24 The Federal Reserve - Paul Winfree
25 Small Business Administration - Karen Kerrigan
26 Trade
26-1 The Case for Fair Trade - Peter Navarro
26-2 The Case for Free Trade - Kent Lassman


Section 5 - Independent Regulatory Agencies
27. SEC and CFPB
27-1 Securites and Exchange Commission and Related Agencies - David R. Burton
27-2 Consumer Financial Protection Bureau - Robert Bowes
28. Federal Communications Commission - Brenden Carr
29. Federal Election Commission - Hans A. Von Spakovsky
30. Federal Trade Commission - Adam Candeub


I will post each article related to the plan with my take on potential interdepartmental conflicts and the soundness of the article's ideas based on upon the application of a principle based methodology. For those wondering about my own expertise, I actually have related experience, both within and outside of trucking. Due to the linear process I'll take reading and commenting on each article, interdepartmental conflict comments will have to wait until after all articles are read.

holy fuck, just realized this is from last year. only nazi and commie have long term plans, especially about the politics.
 
A chief architect of Project 2025 is ready to shock Washington if Donald Trump wins a second term
https://apnews.com/article/project-...l-government-38fc446832062e40fc2ccad6f3348dfd

Russell Vought sounds like a general marshaling troops for combat when he talks about taming a “woke and weaponized” federal government.

He recently described political opposition as “enemy fire that’s coming over the target,” while urging allies to be “fearless at the point of attack” and calling his policy proposals “battle plans.”

If former President Donald Trump wins a second term in November, Vought may get the opportunity to go on the offensive.

A chief architect of Project 2025 — the controversial conservative blueprint to remake the federal government — Vought is likely to be appointed to a high-ranking post in a second Trump administration. And he’s been drafting a so-far secret “180-Day Transition Playbook” to speed the plan’s implementation to avoid a repeat of the chaotic start that dogged Trump’s first term.

Among the small cadre of Trump advisers who has a mechanic’s understanding of how Washington operates, Vought has advised influential conservative lawmakers on Capitol Hill, held a top post in the Trump White House and later established his own pro-Trump think tank. Now, he’s being mentioned as a candidate to be Trump’s White House chief of staff, one of the most powerful positions in government.

“If we don’t have courage, then we will step away from the battle,” Vought said in June on former Trump aide Steve Bannon’s ‘War Room’ podcast. “But our view is that’s where the country needs us, and we’re not going to save our country without a little confrontation.”

(More at above url)
 
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